Let Me Tell You A Secret…

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Have you noticed how many secrets there are.

For everything that exists, and even things which don’t, there is a secret to it.

A secret to success. A secret to being confident. A secret to eternal youth. A secret to obtaining vast amounts of money. A secret to curing you of all your ailments, addictions, and perceived bad bits.

And they are all for sale, at a reasonable price, and surely you would want to own these secrets. Collect them, and put them in a special secret display case.

I thought secrets were secret. Never to be told. Once you reveal a secret it is no longer a secret.

I don’t like it when friends want to tell me a secret.

I don’t feel special when someone says ‘Let me tell you a secret…’, as though I am being initiated into a secret society.

I don’t enjoy keeping secrets. It is a burden which doesn’t belong to me, which I am being asked to carry around for an undetermined amount of time, maybe for the rest of my life. The less I have to carry, the quicker and further I can go… wherever it is that I am going in such a hurry which requires the least about og baggage.

And I don’t think that sharing the weight of a big secret is helping these sharers of secrets either.

In fact several friendships have ended because my friends felt the need to share something with me which they regretted sharing, and then couldn’t face me because they knew I knew this thing about them and it really bothered them. It bothered me too, not because of what they told me, but because it was something which ruined the friendship.

They were not bad secrets, as in ‘Hey, btw, I killed someone and covered it up.’, like in the movies. They were actually banal secrets, as in ‘I hate strawberries, but I tell everyone how much I love them so they won’t think I’m weird’. But the people sharing the secrets believed them to be so important that telling it was a confession to a priest, and who wants to socialise with the priest to whom they’ve confessed their sins?

The secrets which have been shared with me, are still with me, still secret, still kept never to be shared… luckily I have forgotten most of them. That is usually what I try to do when I can’t avoid being the receiver of a secret. Forget it, cast it away and out of my mind. I have enough bits and pieces of my own to drag around, secrets about myself which are secret because they are the parts of me I feel would scare people away if they knew about them, parts which have scared people in the past and now I know they must be kept hidden.

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They are not bad secrets, they are banal, but when they slip out of the dark and into the light they cause fear because they change how people see me. I don’t deliberately try to deceive people about myself, who I am and what I am like, but I do like to remain elusive, the shape of a bear in the shadows of the forest rather than out in the open fields where I can be shot by an overenthusiastic hunter.

So, anyway, I’m going to share one of my secrets with you. Don’t worry, you don’t know me, I don’t know you, this is one of those strangers telling strangers things they would never tell their friends. We’ll keep it between us and no one else need ever know because we will never cross paths again.

I don’t cry.

I can’t cry.

Not because I am lachrymose intolerant or anything like that, but because… well, there are many reasons why I don’t and can’t cry.

When I was a child I was trained not to cry. The training stuck. My trainer was very pleased with the results, and thought that they had done me an inestimable favour for which I had to be eternally grateful. They saw crying as a weakness, and wanted me to be strong… not for myself but for them. My crying annoyed them, stirred their own inner world of secrets up and caused them grief.

Road to hell paved with… questionable intentions disguised as… good intentions, and all of that.

The truth is a little more complex.

I do cry and can cry, but I do so very rarely, never as much as I would like to, and often the tears are imaginary rather than real, wet, and warm.

I prefer to be alone when I do it, without interruptions, intrusions, or someone there to witness my tears. I don’t want to be comforted, told not to be sad, not to cry, and that everything is going to be all right. I don’t need that. I am a thinker, I can reason away my tears in a split second. If I cry it is because I want to indulge myself with the luxury of rivers of grief and melancholy, to wash away that which cannot be, will never be, and maybe never was. I want my body to convulse with sobbing pleasure, my eyes to turn red and puffy, my nose to swell until I can no longer breathe, and my mouth to emit sounds of unearthly pain.

Finding the solitude and seclusion to do all of that is very difficult.

The few times when I have been inspired to cry always seem to be at the most inappropriate moments, when the presence of people is imminent, or I have too many things to do and just don’t have the time.

When I am alone, and know I will be so for a while, I often don’t have the urge, I am too happy to have some time to myself to feel sad enough to unleash the waters trapped in the dam.

 

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Occasionally I manage to squeeze out a tear or two, but it takes an enormous effort, and it is never truly satisfying. And crying is very satisfying when done properly. It is a marvelous stress release. I know this because I went through a wonderful, but very brief period in my life when I cried myself to sleep every night. It felt awful, tragic, and euphoric all at once. I was absolutely miserable at the time, but I had a small ray of sunlight in the form of the tears which flooded from my eyes like a Japanese cartoon character. I was so relieved that I had finally learned to cry, it mitigated some of the horrendous misery of my life at the time.

I didn’t realise that it was just a phase. I wished I’d known that then so that I could have cried tears for the future.

This is a banal secret.

It’s banal because it is not unusual, or shameful, or even really worth keeping a secret at all.

It’s also not a secret. I have spoken about this before, openly… it just always feels like it is a secret even when it’s not.

These days I use words as my tears. When I am woefully melancholic, I write. It is not as satisfying or as warm, thrilling, and cathartic as the real thing, but it does ease the pain. Not all my words express silent cries of suffering, sometimes they are tears of joy, of mirth, of the wonder that is just being alive without any reason other than that I am.

So, are secrets still a secret once they are told?

 

TearDrop

Let me tell you another secret… My words have dried up like my tears at the moment, and this is a very old post, one of the first which I wrote. I’ve re-edited it a bit because it meant something different to me then than it does now. Sometimes everything is a secret… in some way.

8 comments

    • Thank you 🙂

      I agree, sharing a secret does create a bond between people. I think it very much depends on what kind of secret it is, different types of secrets create different types of bonds. There are certain confidences which are like an embrace, a shared love or tenderness. I wasn’t thinking of those when I wrote this.

      You are right, there are some secrets which are special to share and which are not a burden but a boon.

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  1. I think this is a problem we share. I was told never to cry as a child by my overbearing father. To this day, I only cry alone and when really distraught, and not for long. This kind of repression is difficult. As for secrets, I would rather the people I know don’t tell me any (personal people) because it always puts me in a terrible bind. I tell none and hear none with those close to me, if I can avoid them. You always right posts that cut to the core of our human nature. Thank you.

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    • Thank you 🙂

      It is strange how many things we take on, especially when we are young, which don’t really belong to us but become a part of us. In some ways our parents’ need to stop us from crying is a burdensome secret. Our crying was a burden to them in some way. They wanted to keep us quiet and made us responsible for keeping ourselves quiet because it bothered them, perhaps because it revealed their own secrets which they wanted to keep hidden, maybe from themselves most of all. They passed the burden on to us, and we accepted it. Perhaps that’s why we don’t like it when others want to do something similar. We couldn’t rebel against the imposition then, but we can now.

      I wonder… and then see where it leads.

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  2. Oh, the amount of secrets that I’ve kept over the years. It’s amazing. They did add up to a lot of baggage, and the majority of those given to me had been quickly dropped. Secrets are not really “our business.” Sure the situation whatever it may be affects me, but it’s something not to dwell on … especially if it does not concern me.

    Wonderful, honest post as always.

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    • Thank you 🙂

      Next time someone tries to share a secret with you, remind them that you are a weaver of words, and that their words may get woven into one of your creations to be shared with all your avid readers. That is what writers do, they tell stories, and they sometimes voice what others may keep secret.

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