Celebrate the Weirdo.

Before I get started on today’s post… to all my GYST team…

Madelyn, Ute, Ellen, Greg, Justice, Elle, Michelle (Tasmania), Tami 2, Moyra, Melissa (New Zealand), ST and her anonymous sister, Ceridwen, Doug (New Mexico), Lili Ann, Sandi, Angela, Barb J, Anne, Jessie, Leigh, Jodie, Elroy, Sue Reid, Diane (Sydney), Leah K, Jess K, Dee Britton, Kirsten, KK, Virginia (Melbourne), Clare H, Tim (Chicago), Kate, Pip, Miss Beck, Sal, Frank, Louie (Phoenix), Jen (Mildura), Ganesh (India), Tami (US), Barney, Kaddy, Snoskred, Julie (Hobart), Kerry, Finn, April Groves, M, Dianned1, Amanda B, Amber Jordon, Debbie, Irene N, Kristy, Leann, Pip Dodds, tlee, Andy, Charmaine Connolly, Kelvin (US) and Sepyroth

C’MON!!!! It’s day two of twenty eight… GET BUSY!… or I’ll come over to your house and hurt you.
You know I will.
I don’t wanna, but if I hafta…

Today’s Post: Celebrate the Weirdo.

What I’m about to write will resonate with many of you.
It will surprise some of you and hopefully, it will encourage a few of you as well.

For much of my life, I have felt like a… weirdo.
There.
I said it.
Not all the time… but often.
In a range of situations and settings and for a range of reasons.

Even as a moderately successful business owner, speaker, writer, etc.. I still regularly feel out of place and like I don’t belong or really fit in.

Please still love me.

Not in a weird, sad or tragic “I’m gonna build a space ship in my yard and fly off and see my brothers from the planet Zebulon” kinda way… No, more a “I feel different, think different, behave different and am different” kinda way.
Not better, just different.

While all the other ‘normal’ kids were ploughing up and down the pool with their skinny ten year-old bodies, I was splashing around in my big-ass T-shirt… to hide my numerous rolls.
Knowing that they would never realise that I was obese if I was wearing my magic ‘fat-hiding T-shirt’.
Of course.

And when all my buddies were discovering alcohol at sixteen, getting wasted, falling down, getting up again and thinking they were manly and hilarious… I didn’t really ‘get it.’
At all.
I was the only one who didn’t drink.
Weirdo.
I never started.
Never had a glass of alcohol.
Tasted it, but hated it.
Never been drunk to this day.
Double weirdo.
Even when I go to a social function now, I’m often the only person in the whole place not drinking.
People tell me I’m missing out.
Oh well.
A chance I’m prepared to take.

While all my friends were buying highly-modified cars that they couldn’t afford, smoking the tyres, racing each other to the next set of lights and exploring their alpha-male-ness (okay, stupidity)… I didn’t get that either.
At all.

And when I went back to college at thirty five (after a brief seventeen year absence) I felt like a complete weirdo.
In the first year of my degree I was twice as old as every one else, didn’t understand their eighteen year-old vocabulary or culture, scared the crap out half of them (big, old, scary man on motorbike with shaved head), couldn’t use a computer (honestly), had an argument with a lecturer on the first day who insisted that I should complete ‘work experience’ (despite having worked for seventeen years) and spent the first six months of my course studying and eating lunch solo with my ‘I-don’t-really-belong-here’ cap firmly in place.
Old, scary weirdo.

Even investing the time and energy that I do into this web-site has caused some of my friends to question my sanity and judgement… apparently doing what I do doesn’t make ‘commercial sense’.
It’s not logical; it’s weird.

From a professional perspective.. it’s dumb; zero financial return on my investment.
It takes me away from my businesses and my other income-producing commercial interests.
To lots of people it is weird; it doesn’t make good business sense.

However, to me… it’s perfectly ‘normal’.
Incredibly rewarding even.
People have advised me to charge or have memberships for the site.
I won’t.
“Then at least have advertisers on your site for goodness sakes… that won’t cost your readers anything…”
Hmmm… don’t wanna”.
“Why.”
“Looks crap… maybe one day, but not now.”
“Weirdo.”

One of my (business-minded) buddies told me recently…”you do all this writing, spend all this time, invest all this energy and share your knowledge.. and then you don’t charge; that’s just dumb.”
And from where he’s sitting, it is dumb.
Weird.
But I kinda enjoy that weirdness.

