Echoing Into The Past | LOH #191

While I'm not much of a believer in the "what would you tell your younger self" mindset, I did want to participate in this week's Ladies of Hive prompt,

If you had the opportunity to offer guidance and wisdom to your younger self, what insights or recommendations would you share?

See, I think if I went back to my 17 year old self, say, and shared some things I know, I don't think it would've made an ounce of difference, because she wouldn't believe me. It's the same reason we mostly don't believe our parents or teachers when they try to steer us from a bad path.

Some things need to be experienced first-hand before you can own that knowledge.


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17-year-old Honey.

The logic behind the question is that you being yourself might have a different effect, more convincing power on your younger self. Except it doesn't work like that. If I went back, as I am now, my 17-year-old self would intellectually accept that I am her, but she wouldn't experience me as her, thus rendering that logic moot.

So since I don't think it would matter much, I don't think I'd wanna actually go. I'm very grateful for all the hard things and that pain that shaped who I am now. I have to. I have a strong incentive to appreciate it, it being a core element in what made my myself.

That being said, I wanna play. Simply because when I read the question, a couple things immediately bubbled up. The sort I wish I'd known sooner. Would've saved a lot of head-butting.

1. What happens next is always up to you. See, I think my kid self got a lot of things intuitively. This is a slight modification on a quote I used to love at the time from the show Californication, that goes "All those things that weren't supposed to happen, they happened. What happens next is up to you.".

At 17, I guessed this to be true. However, I had to go through a few more roll-arounds until I knew it to be true in my core.

There's a great wisdom and a great power of survival and improvement in that quote, in that knowledge that you are always in charge of what happens next. Not everything that comes your way is gonna be good or helpful. Some bad shit will be visited on you, while other bad things, you'll visit upon yourself through the follies of youth, inexperience, lust, and the other usual suspects.

And this power isn't just in envisioning a better future. A lot of it comes from that "bad shit happened" knowledge. You grow a lot when you accept that yes, this really has happened. Wishing or pretending or fantasizing different won't change it. So the best thing you can possibly do for yourself is accept the very stark, often very unpleasant reality that it has happened, and it's not going away.

2. You can say 'no'. When I started dancing, I remember sitting in a circle and saying how much I love that here, I get to say 'no' when I don't want to be touched or danced with. To which a friend who I didn't know was a friend at the time said, shocked, you can't say no in your life outside here?

For a long time, I couldn't. I positioned myself in a state of inertia. I found it very hard to name my limits and my needs, for fear or rejection and abandonment. It led to a lot of less than ideal situations. That's ok, those were necessary to learn. What I do regret, in a sense, is the years I wasted thinking I wasn't worth standing up for.

The message you send yourself about yourself is of great value. And when you're reminding yourself you're not worth more by failing to say 'no' or create boundaries, you're putting out a damaging message.

3. You already know the answer. But don't make the mistake of thinking you know all the answers. You already know means that when bad shit's happening, your intuition is telling you, and has been for a while. Your body is acting up in one way or another.

And while popular opinion may disagree, yes, 'I've got a bad feeling about this' usually is good enough reason to change your situation.

It's great because these two concepts actually strengthen each other. The more you prove yourself, your reliability to yourself that if shit goes down, you'll have the strength to walk out of a bad situation, the more flexible you are in changing your ideas.

When my body warned me about certain people or situations, I didn't listen. What that told me was I wasn't very reliable to drag myself to safety. And that caused a death-grip on my already existing notions and ideas. Because I needed stability. Rigidity.

Now, I have a little more trust in myself that, if a situation isn't good, I'll know and have the strength to change that and protect myself. As such, I have more inane security and can afford to be more flexible, to entertain the possibility that sometimes I'm wrong or don't know enough about a certain situation.

Would my 17-year-old listen? Would she care? Probably not. She'd say 'fuck you for trying to tell me how things stand'. And she probably wouldn't be wrong.

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19 comments
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That’s called life. We learned by our experiences :)
Really hard to say “no” in the younger stage but as we get older, we are be brave and stand by ourselves:)

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And isn't it wonderful? Life, I mean. Thank you for stopping by! :)

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life is wonderful and beautiful 😌
If we want to be grateful

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This is always badly framed in my opinion. The better way to view the question is “you go back to being your younger self, now move forward” (retaining all your knowledge up to date)

Tell me honestly what was the old path and what is the new path and why.

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that is such a different question, I agree! A fun one, too. Who wouldn't wanna go back knowing what they do now? :)

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That young, stubborn woman wouldn't be who she is right now if not for the things she went through. Life lessons, that the younger us can't learn by just hearing it from anyone (even if that's also the wiser us). We need to live it.

Nice perspective!

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Thank you! Indeed, it can be of great value, as long as we're paying attention to what's happening to us.

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You are right, even if I could talk to my younger self he wouldn't give a damn about what I had to say and I think that this applies to most people.

I would insist though to only one thing.

Buy bitcoin as soon as possible and don't sell :)

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Amen! To be fair, I woulda had to go back to when I was like 9 or 10 to make serious bank :))) What the hell was I doing wasting time with third grade?

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View or trade LOH tokens.


@honeydue, You have received 1.0000 LOH for posting in Ladies of Hive. We believe that you should be rewarded for the time and effort spent in creating articles. The goal is to encourage token holders to accumulate and hodl LOH tokens over a long period of time.

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Experience speaks volumes and shapes us into who we are. I'm not sure I would've listened to myself either. Thanks for sharing!

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Well, I completely agree with you but my personal opinion is slightly different. Yes, probably my 17-year-old wouldn't listen to me at all but if I could guide her a little bit back then or now, today my life would have been easier and I wouldn't need to sit on intense therapy day after day. You see, when I was a teenager, I was suffering from huge psychological issues and I tried to attempt suicide a couple of times, as a result, I ended up sick, marking my both hands with thousands of marks. As a result, I am still carrying those marks and they often remind me of my dark, horrible life. Yes, my life changed a lot, I learned a lot but childhood traumas and problems always ended up haunting me no matter what. At that time, I needed help but I couldn't ask for support and help due to society and cultural differences. I wish I could speak out instead of keeping everything inside me. Yes, I don't want to change anything about my childhood but if I could change that dark period of my life, my present suffering would have been less... This question was hypothetical but every morning I ask myself what if I could change that dark moment in life...

Thank you for your participation and good luck...

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