Becoming
a Strong Woman
Michelle Walker
I always knew that a woman needed
to be "strong", but my interpretation of
"strong" was distorted. My first impression
of a strong woman was my mother, Uyen Pham, a Vietnamese
immigrant whose life and circumstances determined
how she would live and relate to others. It was through
her example that I learned "strength". My
mother had to be strong when she immigrated to the
United States, knowing next to no English, with only
an elementary school level of education. She met my
biological father and married, pregnant with my brother
at the time. She had to be strong when she, while
pregnant with me, was abandoned and left alone to
care for her children. From this point on she maintained
a "strong" front. Despite her efforts this
front did nothing to protect my brother and me from
the abandonment she felt, for it carried over into
the lives of my brother and me. She had to be strong
when she took on the role of sole provider in my family,
had to show her strength to never again be hurt or
abandoned as she had been, but, in our case, forfeited
a relationship with her children, while showing her
"strength". She was unable to show love
or affection; she did not show weakness or cry. This,
I was sure, showed her strength. My mother was prepared
for anything because she had been through so much.
She was prepared to leave, if things got too rough,
rather than let someone else leave her again. I carried
this image with me growing up, and until only recently,
did everything in my power to become the "strong"
woman I saw growing up.
For years I lived with the rejection
that stemmed from a father who had left; the pain
of a mother who was not there emotionally or physically;
and the disconnectedness from a brother who would
fall into the very same emotional isolation that I
had chosen. I was so mistrustful that I never allowed
myself to fully enter into any kind of relationship
and never allowed myself to be vulnerable. I chose
to be "strong", in the sense that I felt
I had to do everything on my own, that I didn't need
anyone, nor could I depend on anyone or ever fully
trust anyone. I was independence in its most corrupt
form, independence that ultimately gave way to depression.
I felt empty and looked to everything possible to
fill the void. I drank, did drugs, cut myself, slept
around, all to find answers to why I couldn't love,
to understand why I had all this anger in me. I felt
I could somehow fill the emptiness, when in reality
each thing I turned to led me further and further
down the path of depression and self-destruction.
No one knew that I would cut myself
because I hated myself. No one knew that I was depressed.
The façade I maintained allowed me to live
the lie my mother had for so many years, the lie that
being strong meant never letting anyone in. I was
a scared, bitter person masquerading as a strong,
self-reliant woman. When you try to contain everything,
pretending everything is okay, it eats you up--and
when you live each day with it, you soon forget that
there's something wrong, and your depression becomes
your way of life.
While living away from home during
my first year of college, the lie I had lived was
exposed. I turned to a higher power to show me that
I could be free, free from my addictions, my self-hatred,
my depression. Once I realized this, I could no longer
continue as before. I had to make a conscious decision;
I could no longer rest passive or complacent. Would
I remain in bondage to my past, a victim of my circumstances?
Or would I deal with the pain for the first time,
allowing myself to be vulnerable?
I chose to begin the healing process.
It was not easy to let God into
my life. It was not easy to let anyone in. I had built
walls, strongholds, in fact. My pain, addiction, depression,
frustration did not disappear immediately, for they
had been with me so long, and proved a formidable
foe. But I took the first step and soon, they no longer
had power over me. I chose to draw from another source,
a source that could not be depleted. I chose to let
myself be honest with others, letting my weakness
be exposed, that I might become truly strong. I chose
to forgive those who had hurt me and asked forgiveness
of those whom I had hurt. I chose to live a new way,
leaving behind the bondage that also held my mother,
the bitterness that never let her cry, never let her
show how much she loved me and my brother.
Only now, at the age of 20, through
God and many people around me, am I able to recognize
and heal from the effects of growing up with a mother
who had had little emotional involvement with her
children. The image I had built in my mind of what
I was to be like as a grown woman was based on my
experience with and my perception of my mother, a
woman always prepared for someone to leave, or escape
if things got to hectic--not the woman I am or want
to become.
Now I live a life free from depression,
free from addiction (besides caffeine, which I will
attribute to our capitalist economy:), and free from
my past circumstances. All families have their problems,
and there are no excuses for the wrongs that, especially
children, have to go through. But we must ask ourselves:
will we choose to be imprisoned by our circumstances
and let it affect our relationships and our future
families? Or will we chose to rise above our circumstances,
and become all that we were meant to be? I could very
well still be depressed, struggling with addiction
and insomnia, but I am not going to let my past circumstances
determine who I am. I am not going to let all that
I didn't have determine my future or cap my potential.
I am not going to be limited by what others have said
about me or what is expected of me. I will not allow
the failures of parents or authority figures to determine
who I will become. I will no longer pretend to be
strong when I am in pain. I will no longer attempt
to do it all on my own. I am no longer slave to addiction
or obsession, but free to be the strong woman I am
meant to be. I will not live in fear of the truth,
nor will I strive to mask my true self. I will not
live with pain and hide it. No woman should.
I live honestly in the present moment,
bravely facing what lies ahead, complete with new
understanding of what lies behind me, though no longer
subject to the past. I am becoming all that I am meant
to be, and therein lies my strength.
Note:
I do not blame my parents for the circumstances of
my life or their own. I didn't keep track of all the
wrong so that they could "pay" for all they
did to me, but I did have bitterness stemming from
the lack of affection I experienced. I know that they,
too, suffered a great deal. But I do not want to repeat
their mistakes. Unlike them, I will not remain a victim
of circumstance and allow pain to rule my life or
rob me of the life I now live.
If you wish
to contact Michelle Walker, E-mail chell_walker@hotmail.com