“If your number one goal is to make sure that everyone likes and approves of you, then you risk sacrificing your uniqueness, and therefore, your excellence.” ~Unknown
I envied the clusters of kids at recess, playing games from which I was always excluded, not just because I couldn’t play them, but also because I was the class outcast. I envied them, the ease with which they moved; their grace, speed, and precision as they ran, kicked, danced, dove. Things I could hardly hope to do.
But it wasn’t just my Cerebral Palsy. It was something that wasn’t really about my looks or behavior or the fact that my day-to-day life was so utterly different from theirs.
It was everything: the thick, black boys’ shoes that I wore because they could fit the orthotics strapped to my legs, and the long white knee socks that I wore with them, their cuffs folded over the Velcro straps to prevent chafing.
It wasn’t anything you could put your finger on, something that could be explained or proven; it was in the tone of their voices, in the endless, hated laughter.
I couldn’t honestly complain to a teacher or a principal that they were making fun of me because of the silly lunch bag I carried, couldn’t make a scene because I was the only one out of thirty kids who didn’t receive an invitation to a classmate’s birthday party or a dopey paper heart on my desk at Valentine’s Day.
In twelve years of public school there were maybe three incidents that involved actual contact abuse: a shove, a chair pulled out from under me when I went to sit down. One time, while working on a group project, I chimed in with a comment, and one of the girls twisted my arm and told me if I spoke again, they would kill me.
The rest of the time, it was subterfuge, gaslight incidents, “pranks” that were anything but comical.
They would rifle my coat pockets, not to steal anything valuable, but for ammunition: every tiny detail of my life was mocking-fodder, something to be laughed about behind palms, whispered through textbook pages; nasty comments and caricatures doodled on notebook paper and passed when the teacher wasn’t looking.
Those girls were suspicious of something they didn’t understand, and jealous of what they thought of as special treatment. When they paid attention to me at all, it was pointedly catty. The rest of the time, they were cold.
They would rearrange things in my desk when I was out of the room, hide things or simply mess them up. I was too damnably, painfully shy to confront them; the few pathetic times I managed to bring it up they feigned utter innocence and acted like I was crazy.
It became almost a relief to be ignored, even though it was incredibly lonely. When you are abused every day, to be passed over feels like a gift. I didn’t know how to articulate my loneliness.
Like when I sat alone at lunch because the other girls wouldn’t “let” me sit at their table. When I sat alone with a book at recess, the yard monitor told me, “Stop reading and talk to somebody; how do you expect to make friends if you don’t hang out with the other girls?”
She didn’t get it. None of them did, those harried, overworked authority figures. They had too much to do to pay attention to one friendless kid, and one so quiet, so polite; they had other students to deal with, the troublemakers, the ones constantly sentenced with detention, the ones from troubled families who were cutting class and already smoking at age eleven, who mouthed off and were on the verge of flunking.
So they forgot about me.
My parents tried to solve my problems. There were years when there were meetings with principals, guidance counselors, and the school psychologist several times a month. The bureaucrats of the school system just wanted the situation to go away.
The school board tried to make it seem like it was my fault: I was just an awkward, oversensitive kid who needed to get along better with her peers. The guidance counselor, a Pollyanna optimist who had smiley faces all over her office and gave equally vapid advice, told me to try harder, she was sure that the girls wanted to be my friends. She was useless.
My parents said that I would find my niche in college, that kids would mature and see how special I really was. They tried to help me. But no matter how carefully I dressed like the cool girls, or tried to talk like them, watched the “right” TV shows and read the popular books and bought pop CDs and the cute accessories that they all wore, it never worked.
I even tried to bribe those kids to be my friends, a memory which still, after all this time, leaves me feeling a mixture of anger and shame. Anger at them for their pointless cruelty, for making me cry at night in bed, shame at myself and my behavior. I was like a woman throwing herself at a man who has absolutely no interest in her even though she is in love with him.
They rejected me, and I tagged along after them. I found out when their birthdays were and left little gift bags on their desk. My pitiful attempts at friendship only led to more rejection, more laughter.
Later on, when the anger surpassed the shame I felt, I longed to scream at them. Some brilliant, caustic kiss-off, an aggressive statement that would leave them shocked and gaping. I wanted to hurt them the way they had hurt me so many times.
So often I was embarrassed by the specter of my Cerebral Palsy, the spasms, the startled jerks and twitches, my ugly leg braces, and the way everything had to be done for me, like I was an infant.
