It Was Never My Fault: My Personal Journey from Blame to Acceptance

http://dlcuocsong.blogspot.com/2013/10/it-was-never-my-fault-my-personal.html
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It Was Never My Fault: My Personal Journey from Blame to Acceptance |
My world was changing in every sense of the phrase.
At the age of 12, I was moving from the Ukraine to Canada. I was leaving all of
my friends and family as well as everything that I had known since the day I
was born. I was going to be alone, an outsider; I was going to be the immigrant
in all of my classes. If the life changes experienced through adolescence
weren’t grueling enough, now, I had to cope with moving to an entirely foreign
place with nothing but my parents and a suitcase.
I had an incredibly difficult time adapting to my
new environment and my new life. I was immersed in a culture completely unknown
to me. It wasn’t easy making new friends; especially when your first languages
differ from one another. I yearned for the company of my friends and extended
family back home.
At the age of 14, my world came crashing down; my
parents were divorcing. My father’s alcoholism became so dangerous that it was
unbearable for my mother. After the divorce, my mom suffered from severe
depression. It was debilitating and as a result, she couldn’t work any longer
and went on disability. I lost my father to the bottle and I lost my mother to
her own despair.
I couldn’t believe that my family was ripped apart
and it was entirely my fault. I couldn’t help either of my parents. My father
was more focused on his next drink than spending time with his only daughter. I
couldn’t save him no matter how much I tried. My mother was too miserable to
get out of bed let alone make me lunch for school or take care of me in any
way. I thought that I was the reason my father drank, for my mom’s depression
and for my parents’ divorce. I blamed myself for everything and I just couldn’t
cope with life anymore.
I tried to hide my pain with the drugs I started
using, find comfort in dating any guy that gave me the slightest bit of
attention, almost dropped out of school and when that wasn’t enough, I started
cutting myself. I released the emotions that I couldn’t cope with through my
promiscuous and destructive behaviors. Since I couldn’t be there for my parents
and they weren’t there for me, I felt alone and couldn’t find a reason to live
anymore. My depression worsened and I tried to take my own life… twice.
It was after my second suicide attempt that my Aunt
Anna came and rescued me (my mother didn’t even care). My dear Aunt Anna took
me to see a psychologist; this was the turning point in my life. Six months
into therapy, I had completely changed my perception of myself as well as my
self-esteem. I started realizing my own self-worth and valuing all that I had
to offer myself as well as others. I went from blaming myself for my parents’
failures to accepting none of them were my fault or even in my control. I was
becoming a new person that was discovering my own intelligence and even, my own
talents.
Seven years later, I am happily married to a guy who
loves and adores me. I know my marriage can and will be different from my
parents’ disastrous one. Last year, I graduated college with degree in
Kinesiology and got accepted to medical school at McMaster University. I’m an
aspiring psychiatrist with a desire to help troubled children inspired through
my own personal journey of change.
By Olga Pavlenko