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One
night I was walking home, shoes in one hand, glasses in the other,
when I got angry. Not that I don't get angry once in a while,
but this time it was more of a rage than mere anger. I think if
I'd had a torch I'd have happily set fire to the world and I could
no longer keep it inside. I threw my glasses against a nearby
wall, secretly hoping they'd smash into pieces, and I screamed.
My
name is Chinelo and this is a small part of the story of my life.
I don't remember my parents ever "making" me do anything I didn't
want to. I had the chance to learn how to play the piano, the
guitar, and even tennis, but each time I found myself too scared
to face the challenge. At such times, my parents weren't ones
to push their children into anything, especially if it was not
directly related to academics. That is not to say they didn't
care; they just never saw extracurricular activities as important
as school itself. They were very traditional that way. Thus, they
never encouraged me to quell my fears and take a chance, and I
drifted through my childhood without any special skills outside
of the classroom.
I
can only suppose this was one of the reasons I became the scared
little person I was for so long. For I have always wanted to be
worthy of love, of intelligence, of beauty, but somehow I'd always
felt something was holding me back. It was not until very recently
that I discovered what it was: me.
Never
one to try anything new, I found that I'd been going through life
like an ostrich with its head buried in the sand. I missed participating
in all manner of things because I didn't have to. Now I realize
that if, as a child, I had been forced, or at the very least,
encouraged to join up in things like piano lessons, volleyball
tryouts, track, even the chess club, I might have grown up a stronger,
more confident person, someone who realized long ago that just
because you are scared is no reason to run away.
When
one learns to do something well, after consistent practice and
dedication, one's self gets an invaluable boost. There is no room
for “selfdom,” for how can you doubt your abilities if all you
have to do to prove yourself is to pick up that instrument or
that ball and do it? I firmly believe that when a child is given
the opportunity to learn a new skill, he or she should be encouraged,
even prodded to try. I'm not condoning forcing your child to do
something that they obviously hate to do; however, do not let
your child run away in fear. It will only set up a pattern of
selfdom. And even if your child does try, do not let him quit
without fully proving himself. The worst injustice you can render
to children is to allow them to think they are not good enough,
smart enough, or talented enough to do whatever they wish.
If
by now you detect a note of anger, you are not far from wrong.
I am angry. I wasted so much of my life being scared, that I am
disgusted. This realization hit me a few weeks ago coming back
from a party. I had spent the entire night too scared to speak,
too scared to dance, too scared even to think. And I had come
away angry. Shoes in one hand, glasses in the other, I was enraged.
For as long as I could remember, I was the wall flower sitting
at one end of the room praying for someone to ask me to dance;
hell, I'd gone to my prom alone because I didn't have the balls
to ask anyone. I was suddenly very tired of being frightened.
After
I searched through the bushes, alarming a few bunnies in the process,
I found my glasses. I brushed off bits of turf and grass from
the lens and I put them on. The world seemed a lot clearer now,
and not just because I could see again: my life was in focus.
I got off my knees and resumed my walk home.
Copyright
© 2000 Chinelo Onwualu
Chinelo
Onwualu is an English major at the U.S. International University
in San Diego, CA. Chinelo is a native of Nigeria and has been
here for the better part of a year. This article was originally
written as a creative writing assignment but its message deserves
a wider audience.
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