When I dropped a heavy textbook in the utterly silent classroom, it hit the ugly industrial linoleum with a thud that seemed to echo, and my body burned with shame. The teacher gave me a dirty look for daring to disrupt the class, and the students tittered, no doubt whispering about what a spaz, what a weird, clumsy thing I was.
I hated myself for my blind devotion to the clique, and my desperate overtures of friendship.
I hated myself for being a skinny, ugly little freak with big glasses and unruly curls and braces on both my teeth and my legs. I hated those girls for their careless, stinging words and their easy perfection.
Whenever I have a bad day, when I feel fragile and insecure, when my manuscript has been rejected or I am having an “ugly” day where my skin is broken out and my hair won’t behave, it all comes back to me, and the memories make me cringe.
I spend more time than I want to admit thinking about those years when I was the class geek, eternally uncool, a scapegoat for adolescent insecurity. I spent years trying to be someone else, and when the futility of that finally sunk in, I spent years trying to figure out who I was.
I am no longer a victim. I have a certain measure of confidence in my choices and my work, and I have scraped a veneer of self-assurance from self-help books and years of therapy.
I recently purchased a bumper sticker that says, “There Is No Alternative To Being Yourself.”
When I consider my life, I do not regret my own hard-won authenticity. I regret the times I tried so hard to be what I’m not.
I think I simply got sick of struggling to fit into some mold that was entirely the wrong shape for me. It was so much less painful to do what felt right for me, to dress how I wanted, to say exactly what I felt even when nobody else agreed, and not worry about whether they did or not. It is incredibly liberating not to care.
There is no magical, fast-acting cure-all for alleviating loneliness and developing confidence. And the truth is, I don’t really know how it happened. I read self-help books, I saw therapists, and I had an incredible support team of family and friends who loved me and helped me believe in myself.
I know how painful it is, and the only thing I have to offer is my honesty, my truth. I hope that my story provides some comfort and solidarity to those who need it.
Photo by Jenna-Carver

About Jessica Goody
Jessica Goody’s work has appeared in many newspapers, anthologies, and blogs. She received an Honorable Mention in the 2011 Lucidity Poetry Journal International Competition and was a Quarter-Finalist in the 2012 Mary Ballard Poetry Prize Competition. She has written two volumes of poetry and a mystery novella.
I loved your write up Jessica. You are one awesome angel sent to earth! It is very much true and similar when we try to fit into someone else shoes. Same way even I did during my school and I suck big time in making friends because I don’t gel with their wavelength. Now though I have a very few friends, they love me. Reason is I expressed myself the way I am, and they agreed with what I am. Whatever hatred I had in my life, the same my husband loved in me. He proposed me by listing those and I was in a real big shock when he said that. Not sure what bigger life can offer me. Keep doing good job my best wishes 🙂 🙂
Yes, your experience may have been exaggerated by your visible condition, and yes, children can be the most cruel little things (that’s as polite as i can put it on here!). What happened to you was downright terrible, but I am proud to read of how hard your parents worked to address the issue.
Perhaps your parents relentlessness has been passed to you too? I know a lot of people that will gain perspective, and strength, from reading this.
Thank you for sharing.
– Razwana
Fantastic post, Jessica. So brave, so true. Made my day…and made me think about the days of my own kids and their friends at school in a whole new way. Thank you so much. I went to your website—loved your poetry. Keep going. Keep writing. Stay beautiful. You are. Here’s a book for you: THE FIRESTARTER SESSIONS. My wife and I can’t put it down!
Jessica this post reminded me of times I was bullied. Still today many years later I can remember the pain. I did not tell anyone I was being bullied and so suffered in silence. I would cry myself to sleep and be scared of going into school the next day for fear of what the bully’s would do to me. I went onto become a therapist and the experiences served me well to grow my empathy for others and I sometimes wonder how the bullies faired with their lives and if they found a more spiritual direction as I did. Their loss, not mine – same goes for you!
It is so horrible being bullied, I was at school and not telling anyone about it made the pain worse. I would cry myself to sleep at night wondering what the bullies would do to me the next day. What the situation did teach me was empathy and I later went onto to study to become a therapist – so something good did come from an awful situation. I often wonder what happened to the bullies as they were obviously suffering more than me.
