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Tara Slade's avatar

Thank you so much for this post. I went into it thinking it didn't really apply to me. I left it realizing that it runs so deep and so far back that it's who I am.

I prided myself in having been called an 'easy baby' (and 'rightfully so', because I was my mother's first) And as a baby, there was an accident and I was rushed to hospital, and I was 'the calm one' (of course, I was in shock) while my parents were panicking.

From there, I had a reputation to uphold. I went from 'easy this' to 'easy that'. As a small business owner, too, I know I keep my prices too low and I offer too much, and that's all related.

Thank you for this piece. I found it brought up feelings of anger in me, which is incredible because my anger is exceedingly hard to find, and if you can't even find your anger, then you're just doomed to enact trip-on-the-floor low-maintenance forever.

Jessica Rich's avatar

This resonates deeply and unexpectedly. I pride myself on being a strong independent woman who doesn’t “need” my husband or anyone else (as any well respecting first child gifted student born in 1982 is), but find myself telling my husband that I would still like help, but then quickly back off when I hear myself asking. At work, I have said repeatedly that I strive to be the easiest employee any of my managers have. If they have a team, I want them to say “wow, Jessica is the easiest - I barely have to do anything to manage her”. But that also leaves me feeling like the “set it and forget it” employee desperate for attention or validation. Just this week I told myself that I’m going to start having the audacity that I see younger generations displaying at work (because sometimes it makes me want to clutch my elder millennial pearls, but they get away with it and are thriving!). Thank you for this essay and journal prompt!

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