If I Met my 19 Year Old Self, What Would I Do?
This is me at almost 18. Frocked up for my High School graduation I thought I was fat and hideous - a waste of energy |
Punch myself in
the face or shake my hand? That is the question “Dr. Harry” of BBC’s “Silent
Witness” asked “Dr. Nicky,” and I thought it was a terrific question. If I met
my 19 year old self, I’d just want to give her a very very big hug and say
everything is going to be OK and your life will be amazing. I’d say I know you’re
feeling angry and confused, I know you’re finding it hard to work out where you
fit in the world since your family unit self-destructed, and I know you’re
really struggling with self acceptance, but I can promise you one thing – it’s
all going to be AMAZING, but you’ve got a few more confusing years ahead of you
before you work that out.
Then I’d grab
both of her shoulders, look her squarely in the eyes and say: But I’m not going
to tell you anything else specific about your future, because it is the
decisions you make today, the people you meet today, and the experiences you
have today that are going to lead you on a wild and wonderful adventure, where
you live in multiple countries, visit the world’s most amazing cities, and your
feet will walk the Wonders of the World. She’ll like that. Then I’d say it’s
all good, and besides, if I gave you any advice, you’d tell me to piss off
anyway, because you’re a stubborn bloody bitch who takes your own counsel very seriously
– and for good reason. While many in your life will tell you this is not a good
quality, and some will even resent you for it, it will always serve you well. But
do pay attention to the teachers along the way – they come in many forms those
life teachers.
The only way your
strength and self belief is detrimental is that people don’t always see when
you need a shoulder to cry on. Sometimes you will find this extremely
challenging to deal with, because all you’ll want is for your friends to “see”
you, but you don’t know how to ask for help, so be gentle on those who don’t
see it. They really don’t grasp your anguish because you are very good at hiding it – your future husband will get it, don’t you worry. But if you want help,
learn how to ask for it – there’s no weakness in that and your friends will
appreciate it more than you know.
Then I’d tell
her that she has some pretty strong opinions on things right now, but life will
provide her with a lot of experiences, and many of the ideas she is fixed on now will change significantly. If I told her what some of the opinions she’d change
were, she would say NEVER, but I know it to be true.
I’d tell her to
learn how to live in the moment and get to work on quieting her mind now –
something she will never find easy to do – suggesting maybe she looks into
meditation at this time in her life, rather than much much later. I’d tell her to let go of any
bullshit in her life quickly, and when people take too much from her, to let
them go too. But at the same time to never resist accepting the diversity of
people in her life, because that is where she will find the most joy. When she
gets to her 40s, she will feel extremely blessed by the vast community of very
different and wonderful people who have touched her life and remain in it – mostly
from afar – to this day. This will be her greatest sense of achievement – the
relationships she’s built with people and the deep understanding of life she
has gained from this. Right now I’ll tell her it’s
her openness to people and experiences that will be her greatest gift to herself. So always be open, put yourself out there (even when it’s scary to do
so) and always expect the unexpected.
I’d tell her she
would have some very lonely times ahead, and while she is in the middle of
these times - sometimes close to despair - that she shouldn’t worry. Everything
comes good in the end. I’d tell her these times – especially when she is
travelling alone for months at a time to far flung places in the Middle East,
Europe, Asia and the Americas – are the best investment she can ever make in her own
personal growth, even if it’s not particularly pleasant at the time. It is these experiences
more than any other, where she will face herself, question everything she’s
ever heard or known, and expose herself to deep introspection, and as a result, she will grow
the most. She'll learn that judgement of others is never welcome because none of us can ever know
anyone else’s story, and she’ll shake off a lot of the bullshit that will no
longer serve her or be relevant to who she is.
She’ll enjoy
this chat. It will give her a lot of hope. It will help her to keep her
convictions even when others are trying to bring her down, and it will make her
excited – because right now, all she wants to do is get out and travel this big
wide world.
The only specific
event I’d talk about is this: just before Christmas 1994, when she visits her lifelong
friend Emma, and her baby girl Ruby, I’d tell her to make sure she gives Emma a
very very big hug when she says goodbye. I won’t tell her that this is the last
time she’ll see Emma - as she dies in a motorcycle accident a few days later –
because it will be a grief too big to bare in advance. However Emma’s death
will be one of her greatest life lessons – and it is to never ever
waste life on regrets. She’ll ponder this concept deeply while sitting high in the
Himalaya’s on a glorious warm day a few months after Emma’s funeral, knowing
that she’ll always miss her friend, but grateful she had her in her life for
so long.
Oh there’s so
much more I can tell her, but one more thing I’d have to say is to stop with
the self hatred bullshit. She won’t listen to me, but maybe it will bring the
subject into her awareness earlier so she doesn’t waste as much useless
emotional energy on what is absolute bollocks.
I think that’s
what I’d tell my 19 year old me.... well it’s a start anyway. If you met your
19 year old self, what would you do or say? I am very curious...
Yours, without
the bollocks
Andrea
Comments
Ken
Glad you didn't when I asked you 13 years later....
Love ya babe, then and now
S x
Back to topic - if I met my 19 year old self I'd tell myself to stop being such a pretentious prat and don't stop exercising. On the upside, I'd tell myself to keep playing music (I did) and "nullius in verba" (which I didn't, but also demonstrates that I'm still a pretentious prat).
I’d definitely like to meet my 19 year-old self. I’m sure (although I’d probably cringe a little) I’d be amused and proud. Actually at 19, I was in what I would call an ‘emerging phase’. Having left a small town high school, with small minds and popularity contests, I was at university, meeting new people, making good friends, laughing, learning and drinking A LOT of beer. It was only in my late 20s, when I had been working in London for a bit, that I though to myself, ‘Righty-ho, time to hop off this conveyor belt of life and carve my own path”.
So, to answer your question, I think to my 19 year-old self, I’d say “Above all, have hope, faith and courage. Life won’t always be easy, and sometimes it will almost break you, but the myriad of emotions you experience are what life is all about and they will make you stronger. You will see the world and the more you see, the more you will respect it, and the more you will want to see. And don’t worry about where your ‘home ‘ is. Home becomes about a feeling of belonging in your small family and community circle. And it’s about the bonds you make as you pass through life, which should be cherished and nurtured, wherever in the world you are. Those bonds are your strength. They are your anchors.”
But what would my 19 year-old self say to me 28 years later? “When did you become so bossy?!”, for a start. I think I would also say, “The pressures of more mature adulthood, especially parenthood, are real and you have responsibilities. But don’t forget joy. Don’t forget to be polite, and above all, remember to be kind. Life may get hard at times, but it is amazing and you have plenty more to come.”
So today (after I have folded the laundry), I’m off to explore.