The day arrived unexpectedly that the curse by which I had been bound for a long time freed me finally.
Because my mother had nurtured excessive self-consciousness in me
since my childhood, I had cared about how I look, how I behave, and what
others think of me more than enough. I would be drenched in sweat from
chatting casually with others as a thought I should look my best tenses
me up abnormally. I’m now aware that this nature of mine was the culprit
that cornered me with pursuit of fame and wealth although I became a
singer-songwriter purely from love for music in the beginning.
On that particular day, I got in the communal spa of my apartment
building as usual.It was an evening bath time for the regular residents
and quite a few people were taking a bath there. Among them was this
woman who had moved in about two years ago. My bath time coincides with
hers every day and hostility toward her had gradually grown inside me.
She is thin and beautiful, a little younger than I am. She is always
posturing and self-assured. For some reason, she imitates almost
everything I do in the spa, from the way of taking a bath to bath tools
she brings in. Whatever she does gets on my nerves, such as her way of
walking, washing, and talking. She practices beauty exercises in the
Jacuzzi, and does the facial treatment in the hot tub. Those routines of
hers irritate me immensely when they happen to come into my sight.
Since I don’t figure out why I dislike her so much, I asked my partner
one day. According to his analysis, it’s because she is the one I want
to become but I know I can’t become. It sums up all envy. That explains
it indeed.
It’s common that people don’t wear a swimsuit at a spa in Japan. This
communal spa also adopts the Japanese practice, and the hot tubs, the
Jacuzzi and the sauna must be taken all naked. I’m not thin nor
beautiful, and I know it’s no competition between that woman and me.
Nevertheless, I hold my breath and squeeze in my chubby belly as much as
possible spontaneously whenever I pass her by. It’s so silly of me to
try to look better, even in vain, but I can’t help it.
And the thing happened. I was taking the Jacuzzi when she stepped in
and joined me. I stepped out right away because avoiding her was my
usual habit not to let her see my unshapely body. I was squeezing my
belly and walking beside her on the stone floor toward my shower booth
hurriedly because I was inside her sight. Then, right in front of her
eyes, my foot slipped and I saw in slow motion my body flying in the air
like in ‘Home Alone’. I landed on the stone surface with my buttocks
and my left hand.
Before a scare or pain, it was embarrassment that came first. I stood
up immediately as if the fall had been part of some sequence of motion.
Although other users were all washing their body in the shower booth,
the only one that was in the tub and witnessed what I did was, of all
people, the woman whom I didn’t want to let see most. She jumped out of
the tub worrying, and kindly asked me, “Are you all right?”. Oddly
enough, my instant reply was, “I’m OK. I do this all the time!” although
I had never fallen there before. Even in the case like this, I still
tried to make face by fabricating an accident into my custom. I laughed
and shrugged off, and walked back to my shower booth.
I noticed pain. But it was nothing compared to the massive amount of
embarrassment that overwhelmed me. I couldn’t believe it really
happened, nor could I imagine myself being any clumsier. I Home-Aloned
naked before the cool woman whom I had regarded as a rival by flattering
myself but in reality who had been way out of my league. I was
literally stunned with an extremity of embarrassment. I sincerely wished
to make time rewind. I took a hot tub with absence of mind in shock and
the woman joined in again. My mouth uttered weird words one more time,
“I’m sorry my fall disturbed you. It’s a usual thing to me, but
surprises others.” I was persistent to keep up appearances. She replied,
“Oh, it’s all right, only if you didn’t get hurt.”
Back in my apartment, pain assaulted earnestly in my hand and
buttocks. The palm of my left hand already turned purple and swelled. I
dreaded to think about broken bones. But the embarrassment appalled me
even more. I felt sick to my stomach with my outrageous
self-consciousness. I wondered why I couldn’t admit I did the folly.
I’ve been clumsy all my life. I’ve been a comic who makes a blunder
all the time. No matter how hard I pretend to be cool, it has never
worked. I should have stopped denying that long before. The fall ordered
me to accept it already. I felt as if I had looked at myself in the
mirror for the first time in my life. The reflection of myself
disappointed me but somehow relieved my burden. I came out of the
illusion that pretending can change who I am. I’ve felt easy on my
shoulders since the fall, walking around as my true self...
Showing posts with label self-consciousness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-consciousness. Show all posts
Saturday, March 9, 2019
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Bruises hr615
The reason I am excessively self-conscious is apparently because my
mother hammered in my childhood how I should look and behave.
Appearance is the most essential thing in my mother’s life. She always puts face-saving first among other things. That inevitably leads to her daughter’s reputation. For it, she doesn’t care how her daughter feels or what she wants. People’s opinions are everything to her.
When I was in junior high school, the local public transportation bus I took everyday to school slammed on the brakes suddenly one day and threw me out of the multiple seat at the back. I hit my shin against a metal bar. After I got off the bus at the nearest bus stop from my home, I did my usual 15-minute walk to my house limping. My parents happened to pass by in their car on that particular day. I thought how lucky I was to get a ride when I had a sore leg of all occasions. As soon as I got in the car, my mother bawled me out for limping without asking what had happened to me. “You’re walking like a vagabond. How embarrassing!”, she scolded. She ignored my say that I had a small accident on the bus and my leg hurt as if it wasn’t the point at all. She kept lashing out with her mantra, “How would others think if they saw!?” It must have been so shocking to her that she had grabbed every chance to bring up the way of my walking and nagged at me about that one-time-only limping for years. Now, the sight of my limping has haunted her strongly enough for her to believe I have a slight limp by nature.
