Hold Your Head up High
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I was fifteen months old, a happy carefree kid . . . until the day I fell. It
was a bad fall. I landed on a glass rabbit which cut my eye badly enough to
blind it. Trying to save the eye, the doctors stitched the eyeball together
where it was cut, leaving a big ugly scar in the middle of my eye. The attempt
failed, but my mama, in all of her wisdom, found a doctor who knew that if the
eye were removed entirely, my face would grow up badly distorted, so my scarred,
sightless, cloudy and gray eye lived on with me. And as I grew, this sightless
eye in so many ways controlled me.
I walked with my face looking at the floor so people would not see the ugly
me. Sometimes people, even strangers, asked me embarrassing questions or made
hurtful remarks. When the kids played games, I was always the "monster." I grew
up imagining that everyone looked at me with disdain, as if my appearance were
my fault. I always felt like I was a freak.
Yet Mama would say to me, at every turn, "Hold your head up high and face the
world." It became a litany that I relied on. She had started when I was young.
She would hold me in her arms and stroke my hair and say, "If you hold your head
up high, it will be okay, and people will see your beautiful soul." She
continued this message whenever I wanted to hide.
Those words have meant different things to me over the years. As a little
child, I thought Mama meant, "Be careful or you will fall down or bump into
something because you are not looking." As an adolescent, even though I tended
to look down to hide my shame, I found that sometimes when I held my head up
high and let people know me, they liked me. My mama's words helped me begin to
realize that by letting people look at my face, I let them recognize the
intelligence and beauty behind both eyes even if they couldn't see it on the
surface.
In high school I was successful both academically and socially. I was even
elected class president, but on the inside I still felt like a freak. All I
really wanted was to look like everyone else. When things got really bad, I
would cry to my mama and she would look at me with loving eyes and say, "Hold
your head up high and face the world. Let them see the beauty that is
inside."
When I met the man who became my partner for life, we looked each other
straight in the eye, and he told me I was beautiful inside and out. He meant it.
My mama's love and encouragement were the spark that gave me the confidence to
overcome my own doubt. I had faced adversity, encountered my problems head on,
and learned not only to appreciate myself but to have deep compassion for
others.
"Hold your head up high," has been heard many times in my home. Each of my
children has felt its invitation. The gift my mama gave me lives on in another
generation.
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