Question

What labels have you been given and how did that affect you?

 

Labels Are Fables

 

Self-Esteem

I wrote a short story yesterday about a homeless woman and her daughter.  The mother was confronted by a woman who judged her negatively without really knowing her.  The daughter was upset about the judgment and her mother used the opportunity to explain that the judgment wasn’t based on the lady knowing them. She explained that she judged because she had some hurt in her that she was trying to get out and judging others was her way of doing that.  And the mother was right, the judgment occurred because the woman was raised being judgmental. It was how she tried to be like her own mother. It was a convoluted attempt to get her approval, which she never really had as a child.  The child was lucky to have a mother to help explain that their self-esteem came from them, not from some random person who did not know them.  The link to that story is below.

Their Story

I am guessing those of you reading this have been called one of the words in the drawing above.  Some are negative and some are positive, but all of them are fables, or stories.  That doesn’t mean they may not have some truth in them.  Maybe they do, maybe they don’t.   But at the most they are incomplete statements of who you are and at the least they are outright lies.  Wherever they are in the arch of truth, the reason they are spoken has more to do with the person speaking than it has to do with you.

In other words, they are making up a story about you that fits their needs. It’s not a story about truth, it’s a story their need.  Within that story may be some truths about you that you agree with. Maybe you think you are smart just like they do. Maybe you do think you are a slut just like they do. But that is just two stories having a similar character.  It doesn’t make their story your story.

Your Story

When I do a photo shoot with a model for one of my art projects I will often ask the following question:  What is your favorite facial feature on yourself?  Many will answer in the following way:  “Well, most people say it’s my… ‘type in facial feature here’.  I, in response, will say,  “I am not asking what others think is your best feature, I am asking you what feature is YOUR favorite.”  That gets them thinking and they often, but not always, will change their answer.  They might say, “I know no one else really pays any attention to it, but I love my forehead best because it reminds me of my dad.” or something like that.  That, to me, illustrates the difference between the story you would tell about yourself and the story others may tell about you.

Question

What labels have you been given and how did that affect you?

 

Story Link:

The Judgment

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Drawing, quote and commentary by Marty Coleman

 

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