I want to know all about you - what are your dreams, your fears, your idiosyncracies? What keeps you up at night? What do you love about yourself? What do you hate? I feel other peoples' feelings like they are my own. If you're sad, I'll cry for you. If you're jubilant, my heart soars.
I have a harder time drumming up this kind of curiosity about myself, though.
I just finished a book by Christopher Kennedy Lawford called Moments of Clarity. Lawford, who is a recovering alcoholic and addict, interviewed dozens of celebrites, politicians - people in the public eye - about the moment they knew they had a problem with addiction. This is not the same thing as rock bottom, mind you. A few of the people he interviewed had a moment of clarity about their addiction and proceeded to continue drinking or using for some time. What Lawford was exploring was the moment they knew, with frightening lucidity, that substance abuse had taken the reins; that they were powerless over alcohol, drugs, or both.
This got me thinking about how difficult it can be to really know yourself. We all experience those moments where we really see ourselves, stripped of pretense or showmanship. Sometimes, for me, it's something small. I get dressed up for a night out, and leave the house thinking I look really put together. Later I'll catch a glimpse of myself reflected in a window, or a mirror, and think: what was I thinking, wearing this? I will see how I was trying to project some image of myself that doesn't quite work. That isn't me.
I do this with bigger things, too, like addiction and recovery. I remember my own moment of clarity, the moment I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that I had a problem with alcohol. It happened in a flash. Some lucid part of my brain broke through and shouted: what are you doing? This is no way to live! It felt it like a punch in the gut. As quickly as it came, it was gone, replaced by my carefully constructed justifications and rationales. By my denial. I continued drinking for two more years.
Oddly, in recovery it feels like the stakes are higher. I feel, on some days, like the only thing between me and the web of addiction is my ability to try to be truthful with myself. This can be exhausting. Who wants to spend much time peeking into the darker corners of their psyche? The temptation to overlook reality, to gloss over the parts that make me uncomfortable, is huge.

In recovery, unanesthetized, the little bells that ring in my head that say something's off here, are harder to ignore. I know that left to my own resources I can dress up any problem until it feels comfortable. Until it fits with my perception of myself, or how I'd like to be. Until it makes me stop squirming. All I can do to protect myself is open my mouth. Rat myself out. Turn to a trusted friend and say does this make sense to you?