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Miguel Clark Mallet's avatar

I appreciate your writing this so much. It helps me feel a little less dysfunctional and alone. You see, I have a gremlin too. At a very young age, I was diagnosed with childhood asthma. My parents had to work around my allergies, and my siblings--who were very young themselves--resented the energy and time and accommodations keeping me healthy required. On top of that, my parents had a terrible marriage. Constant arguing and fighting. And so, between the marriage, the sibling resentment, and the asthma itself, my gremlin emerged. It continually told me contemptuously that I was weak not just physically weak but also emotionally. I grew up almost constantly on guard: waiting for an asthma attack, for my parents to fight, for my overall weaknesses to reveal itself. It's easy for me to be hypervigilant even now, decades after those experiences. Now I worry about my wife, children, work, money, growing older. So often I look for something bad to happen, trying to be ready the same way I tried as a child.

I don't have any magic answers. I've been in therapy before and am again, and I think it's helping. I don't know if or when my gremlin will go away. He doesn't visit as often, but I'm hoping, like you, to learn to take more leaps, even if it means just one small step. I hope you are proud of yourself for even attempting the Camino. I hope you find strength in yourself that you've never realized you had. And I hope you will see qualities in yourself, as you engage in new experiences, that you didn't know you had. I would say "good luck," but I don't think you're going to need. I hope you'll be proud of yourself too.

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