Now I know that I may have disappointed some of you because you thought I was Superman, not Weirdo-man… but sadly, it’s true.
No ’super’ and plenty of weird.

I think I need a tight outfit with a big ‘W’ on the front.
Perhaps something in blue.
Turquoise even.
And maybe a modest yellow cape.
Nothing too long… might get caught in the back wheel.
Possibly some red boots.
Or not.
And beige tights.
I’m digressing.
You love my digressing.
It’s why you come back.

See… weird.

Put up your hand if you’ve ever felt like a weirdo (for whatever reason) or like you didn’t fit in. Okay, lemme count…. 47.. 48.. 49.. 314,231… yep, nearly all of you.
Hey, you’re a freak like me.
Giddy-up; I’m not alone.
Nice.

I just asked twenty people (at the gym) if they’ve ever felt like a weirdo (didn’t fit in, didn’t belong, felt ‘different’) and all of them said yes and more than half said they regularly feel like a weirdo.

That’s it… I’m starting a weirdo club.

Doing what I do (my job, that is) for the last twenty five years has taught me that we ALL feel like we don’t ‘fit in’ at times.
Don’t really belong.
Not good enough.
Talented enough.
Funny enough.
Clever enough.
Cool enough.
Skinny enough.
Pretty enough.
Young enough.

The truth is, we’re all weird in some way.
There’s always a situation, circumstance, environment or conversation where we won’t fit in.
Where we’ll be the weirdo.
Or feel like it anyway.

The challenge for us is to not let those feelings get in the way of our potential.
To not let the emotional stuff (fear, doubt, anxiety, low self-esteem, poor body-image) get in the way of the logical stuff (what’s possible for us).

I’ve felt inadequate (in some way, in some area) for most of my life… but if I always wait until I feel ‘normal’ or ‘ready’, I would never get off the couch (or computer stool).

In many ways, weird is actually normal.
And normal is a myth.

I’ve decided to have a great life and do some amazing things despite my weirdness.
What about you?

{ 61 comments… read them below or add one }

Craig Harper September 5, 2007 at 4:02 pm

Go Ellen!!

Hann September 5, 2007 at 4:30 pm

Ta, here’s one back ( )

Julie September 5, 2007 at 4:48 pm

ooopsie woopsie didle tootsie, did someone say cheesecake on the CH weirdo (unique) train? don’t s’pose there’s some key lime pie there also?

WHOO HOO TOOT TOOT!

Laura Young September 5, 2007 at 10:27 pm

Oh, Darlin’ yes yes yes. I’ve finally just decided to embrace it. And I’m right with you on the blogging for joy even when it makes no sense at all.
Just the post I needed to read this morning.
Now off for a nice bike ride. (the pedal kind). Hey, will our Weirdo club have a secret handshake or anything? Do the tights have to be beige? Not very flattering on me.

frank September 6, 2007 at 10:23 am

I have a button somewhere, it says
“why be normal?”

say no more.

Craig Harper September 6, 2007 at 10:24 am

Hi Julie.

Key Lime Pie??

( )

Craig Harper September 6, 2007 at 10:27 am

Hi Laura.

Not happy with beige.. okay, your choice.

Definitely need a secret handshake.
You can develop that.

Get back to me on that!!

Peace… and weirdness.

Craig Harper September 6, 2007 at 10:29 am

Hey Frank.
Wazzup?

Normal, Schmormal I say.

Later.

Belinda December 15, 2007 at 4:56 pm

We sit in the square we live in, in our society, in our home, we are taught how things are and believe that’s how things are, we are taught what is wrong and right and believe that they are wrong and right,We surround ourselves with people like ourselves, birds of a feather flock together. Then we think everything and everyone inside our square is normal and anyone or anything outside it is weird… Then we stereotype and judge.

I must say, I hate being labelled or stereotyped lol. I don’t WANT to fit in, I want to be me.

My group and I weren’t sure who we were in high school, you know.. we thought we were the geeks, we knew we weren’t the cool kids or the nerds.. then when we left we realised we were the misfits and we just found eachother lol. We didn’t fit into a catagory :D

feathers January 12, 2008 at 12:02 pm

How great to meet another weirdo. I hate alcohol. It annoys me. I have never been drunk in my life (just turned 50). Love to list the reasons why. H’m, alcohol: hepatotoxic, reonotoxic, neurotoxic, carcinogenic and teratagenic.

I’d rather be weird.

Mr.Kimhap April 18, 2008 at 11:29 pm

just found that i’m a wierdo too..thank you craig

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