This post is available as a podcast here: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/s-p01/episodes/Blessing–or-Curse-e2eg5ho
Most of the time my empathy and ability to see people is a blessing. I do all I can to only use it for good. There are days it’s a curse. Probably not the way you think, either. The burdens of others are not my curse. My curse is knowing how to hurt people at their core. I never intentionally strike them like that, it’s always by accident. It’s always when I am in a bad place and can’t see or think clearly enough to realize what I am doing. It’s like a lashing out, even though I don’t intend it that way. I express my pain, but I hurt them instead. It’s something that I wish I could stop. I guess I hope by sharing how it makes me feel, maybe some of you can face your own “curse.”
I work to cultivate love, support, and safe spaces. My blessings help me in those. I give them credit for why I am seen as understanding. For the reason people open up to me and appreciate my presence in their lives. Those gifts help me create and cultivate the kind of connections with humans that I truly seek in all my relationships. That presence and ability to hold space for others is something I love about myself. I recommend anyone to cultivate that same love, support, and safe space in their interactions – it’s amazing.
I want to help people. I never want to hurt people. No matter the pain I experience, my heart doesn’t seek revenge. I learned very early on that the cost of hurting people hurts me more than any pain done to me. It breaks my heart when I hurt another person. So, I do everything I can to avoid hurting others. When I get triggered is when I, inevitably, hurt others. It’s like my good parts go out the window and I become clueless how my actions or words could hurt. It’s the one thing I do that I don’t know how to change, so it’s a good time to unpack it.
When I get triggered, I think things are appropriate to say or do that I would never think are appropriate to say or do under normal circumstances. These are things that ruin friendships, create divides in my family, and genuinely cut down another person. I’ve gotten better, but I haven’t eradicated the trauma within me. I still get triggered; I still accidentally hurt others. None of my examples bear repeating, I don’t think negativity is worth sharing. The only thing I’ve been able to do is recognize when I’m triggered. Still, I realize it too late.
My goal is to recognize my state so that I can change my actions. My goal is to at least reach a point where I can say “I’m sorry, I’m triggered, I don’t want to say anything I’ll regret.” and simply leave it at that. Please. Universe help me, to just leave it at that. The overexplainer within me cannot stop. I read somewhere that if we were misunderstood as children and it caused us great pains, that in adulthood we overexplain ourselves in order to try and ensure that doesn’t happen again. Yes. I do that. Entirely to my own detriment. My mother used to preach at me to “let it go” long before Frozen came out and made the phrase popular. I never learned how to let it go when it comes to my heart.
This is a story about my heart.
Feeling deeply is a blessing and a curse. I bond with people so fast and I care about them so much. I feel their pain. When a friend lost a child, I cried for her (not at her, I did all I could to only send her support.) When another friend was in the hospital due to pregnancy complications, I reached out to her – without knowing why I was worried about her. I had a woman sit next to me on a bench one day, and her emotions swept over me so deeply that I sat there and cried for 10 minutes. Empathy would be easier if emotions were not so overwhelming.
I think this is why dance class is so beneficial to my soul. I feel the room, we all feel better as we dance. There’s a sense of connection and community through dance that is strong. My dance friends are forever friends; my adult dance friends. There is so much love in a room of adult community dancers. Every class I take fills up my heart. Every class I teach also fills up my heart, just in a different way.
I taught contemporary dance for several years. I’m the kind of instructor that kicks butts. If your legs leave my class and they aren’t shaking… then you must have been taking my class for a long time. I think dancers are a little masochistic; just look at pointe shoes. Those things gave me bunions, so as much as I love them – they’re masochistic. I say that with acceptance that I am, therefore, masochistic. Yeah, I like to push myself, I like pain because it reminds me I’m alive. So, not all dancers are masochistic, but I can confirm this one is. I think the dancers that enjoy my class must be, also.
My choreography is from my heart. I don’t do technical pieces, I do feeling pieces. The technique is part of the fallout from my training and because it’s beautiful, but I was never a competition dancer and I don’t follow those rules. My choreography comes from pain most of the time. Good art comes from pain, and performing my pain on stage is a form of processing that drives me to dance. Not everyone will know the story, or the pain, but the audience will feel something. That’s why I choreograph and perform, to help others feel and release their pain. That’s why I write this blog, too. In all of my creations, my goal is to help others feel and process their pain. To help others find love.
If you think you have a curse of your own, unpack it. Our blessings help us manage our curses, but curses must be faced to reach a point of relief.
Love, hugs, and all the feelings, -S.
