The end of censoring myself

“I think midlife is when the universe gently places her hands upon your shoulders, pulls you close, and whispers in your ear: I’m not screwing around. It’s time. All of this pretending and performing – these coping mechanisms that you’ve developed to protect yourself from feeling inadequate and getting hurt – has to go.”

I came across this Brené Brown quote one evening recently just after taking part in a Facebook group thread about authenticity and learning to be yourself fully and whole-heartedly, without regard for other people’s opinions. It seemed funny how this came up just then; and then I realised that I had myself been working on a blog post just days earlier, entitled ‘The end of censoring myself’. It suddenly felt as if an entire generation of women had had enough of being nice.

My blog post – the initial draft of what was to eventually be rewritten into this – had been triggered by something as random as a discussion about the sentiment of a car bumper sticker, also in said Facebook group. A friend had lashed out due to frustrations with people, in this instance feminists, who continuously got worked up about the wrong things yet seemed unwilling to support the cause vocally enough and share petitions and articles on request. I had questioned her, it had been a bit tense, we’d had it out and moved on – but I had somehow ended up feeling frazzled, even hurt. A month or two later, enough pieces of the puzzle had fallen into place for me to begin to understand what had happened: I was censoring myself, and she had called me out on it.

It took little more than the realisation for me to decide that I wanted to change. Like the woman who had started the authenticity thread, I knew that I was holding back – but why? Whom was I scared that I might offend? Whom was I trying to protect?

Then another timely piece of writing appeared. After a couple of years’ hiatus, feminist writer Flavia Dzodan returned to the scene with a piece that started like this: “This is about the difficulty of writing about difficulties. The things we do not say because they are not polite or because they are embarrassing. The things we do not talk about because of how they would reflect on those we care.”

There it was: the reason I’d been censoring myself – on Facebook, absolutely, but in many ways far more widely than that. Dzodan continues: “Writing as a woman on the internet is also writing for public scrutiny, to be evaluated in one’s “moral character”. Is this woman embarrassing herself and, by proxy the people in her life? Is this woman bringing “shame” to her family? Unlike men on the internet, we write not only as a reflection of ourselves but of our entire community. When a woman “goes mad” on the internet, she doesn’t just go mad (whatever that means) on her own, she calls into question the patriarchal structures that should have kept her in her place.”

Here’s the thing: I don’t really care what other people think; I’ve just been behaving as if that’s rude of me. But I’m going to write. I’m going to share, and I’m going to ‘like’. Going from A to B might take a bit of time – I’m not even quite sure what B is yet. But what I’m saying is this: if I annoy you, mute me; if you start to really dislike me, unfriend me; if things get uncomfortable, know that it’s coming from a good place. Know that it’s me, fully and whole-heartedly. The watered-down version is no longer in stock. I’m pretty sure I’ll put my foot in it before too long – but I’ll live and I’ll learn and I’ll be able to say that I didn’t censor myself.

All of this pretending and performing has to go. I’m not screwing around. It’s time.

10 Comments

  • This is what I explored in my most recent book, Burning Woman – all about stepping into our power as women, and what control fear and shame have on us when it comes to being heard and seen. Fab post on the horrific Cavan case, I shared it onwards on Facebook, you articulated exactly what has been bothering me about it.

    Just wanted to check in and cheer you on.

  • Your posts can stand with those of Brené and Liz Gilbert, writing that makes me clearer about what I think and feel and what I aspire to. Thanks.

  • I am happy seeing more and more people transforming and “unlayering” themselves. I feel the society puts on people big pressure to be nice person, likeable, etc. And we loose ourselves in this illusion. Individualism is perceived almost as a bad thing. And it surely is from the government’s perspective. The more people have their own opinion the less people is under control. Ah… And we could go on and go on here.
    Good luck on your path 🙂

  • Thanks for this. Really hit home with me and completely relate. Have two Twitter accounts to back it up, one my “public persona”, the other where I tend to vent my less censored reactions.

    I also found you via your comments on the Cavan case and thank you for that, too.

  • I’ve just found your blog due to your “invisible woman” post being shared on the Guardian website as content and I’d like to say thanks – it’s uplifting reading and has actually prodded me to go back to my own dusty Livejournal that hasn’t been accessed for far too long. Less passive reading, more thinking and doing. I hope. Thanks!

  • Good call – being a man there are different set of pressures, but I found that allowing myself to be me 100% of the time where possible, and certainly all the time online and in my writing led to a great deal more satisfaction than wearing the masks I was issued by society.

    I wish you a lot of luck and hope that you find the choice as liberating as I found it and continue to find it.

  • Hearing you, nodding my head in agreement and working on my self censoring! Not quite there yet but thanks for the nudge…