Walk while eating used to be regarded as bad manners in Japanese society. My mother made me go to the cram school to prepare for an entrance exam of a renowned junior high when I was an elementary school pupil. The classes were three days a week after regular school hours and the cram school was far from home, which it took 40 minutes by train. It was usually close to 7 p.m. when the class was over, and we were all hungry. My fellow students would buy chocolate and eat at the platform while waiting for the train home. I had never done that as I didn’t have extra money and was forbidden to eat standing in public by my mother. One of them gave me a piece one evening. I stashed it to have it back home. But I became very hungry in that particular evening when I transferred to another train at the terminal station. I had put a piece of chocolate in my mouth when I arrived at the nearest station from my house. My mother happened to be there to pick me up for once. She almost screamed, “You’re chewing gum in public!” She ignored my say that I had never done this before and the thing was chocolate not gum. She kept wailing, “You chew gum in public! How embarrassing! How would others think if they saw!?” To this day, when she meets me, she still nags at me about how disappointed she was when she saw me chewing gum that evening.
Those instances could go on endlessly. She didn’t allow me to go to the school nurse's room no matter how sick I felt at school because it looked bad in front of other kids. When we had our house robbed, she stopped me from calling the police because it looked bad to our neighbors. She made me wear the class president pin wherever I went during my term for show. I was raised by a lump of vanity like my mother and have become a vain person myself who cares too much about looks and behavior unconsciously.
My family took a trip by train early in my teens and I missed a step of the stairs at the station with my new unaccustomed high-heeled boots. I fell and rolled down the stairs over a dozen steps. I stood up at the bottom of the stairs despite pain. My mother walked down the stairs calmly and indifferently instead of rushing over to help me, and said, “I didn’t think it was you. I thought it was a stranger.” Not one ‘Are you all right?’ came out of her mouth that day. After we checked in a hotel, I saw my body in the bathroom. The half side of my body was covered with dark bruises. I imagine how wonderful it would be that someday the bruises on my mind finally healed and disappeared along with my massive self-consciousness...
Appearance is the most essential thing in my mother’s life. She always puts face-saving first among other things. That inevitably leads to her daughter’s reputation. For it, she doesn’t care how her daughter feels or what she wants. People’s opinions are everything to her.
When I was in junior high school, the local public transportation bus I took everyday to school slammed on the brakes suddenly one day and threw me out of the multiple seat at the back. I hit my shin against a metal bar. After I got off the bus at the nearest bus stop from my home, I did my usual 15-minute walk to my house limping. My parents happened to pass by in their car on that particular day. I thought how lucky I was to get a ride when I had a sore leg of all occasions. As soon as I got in the car, my mother bawled me out for limping without asking what had happened to me. “You’re walking like a vagabond. How embarrassing!”, she scolded. She ignored my say that I had a small accident on the bus and my leg hurt as if it wasn’t the point at all. She kept lashing out with her mantra, “How would others think if they saw!?” It must have been so shocking to her that she had grabbed every chance to bring up the way of my walking and nagged at me about that one-time-only limping for years. Now, the sight of my limping has haunted her strongly enough for her to believe I have a slight limp by nature.
Walk while eating used to be regarded as bad manners in Japanese society. My mother made me go to the cram school to prepare for an entrance exam of a renowned junior high when I was an elementary school pupil. The classes were three days a week after regular school hours and the cram school was far from home, which it took 40 minutes by train. It was usually close to 7 p.m. when the class was over, and we were all hungry. My fellow students would buy chocolate and eat at the platform while waiting for the train home. I had never done that as I didn’t have extra money and was forbidden to eat standing in public by my mother. One of them gave me a piece one evening. I stashed it to have it back home. But I became very hungry in that particular evening when I transferred to another train at the terminal station. I had put a piece of chocolate in my mouth when I arrived at the nearest station from my house. My mother happened to be there to pick me up for once. She almost screamed, “You’re chewing gum in public!” She ignored my say that I had never done this before and the thing was chocolate not gum. She kept wailing, “You chew gum in public! How embarrassing! How would others think if they saw!?” To this day, when she meets me, she still nags at me about how disappointed she was when she saw me chewing gum that evening.
Those instances could go on endlessly. She didn’t allow me to go to the school nurse's room no matter how sick I felt at school because it looked bad in front of other kids. When we had our house robbed, she stopped me from calling the police because it looked bad to our neighbors. She made me wear the class president pin wherever I went during my term for show. I was raised by a lump of vanity like my mother and have become a vain person myself who cares too much about looks and behavior unconsciously.
My family took a trip by train early in my teens and I missed a step of the stairs at the station with my new unaccustomed high-heeled boots. I fell and rolled down the stairs over a dozen steps. I stood up at the bottom of the stairs despite pain. My mother walked down the stairs calmly and indifferently instead of rushing over to help me, and said, “I didn’t think it was you. I thought it was a stranger.” Not one ‘Are you all right?’ came out of her mouth that day. After we checked in a hotel, I saw my body in the bathroom. The half side of my body was covered with dark bruises. I imagine how wonderful it would be that someday the bruises on my mind finally healed and disappeared along with my massive self-consciousness...
Labels:
behavior,
bruises,
bus,
Childhood,
daughter,
Japan,
Japanese,
junior high school,
Kyoto,
looks,
mother,
self-consciousness,
unconscious
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