When you look at me, what do you see? Do you just see the physical girl standing in front of you? Or do the emotions, the spirituality, the thoughts creep through as well?
When I look in the mirror, I see that I'm tall for a girl. I see that I have my father's blue eyes and the Guerin nose. I also see that my mother's side of the family shows through with the curve of my hips. When I look at me, I see my family staring back at me. Each part of my body comes from the genetics behind me. The resemblance in facial structure to my middle brother...the same fair skin of my mom and oldest brother...the small wrists that are present in all three siblings.
But I also see a lot more when I look at me, because I can look past the mirror and see my history and my life shine through. Not only is it the physical marks of that history, like the chicken pox scars from my 2 year old self. Or the mark on my stomach from where my brother ran into a tree in a golfcart, leaving me rolling across a concrete driveway. It's the calluses on my finger tips, the bumps of years of insulin injections, and the intensity of my other conditions on my skin.
All that history and all that life makes up a larger person though. It's beyond chicken pox; to me, it's the fact that my older brothers passed that childhood marker onto me. It isn't about the scar of the concrete; it's about the years of teasing my brother for actually running me over with the golfcart! It's also about the strength that I've built from the years of chronic conditions, an endurance to keep fighting, and the hope of a light at the end of the tunnel.
Beyond the history lies something even deeper. It's the character that comes from all those marks and markers. That strength and endurance that hold true throughout every trial in my life, like my parent's separating or losing a best friend. It's about the knowledge that mortality is never that far off. It's also about the bond between my brothers, an unspoken connection through our blue eyes, skin, wrists, and noses.
Each trait pushes against who I am every day. Those traits change my likes and dislikes, from my love of my fair skin to the fact that liking sweet cornbread runs in the blood. They mold me into a stubborn, opinionated, perceptive woman...because I had to fight to be heard among two older brothers, because I had to know when to stand up for myself and when to back down.
There are times when I haven't liked who I am, inside or out. Moments that I've made mistakes, said the wrong thing or done the wrong thing. Days where looking in the mirror seemed so much harder than it should be. But most of the time, I genuinely love who I've become. And I know that without diabetes, without the last three years of conditions, I wouldn't be this person. I wouldn't pursue things so intently. I wouldn't believe so strongly. I wouldn't feel so passionately.
But sometimes that's tough to see: when looking in the mirror takes a certain amount of courage, when running my finger tips over my own skin reminds me that those calluses may not ever go away, when I can't hide the ruthlessness of PCOS or rosacea or whatever it is with any amount of makeup. All those things make the good in me, but they also make the bad in me. From the struggle to love myself to the longing for a deeper understanding, it's all from the years of being who I am and fighting for more than this.
Today, looking in the mirror wasn't easy. But today, I also kept fighting. Because I put on the mask, built myself up, and walked out the door. Today, fighting the fatigue of a high was harder than most days. Yet I'm still awake, still going throughout my day. Because no matter what, I know that giving up is the end of all ends. So another treatment, another insulin injection, another doctor's appointment is the only way to keep living...and to eventually thrive.
















Very well articulated. You captured so many nuances with such clarity. I applaud you.
Hi Lindsey,
I have not seen you and cannot comment on your beauty. However, for me the challege would be to focus on your eyes. I find them to be the windows to the soul with your thoughts and feelings that make you, you.
I have dropped notes when I felt that you needed an encouragement to keep on keeping on and today is one of those days. Your's is a special beauty that shines through your words. They are real and they are you.
A passing thought. Have you noted the difference in you outlook and writing style when your numbers are in a higher range verses your outlook and writing when they are in a lower range.
AS always have a great day.
D2
Bravo!! You have hit the metaphorical nail on the head.
Lindsey Guerin,
I was most surprised and astounded when in your blog you stated that you have a bond between your brothers, "an unspoken connection through [your] blue eyes, skin, wrists, and noses".
Tell me, are your eyes, skin, wrists AND noses all really blue? No wonder it was hard to look in the mirror. :-)
But seriously, looking into the actual or proverbial mirror is difficult for many people. Doing it didn't mean you weren't anxious about it, but it did mean you were courageous enough to face yourself. And I knew you could -- and would, and will -- do it. I suspect anyone who has followed your blogs somehow just "knew" you had it in you. I'm not surprised at all that you have written this blog the way you did, but I found myself smiling, nodding my head and reminiscing on my own similar and wonderful experiences as I was reading.
I really want to thank you for sharing this personal blog on the mystery of self-identification through personal revelation.
It was a true pleasure to read.
And, I always wondered why your dLife photo shows your hand before your nose, and now I know why. Please know that I would never think any less of you just because you have a blue nose. :-)
Dantony C.
Oh Dantony, how you make me laugh! Now you know my secret though...I have a blue nose! It's awful! :)