I remember when I was 22. It feels ridiculously too recent. Surely 10 years have not flown by! It’s just not possible. I am still as youthful, relevant, and spunky as ever right? Sometimes I feel that way. Other days my mortality and decay is spreading like a crack on a windshield. In fact, I feel like I remember the moment when the metaphorical rock hit my windshield.
I was 29 and all kinds of major life changing events were happening. I mean MAJOR. The year I turned 30 was the most stressful year of my life. It was like driving through a hail storm and then… CRACK! Suddenly I noticed a wrinkle which slowly became more wrinkles, some saggy skin, strange hairs, and grey hairs. I analyze every detail as though the world is watching and the headlines in tomorrow’s newspaper will be announcing that Natalie Busch is old.
Then I sit behind a 90 year old woman in church who is hunched over so badly her face is pointed to the ground and she is forced to strain her neck to keep from staring at her feet. Her hands are curled up tightly in her lap. Her skin is soft and translucent as if it is fading into oblivion. She is wheeled into the sanctuary every Sunday where she praises the Lord with all that is left in her. As her body turns inward into itself her soul turns upward and outward. She is so peaceful. In the moments that I observe and admire her I realize how silly I have been for thinking that at 32 years of age I am old!
Tomorrow is my birthday and it has finally occurred to me that if I can’t be content now, then I never will.
I spent far too many years wounded and insecure. I used to hate myself. I don’t know if you would say I had an eating disorder. If I did I wasn’t very good at it because the more I hated my body the more weight I gained. I definitely had body image issues though. I would do crash diets left and right. I tried every kind of exercise regimen under the sun and I even reverted to pills. When I didn’t see the results I was looking for I would binge and eat in secret. I was truly depressed. It wasn’t just a little slump. It was the pit of despair. I felt hideous and unwanted.
10 years ago I was so desperate to change, I remember coming up with a slogan around my birthday. It was “A Better Me at 23”. Mind you, this didn’t mean a more selfless me, or a more spirit led me. No, that would be great if that was what I meant by better, but the reality was it was another big diet plan. This called for another round of “Before” photos. I was determined that my 23rd year would be the year I would change! And did I?
No. I did not, because my heart and my mindset stayed the same and I refused to address what was going on inside of me.
I was a server at Macaroni Grill at the time and one day my manager came up to me and said “These guys asked for our prettiest waitress and I want to hurry up and get that two top bussed so I can put them in your section. You’re okay with one more table?” He was dead serious. The sad thing is I wasn’t flattered. I didn’t flip my hair and think Oh boy, big tippers. Right this way gentlemen. I wasn’t disgusted and thinking I am not waiting on those sexists morons. What do they think this is Hooters?
No. I didn’t think any of that. I thought Oh no. They are going to be disappointed. They wanted to have the prettiest waitress and all they get is me.
I have never told anyone that story before so this takes a lot for me to admit. It’s embarrassing and sad. Everything about that story is what is wrong with our women in our society today 1.) That I would think that I owed these men something as a woman and 2.) That who I was wasn’t enough.
I have no idea what those men’s intentions were. They were elderly business men and honestly I think they were just being goofy and playful. This isn’t about the men. The point is that I had bought into the lies about who I really am!
The Lord has delivered me from so much since then. I can’t even begin to express how much freedom I have experienced in the past ten years. I still struggle though. I think most women do. That insecurity will rear it’s ugly head like a bottle of whiskey calling out to an alcoholic. Having the physical evidence of aging has not been easy for me. It makes me want to revert back to that depressed lost 22 year old that hated how she looked and worked hard to change her outward appearance, but I know better now. In my own strength I am definitely weak, but through Christ I am whole. And although it might sound cliche like a pop song or Dove commercial, I am beautiful just as I am.
It’s been Ten years since I made the “better me at 23” declaration. I’ll be 33 tomorrow and this year I have a new slogan.
It’s, “This is me at 33”.
This. Is. Me.
Happiest of early birthdays to you!!!
You are absolutely stunning!
Inside and out!
I have felt all those emotions and it is just the worst! I don’t know if it just comes with age but at 28 (although I’m still in shock at how fast those wrinkles and grey hairs snuck in) I feel better than I ever have.