You get bullied, don’t deal with the negative impacts and become a bully yourself or live life feeling not worthy of standing up for yourself and developing a balance self-esteem. The children that cause the bullying are not in a place where they can understand the impact they are making and are probably being lead by very emotionally unstable parents. Tragically we face people with several scares of a rough childhood and it stays with us for the rest of our lives.
Some people find comfort in the idea that ‘hurt people, hurt people’ forgiving these people for their actions because they we just doing the best they could at the time with the feelings and emotions they had. If their circumstances were different 9/10 times they would have done different.
I think this is a lovely post, Jessica! As others also, I have been going through similar times in my life, but first of all, let me tell you, I am so happy for you that you are in a different “place” right now (Not geographically-speaking; I mean situation-wise and also mind-wise.). 🙂
I have actually also been wondering whether I should really “go for my dreams”, because I was scared that the bullies from my childhood and youth would notice and I*d be pulled down again because they*d spread rumours or anything along this. It is not anybody*s right to suck the light out off anybody else*s life, whatsoever, and I came to realise this.
I myself have tried to “please” the bullies at some point of my life, too, and after a week or so of acting/looking like “them” I was told my shirt wouldn*t match the rest of the clothes, which led to me realising that, no matter how hard I try to be like them, they*ll always find a reason to pull me down, so I could be myself as well.
I went through a major change of my life, but it led to me at least LIKING myself … And helped me greatly to develop self-confidence & also prevent me from being harmed by others. Never ever do something to yourself just for the sake of satisfying other people*s need to look down upon you.
Love to everybody out there reading this & thanks for sharing your story!
What a great post, Jessica. It sounds like you have come a long way and your story is inspiring to me, and probably to many others. When I was in 1st grade, I kept a birthday invite for one of my classmates because she wasn’t very popular. When my mom found out she made me invite this classmate and her birthday present (a small pinball machine) was my favorite of the bunch. I learned a valuable lesson that day and looking back I realize my not wanting to invite this classmate had nothing to do with her and everything to do with me trying to fit in with my other “more popular” classmates. At any rate, like I said earlier, cool and inspiring post. And congrats on your poetry accolades!
Thank you for sharing your story, and successful steps from adversity! I am proud of you for sharing all this raw vulnerability, it is a gift that you are sharing! So many people, including myself, who have experienced such awful bullying as children, and need stories of understanding, unity, encouragement, and inspiration to know it will be okay. This part that you said, “It was so much less painful to do what felt right for me,” That is such a beautiful message to emphasize to kids everywhere! Our world wld look much different! 🙂 BEAUTIFUL and appreciated post!
Thank you for sharing. I can totally relate with this sadly… And you made me think of where I am now and what a long way I’ve gone 🙂 I’m not yet where I need to be, but I’m close. Thanks for making me realise this 🙂
What a powerful and heart-wrenching story. It is so painful to hear and experience such interactions, and what’s worse the demons that people carry after being in such a dynamic. After being bullied as child, and growing up in an unstable home, I was susceptible to being a victim, even as an adult, I realized. Confidence and self love are effective tools to get out of the mold and habit. Ugh, wish it was easier sometimes, but this is life and all we have and it is totally worth it! Best of luck and continued empowerment to you!
Wow! I’m sincerely impressed with your brutal honesty and raw emotions expressed in this article. Not only did you have to deal with bullying and feeling excluded from your peer group, you also had to deal with the challenges involved with Cerebral Palsy! I’m truly amazed by you and wish you so much luck and happiness in the future! Take care!
why are schools so cruel.. this school reads more like a corrective facility than a place to love learning or fellow man in all its unique individuality . There is no manual for surviving it – maybe that would be a best seller to write – a How to Survive High School .
you’re an amazing person!
Thank you Jessica for your story. I totally feel you. I did not have your physical challenges but was awkward and mercilessly picked on for everything appearance/mannerisms etc. I too still feel the scars of shame I felt for the things “wrong” with me. I tried so hard to fit in and be cool and accepted. Some of us were just made to stand out which what was awkward back then is awesome now. I don’t rely on many due to my past hurts and I am proud that I have the courage to face things alone or without relying on friends or family but I need it sometimes. I feel I have been embarrassed enough for two life times so I just let there be “no shame in my game” now so to speak. I just really appreciate you taking the time to write. Now if I can just figure out the balance between not caring and not being a b*tch 24/7 LOL. Much love and hugs.