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Every life has a starting point. A foundation that molds who you will become as an adult. Twists and turns, laughter and tears, courage and fear. Lessons are as important early in life as they are when we become adults – and responsible for our decisions.
I remember being a happy kid. I have the greatest parents I could ever have been born to. They sacrificed and took care of me and I usually got whatever I wanted. I also was taught values and lessons that proved to be useful – when I used them. I was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Although I don’t remember a whole lot from my very early childhood, I can remember bits of memories in the form of emotions and I remember swallowing a penny or something like that. Whatever it was, it’s out of my body now.
When I got a little bit older, maybe 4-5 years old, my parents and I moved to New Jersey. I started attending pre-school and I remember meeting other kids for the first time. Even as I look back now, I’ve always felt different and not really accepted by people. Some kids talked to me and we discussed important issues like Legos and crayons. Most of my social interactions were decent, but I could remember the first occasion I felt any sort of basic resentment. It was my birthday, I think it might have been my 5th, and I got this Colorform set in a birthday card. Remember those? They were like stickers (only they were plastic and peeled off – able to be reused) of favorite characters like Garfield and other popular kids’ cartoons during the mid-80s. I got the card and I loved it. We had these little shelves with our names on them at the schoolhouse and I stowed my card away and was going to play with it after my nap.
When I awoke, I went straight to my box and…the card wasn’t there. I felt a sting of anger and hurt. Who would do this to me? This sounds really funny to me now and trivial at best, but back then – you don’t just go around and steal someone’s Colorforms! I remember this event because it was the first time I ever felt betrayed. To a kid, that’s a serious wake-up call to a corrosive and very real emotion: Anger. I felt alone, like everyone was laughing at me. It was a terrible feeling, and no matter how small it seems now, it was a big deal to me as a child.
That feeling passed quickly, as usual for a child. The awareness of resentment, however, would prove to be a recurring theme in my life – both in myself, and what I caused for others.
Aside from that negative experience, I found something that I loved: Art & Music. Creativity. Singing. Drawing. These things were in my blood, given to me by my parents – who were singers and actors. They influenced me a lot throughout my life and always wanted me to succeed. They encouraged me to excel in school and to cultivate my talents, mostly in drawing at that time. So did the rest of my family.
So if I had support and a great family life during my early childhood, why am I talking about resentment and fear?
Well, it’s because they had nothing to do with it. The fear that developed inside of me was a fear of people and social interaction. I was shy, nerdy (still am), not very outgoing, and didn’t trust kids because of being teased and bullied. I found myself making friends with the easiest people I could: the “bad” ones. They were the only ones who accepted me and I said, “Well, okay! I’ll be your friend!” It made me feel good to have “friends” because I felt alone so often. I didn’t know how to interact with people and I always felt like the awkward, weird kid who everyone laughed at. So, I joined the group of awkward, weird kids who everyone laughed at. At least I wasn’t alone.
After 3rd grade was over, we moved again. This time to a different city AND state altogether: Pottstown, Pennsylvania. Now here’s where the fun REALLY began.
My parents and I had to make some adjustments and we made them as well as we could. We moved into a nice, large home in a nice (at the time) neighborhood in a suburban town. Things were changing. I started at a new school and that meant starting over. While I was finding out who I was, I was looking for new friends. The first person who talked to me, we’ll call him Mike, became my first friend in that new town. He lived a block away from me, it turned out, and we had a great time outdoors and making styrofoam airplanes and banging on trashcans in my garage, thinking we were musicians. We were innovators.
There was another kid, too, who we’ll call Jon. Now this one was a troubled kid but I was drawn to him out of that inner need to feel accepted. We did stupid things together, like shoplift candy bars and prank people. I soon heard the wrath from my parents on that lovely choice and I had to stop being his friend. Later on down the road, I ended up going to jail and as I was being released, he was going in. Our roads were separate, but we wound up at the same place – from stealing candy bars, to living behind bars. I guess that could be considered a reunion, but I’ll get to that in a later chapter.
So, my story starts out simply. I was born, I went to school, I was a loner, I starved for acceptance, I was a people-pleaser, I was good in school, and I was the weird kid who no one could relate to. Off to a good start, huh?
Little did I know that this was only the tip of the iceberg. In the following few years, my life would go through another upheaval.
Upcoming: Chapter 2 – The Turbulent Teen Years…Accepted?
Introduction
To anyone reading this blog -
My name is David. I am 28 years old, gainfully employed, and I have a lovely, beautiful, talented woman who is very supportive. Everything I could ever ask for. Living the dream, right?
All of these things didn’t come easily for me. Looking back through my life -up until recently- I had a fear. Well, several fears. On the outside, I could laugh and enjoy parts of life. But that nagging fear – the annoying gnat that keeps trying to fly into my eyelash as I fend him off desperately – kept coming back. In fact, it never went away.
I am not writing this to bring anyone down. In truth, my intentions are the exact opposite. I am hoping that my experience is relative to you, the reader, or someone you know who has developed and is enveloped by what frightens them the most.
My revelation is this: When you voice your concerns, your fears, your vulnerabilities – you deplete the force behind what scares you and you can breathe a little easier. The power is taken from them because you find that you do have a voice and those fears are smaller than you are. Write your fears down, share them with a trusted person. Or if it’s people you’re afraid of and you aren’t ready for that road – confide in your pet turtle, dog, cat, iguana, or ferret. They listen and they don’t judge!
So RELAX!
These forthcoming passages are chapters in my life. Experiences from which I’ve learned important lessons – both through tragedy and triumph. May they offer serenity, hope, and positivity.
Enjoy…
Upcoming: Chapter 1 – The Roots Planted
“The Right Side” / David S. Bradford

