The Blue Collar Buddha Podcast
⚠️ Trigger Warning: This episode contains discussion of childhood abuse, sexual abuse, and suicide. This is another one of those episodes that I wasn't going to post. And if you’ve been with me for a bit, then you know that there seem to be times when I question whether or not I should an episode, and if we want to be undeniably clear about the why, it’s because, and some of you already know this, and that’s some disclosures leave me, us, feeling so fucking vulnerable that we really do think that maybe we might just want to keep it to ourselves. This is one of those. That probably tells you everything you need to know about why I did this one and am sharing. It’s a theme and promise to myself. If I am going to “be real” then, fucking be real, and as such, if I post it, it’s gotta be real and true. Otherwise, it stays on the hard drive. No editing out the life that drives this. We deserve better than that trifling shit. And you all know what I mean by that…. I was 13 or 14 years old when my parents sent me to a psychologist. Not because they had any idea what was actually happening to me — in the house, next door, inside my own head. Or in my heart. They just knew that their kid had changed and they wanted to know why. So there I was, sitting across from a stranger with my hands in my pockets, and something that had been building pressure inside of me that I needed to let out; it felt like it was strangling me. It needed to came out. I just didn’t know how badly I needed that to happen. Or what it would cost me when I did let it out. She, the professional that I was supposed to trust, asked me a question that closed every door I had just opened. I went home. My mother said what she said. I went downstairs, put on KISS, and crawled under my bed. I'm 60 years old and that's something I've never told another living soul until right now. This episode isn't a lesson. It's not organized and it's not supposed to be. It's me sitting behind a microphone doing what I used to call mundane musings — which really just means I needed to hear myself think out loud. About the psychologist. About the surveys and the theories and the schools of thought that never answered the actual question. About two POWs in the same camp who come out and become completely different people. About November 2nd, 1994. And about the one question that changed everything for me when I finally stopped running long enough to ask it: What makes it true? I know what it feels like to think you don't belong here — and I know what it feels like to be wrong about that. Come sit with me for a little bit…. The Site [https://www.theloveofyourlifetime.com]
48 episodios
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