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So, you didn’t unpack that emotional baggage…

As I sat considering the term ‘emotional baggage’ I wondered where that phrase came from. While I didn’t search extensively, the answers I found that made the most sense seemed to indicate that the cliché came from the depression era or possibly relating to individuals in the military.  Essentially a reference to the idea of a person carrying around the burdens of emotional pain, trauma, or some other past event.  I suppose it’s an accurate analogy for this very human condition in that all adults have a past, and the vast majority of us have emotional issues that cause us to suffer.  In my wife’s recent post, she spoke about the importance of ‘unpacking’ our baggage and dealing with it in an appropriate manner that will allow a person to move forward.  I love that she was able to recognize the need to ‘unpack’ what we both had been through. However, I can state from experience what can occur when we don’t unpack or continue dragging un-needed bags around for extended amounts of time. 

If we are claiming that people are carrying around heavy or full bags as adults, we are therefore under the assumption that we’re born with an empty bag. I’m fairly certain that I began packing all sorts of emotional matters at a very young age. Being raised in a dysfunctional home where my dad was an alcoholic ensured that I would start accumulating heavy items that would go directly in my bag. While I may have been spared any physical infliction of pain, my dad’s anger and harsh words hurt more and longer than any punch to the face ever would.  I don’t remember every incident when my dad got drunk and lashed out at me, there are a few that I recall with vivid detail.  One time while still in elementary school (I’m thinking perhaps when I was 9 or 10), I stayed home for school, perhaps I was sick, maybe I wasn’t. Whatever the reason, I apparently lied to my dad about it earlier in the day and later, after he had spent the evening drinking, he discovered the truth. When he discovered my lie, he proceeded with a tirade of calling me names including ‘gutless wonder’, ‘coward’ and the completely unrelated ‘pig’. On other occasions I merely was called the standard ‘worthless.’  

By the time I was in high school I was fully convinced that all of his descriptors of me were completely right. Along with the multiple incidents where he did his best to make me feel small and worthless, he seemed to want to make me feel unlovable too. Because I didn’t love myself, and my fathers love for me seemed non-existent, I came to believe the only solution was to find a girlfriend who would love me. I had fully convinced myself that if I could find a girl, she would not only shower me with affection, but magically fix every flaw I had. Ironically, I didn’t think I was physically attractive, nor had any qualities that would make me attractive to a girl. My flawed thinking was a double-edged sword (and those are really difficult to put in a bag). 

In the second half of my senior year in high school, for some reason unbeknownst to me, a girl in one of my classes took interest in me and we started going out. She would be my first girlfriend, the first person I had sex with, the mother of my first child, my first wife and the first, and thankfully only, person who tried to kill me on two separate occasions.  That is a lot to carry, let alone try to unpack.  

Without going into the details of all that went down in our 2 short tumultuous years together, that horrific marriage seemed to double the weight of the baggage my dad had already given me. By the time I was 20, I had numerous extremely heavy bags that I would continue dragging around well into adult life. I carried the weight of it everywhere I went. They were my constant companion in multiple relationships, my jobs, and every aspect of my personal life. Because I never even attempted to deal with the baggage, they just got in the way. Those heavy bags kept me from ever being the husband, father, son, friend or just person that I really wanted to be. I didn’t know how to love myself and subsequently I didn’t know how to love anyone else. The mental anguish from that baggage also manifested itself as frequent severe migraine headaches, depression and eventually addiction to pain pills. When I turned 50, I hit rock bottom. That birthday hit me harder than I thought it would. But it also became the catalyst to finally not just unpack those bags but burn all the heavy garbage inside them. Four months into my 50’s I met the love of my life. Because of her I found a way to deal with my past and for the first time in my life, find true joy.  I’ve learned it’s never too late to reinvent yourself by addressing the past, and truly learning from it.

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Got EMOTIONAL BAGGAGE? UNPACK IT

What exactly is ‘baggage’? I have it, my husband has it… we ALL have it.  It’s the mental and emotional ‘stuff’ we carry.  It starts when we really start forming memories and we just keep gathering things as we get older.  For some people it may look like a carry-on.  They pack it all in a nice neat little bag and tuck it in an overhead compartment. For others it may look like you’re headed on a year long trip with bags upon bags packed like you just threw everything in something, hoping it gets there. Here’s the thing.  That small carry-on bag may hold the weight of the world in it for one person…. And conversely the bags upon bags packed chaotically may hold a lot of little things that have built up and built up over time and now feel like the weight of the world for somebody else.  My point is, we can’t judge someone by the amount of ‘bags’ they carry. We all go through different things in life. We all have different experiences, challenges…trials. We are all individuals.  I will stress that over and over again.

As you may have noticed in our first posts, Chaz and I come with quite a bit of emotional stuff that we’ve each carried throughout our lives. If you don’t know that, go back and read our first couple of posts…I think they’re interesting…maybe you will too. I decided early on in our relationship that we absolutely needed to address this. I really…really liked Chaz when we met, and I needed him to know that his heart and his mind and everything that came with him were safe with me. I needed the same reassurance from him. At the very beginning of our relationship, we both knew there was something special between us. We had these invisible strings pulling us together. It is hard to describe, and nothing I had ever experienced in my life before that. But we had to address all the things that hurt us, all the emotional crap that we had both been carrying and had been affecting us individually.  He was going through a divorce; I had just months before buried the man I had been married to for 18 and known for 19 years. How in the world do you start to unpack it all when it’s…a lot? A few years ago, I described it like this. “One day we sat down threw everything on a table, sorted through it, talked about it, cried, and then gathered it all up and threw it off a mountainside.”

Was it that easy? Hahahaha… (straight face) …no. We started with hard conversations. Did we like talking about each other’s past relationships? I can’t say it’s in my top ten things I loved to talk about, I’m positive it’s not on my husband’s either, but we did it, because we needed to. We talked about our childhoods. We talked about abuse in our respective relationships. We talked about self-esteem, what we hate about ourselves, if there were regrets from our pasts, traumatic experiences that changed our lives, addiction. There were times Chaz would walk into a room and I would smile and he would give me what he thought was a convincing smile back, and I would look at him and say, “Don’t fake smile me.” For awhile it always stunned him that I would even notice if something was off. It took a while for him to realize that in some ways I saw him better than he could see himself. He would say, “What do you mean?” And I would say, “That’s not your real smile…what’s going on?” And a conversation would start.  It was not easy for each of us to learn about all the hard things that happened in our lives, it was painful and heartbreaking. And it was absolutely necessary.  Communication is a keystone in our relationship.  We have to talk to each other, and I love knowing we can talk about everything together. I talked to Chaz more in the first six months of knowing him than I talked to the man I was first married to in the 19 years I knew him.  That’s not an exaggeration and it’s hard to even admit out loud. 

Did we actually throw that baggage off of a mountainside? Figuratively… for the most part… yes, we did. All that really means, is that we addressed what we needed to and then left it all in the past where it belongs, where we no longer live or belong. See the thing is we had to learn from all of the stuff that we’ve been through.  Because of that, we have been able to grow as individuals and as a couple. We are not the same people we were when we were kids, or teenagers or 20-somethings, we aren’t even the same people we were 7 years ago when we met, when I was 44 and he was 50.  We’ve had many, many conversations since then. We know each other better and continue to learn and grow every day. That’s part of life… learning from the past, growing, and living in the present. There is still some baggage, I think there always will be, but the weight is much lighter, because we carry it together. The weight is lighter because we unpack, acknowledge, and work through it… together.