I just decided enough is enough!
It is crazy to be living life in such a funk of self pity.
Surround your self with loving people, eating well, exercise, faith it all lifts you up 🙂
not that I don’t have down days but I try my hardest to not give in.
Lovely piece Natalie 🙂
Thank you Holly. Sorry for the late reply (my internet was down last week and it made life very difficult). I did want to say that I thought about you and some other beauty bloggers. I agree with everything you have said here. I am not against trying to look nice or take care of ourselves! As long as it’s not an obsessing over an unattainable goal then I think all of the girly stuff is fun!
It was nice getting to know you! thank you for sharing!
And you are beautiful inside (I can tell from what you’ve written!) and out.
Lovely! Vulnerable and real… it’s what makes you a true beauty, my friend! To grow into our own skin and stand up tall – it is a gift! So glad you are not waiting any longer! 😉
Natalie, I love your post and your new slogan. What a powerful story in your past that symbolizes so much growth and healing. This is one of the reasons I started blogging in the first place. Thanks for your powerful transparency. You’re not alone 🙂
Thank you so much Brooke. I love reading your stuff on Bye Comparison. You might want to check your spam folder for comments from me because no matter what I do it doesn’t seem to post mine 🙁 Anyway, thanks for the encouragement.
Thank you for sharing this. Your heart. With all of us. You are not alone in your struggles. I have battled those thoughts, in most aspects of my life. And I am right there with you for this next year. This is me. And it is beautiful. ?
Beautifully honest, written and relatable! Love this post and at 46 I find myself being grateful for where God has me and all that He has brought me through!
I kind of know how you feel…all my life, I have been compared to my sister by family, friends, boyfriends, etc…. Till this day, I am still compared to her and you know what frustrates me the most is when I see someone I know and all they can talk about is how pretty she is…while they are talking to me. For the longest time I was insecure about my looks, my intelligence, and other things, but being a mom taught me to love myself in a way that I never have. I have 2 little girls who are extremely smart in their own right and absolutely gorgeous…guess what? One is brown and one is white in color, one has straight hair while the other has curly and the list goes on….but guess what again…these were the same differences between me and my sister. My kids have the same parents (some people think otherwise) and they see the differences and it is pointed out where ever we go. I do not compare my kids because I know how it feels…I know how much hurt it can bring. Believe it or not my extended family and inlaws compare them all the time and they tell them who is more beautiful, smarter, etc…and it kills me. I have literally had sit down conversations and I have told them…”do not do that…Society is already going to judge them based off of their skin color alone…I do not need to hear it from family member”. It was so bad, some family members were even being biased with my kids (they preferred one over the other). I have learned the best way to show my kids to love themselves, is by loving myself. In my household, we praise our differences, that is what makes us special.
I am so sorry that you went through that and I am happy that you have grown to love yourself!
Thank you for sharing this. I understand exactly what you are talking about! I don’t have any sisters, and I have wondered what it would be like if I had another daughter and would they be compared? I have heard some horror stories. I don’t know why people make comments are choose to be that way. It makes me so mad. I will find out on Monday what I am having and if it is a girl I am just trusting that my daughters will be close and comfortable in their own skin with their own unique voices and like you said, that I would be an example of that to them.
Make that peace, Natalie, with yourself at 33. I will be 65 in October and I still struggle especially NOW, when lettuce turns into belly fat and a squint turns into a crevice. It is a daily fight for me to say
“I am 64 and this is me!”
God help us all.
Beautifully written and I couldn’t agree more! Happy Birthday to a beautiful woman who has an equally beautiful heart, spirit and soul! xo
Girl, you know I can relate! It is so liberating to embrace who you are, isn’t it? How funny that I made the comment on IG about you always being 22 in my mind, and then I read this! In case I haven’t mentioned that before, I have several of y’all stuck at 22 because that’s how old y’all were when we moved! I hope you had a great birthday!!
How funny! I thought you were referencing my blog when you said that. I guess it was the meant to be 😉
Hey, thanks for the blog post.Much thanks again. Will read on…