Perceptions are everything.
Some people come off opposite to their true nature, making it hard to really judge a person and their actions.
In third grade, I was convinced that my teacher hated me because she never called on me. Granted, I was a bit Hermione-like; my hand was permanently raised and waving.
To my third grade mind, there was only one explanation. As it turned out, she was just trying to give the other kids a chance to answer. I guess I was a bit of a know-it-all.
I like to tell myself I'm not as one-sided as I used to be. In some ways it's true; I can at least acknowledge other people's opinions, even if I don't agree with them. But once I think someone hates me, it takes a lot to change my mind.
It's one thing if someone doesn't like me, but it's a whole new deal if I think they're blaming for something I can't control.
Did that doctor really mean that or does he think it's my fault I'm sick? What was he really thinking? What was he implying?
It's a sore subject, to be sure.
I've spent enough time going to doubtful doctors that I have my walls up.
I can sort of see where they're coming from: teenager with vague complaints, not in school, I don't know what it is, why not blame it on her?
But then again--how dare they!
I know this is not my fault. I did not cause this. But I've spent enough time having to defend myself that a small seed of doubt has worked its way in.
It has no business being in me. Being wrong and making me doubt myself, springing to life whenever I interpret so much as an insinuation that I am somehow responsible.
It all comes back to my perception. I don't know what the doctors really think. But when it comes across as my fault, that seed starts to grow.
It's a battle. Against the illness and occasionally the doctors, but mostly to convince myself, completely, so that when someone else doubts me, there is nothing to start growing.
so true! thanks for those words.
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