Not pretty enough. Not skinny enough. Not smart enough. Not fast enough. Not talented enough. Not good enough.

Ever since I was a kid, I’ve felt like I’m not enough. These are the mantras I’ve told myself about myself for years. Self-doubt and a crisis of confidence have haunted my life. I am not sure why, but from an early age I felt a little less than. Part of it was the alopecia and not knowing how to deal with it. I mean, my mom brushed and put barrettes in my hair to hide my bald spots until I turned twelve. Part of that hiding made me hide who I truly was, probably even from myself.
I think for a lot of my life I have been scared to tell people what I really think or who I am. I am sure this has impacted my friendships and relationships. I’ve been scared to assert myself (my husband would disagree with this, and probably my children too because I’m comfortable around them). I told myself to just be kind and people would like me. But sometimes being kind means getting stepped on and not being true to yourself. There is a middle ground for sure.
I told myself a lot of negative messages about myself, while assigning perfection to other people who probably tell themselves a lot of these same messages too.
Not skinny enough. I always had an athletic build in high school–I played tennis and it was pretty much my life. After high school, I packed on the pounds. Freshman 15? More like Freshman 45! I have always struggled with my weight and let it define me. And why? Weight has nothing to do with my talents or my personality, but people do look at weight and judge a person. I have done it myself–looked at an obese person and wondered how they got there. And I’m not skinny, so that ain’t fair at all!
Not smart enough. As a kid, I went to one of the most prestigious schools in Montgomery, Alabama. I felt like a complete idiot. Everyone there seemed smarter than me. I struggled, especially in math, and was so embarrassed by this that I often hid my grades from my parents. I also had two older sisters at the school who seemed to do fine. Of course, one of my sisters studied her butt off, and I never did that–I sort of had this fly by the seat of the pants attitude about life. And it ended up working for me…until it didn’t.
Not talented enough. I have always loved to write. As a kid, I wrote these long stories mostly about people growing up in the Civil War Days. I had a huge obsession with Abraham Lincoln and triplets. I wrote most of my childhood, but I never felt talented enough to turn the writing into anything. I let other people’s ideas of what I should do influence me. I felt like my writing talent was not enough to make anything substantial. I told myself this even when I published a book, and after that book went out of print.
Not fast enough. A few years back, my sisters decided we would all run a half-marathon together. I said, “Thanks, but no thanks. I do not run.” Well, sibling pressure is real, y’all. I ended up training for 20 weeks, hurting my foot, you name it, but competed and finished the Nashville Rock ‘n’ Roll half-marathon. But I’ve never been fast. I trained all that time and still had trouble with pacing, keeping up with my sisters, and increasing my time. I told myself I wasn’t fast enough to be a real runner.
Not pretty enough. I have never looked at myself and thought I was pretty. As a child, I struggled a lot with self-image. I had alopecia, and kids made fun of and bullied me. I struggled a lot to look in the mirror and think the person looking back at me might be beautiful. Everyone always told me I had a beautiful smile. But I just couldn’t see what people saw in me. And when I lost all my hair nine years ago, I struggled again. I had a hard time confronting the emotions that came with that loss, and thinking that grieving the loss of my hair might make me self-centered or something like that. I rolled with the punches. I told people about alopecia. I feigned feeling confident. Fake it ’til you make it, right?
So how do you go about changing the not enough into a great big ENOUGH? Start changing the mental dialogue. It takes practice, and sometimes I fall into the same pattern of telling myself I’m not enough.
When I look in the mirror now, I try to think about how easy it is not to have to deal with hair. I can go bald, and I don’t use that much shampoo. When I run, I think about how strong my body is getting. I think that speed doesn’t matter as long as I’m continuing to run the race. When I write, I can acknowledge my talent. I had to stop thinking about what other people might be thinking of me, and start thinking about what I should and could tell myself.
SMART ENOUGH. PRETTY ENOUGH. FAST ENOUGH.
TALENTED ENOUGH.
Still not really skinny enough, but hey I’m working on it.
GOOD ENOUGH
Follow Lauren Greene:
Facebook: www.facebook.com\laurengreenewrites
Twitter: https://twitter.com/laurenegreene
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/109867402293227201728/posts
Love you! Lauren!! What can I say except that you are great!!! Positive affirmations work! Every day!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love you too, Aunt Karen! Thanks for always supporting me. You’re the best. Miss you.
LikeLike
Love you, Lauren! You are so much better than “good enough!” Miss working with you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks Joy! I miss working for you too. I’m still at VCA remotely, so that’s been great. I hope you’re doing well.
LikeLike
Lauren, thank you for sharing this. I’m sure there are many others that have gone through the feeling of being less than. I know I’m one. I’m so glad that God loves us as we are and uses weakness to help others. My Bible verse of the day is 2 Cor 12:9
…”my grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”
God bless you,
Joice
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you Joice.
LikeLiked by 1 person
You are the strongest most amazing person I know. I always wanted to be like you in high school and college. You were and still are so fantastically creative and beautiful. You made me want to be a better person. You never judged me and were my best friend from the jump. I love you
LikeLiked by 2 people
Love you!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lauren, I think you nail a very central truth when you say, “I told myself a lot of negative messages about myself, while assigning perfection to other people who probably tell themselves a lot of these same messages too.” We are a very competitive society. We are probably a competitive species, but we are also a species that desperately depends on a socially supportive environment, as I think the current pandemic is proving daily. Stuff doesn’t make us happy. The glory of “winning” quickly dissipates because, as every champion of something knows, you’re only as significant as your last victory. I think the happiest people are seldom the prettiest, or the most athletic, or the wealthiest. They seem to me to be the people who just march to their own tune and leave the angst of whether or not to accept that to others. Great post!
LikeLiked by 1 person