Overcoming Having Been Othered

Overcoming Having Been Othered | An Insomniacs Paradise

Last week, I read this post about overcoming having been othered by Tamara Kulish. 

Overcoming having been othered, and why you may not be as “different” or as rejected as you might believe!

For those of you that don’t know her, she’s a fellow WordPress blogger and writes incredibly deep and reflective posts. I connect strongly with many of them and this is one of those that really stood out to me because it’s something I have experienced too. But before I get into my experience of overcoming having been othered, I hope you go over and read her post too. She very bravely shared her personal experiences and how she’s healed and moved past her trauma. 

I love when people share experiences like this because so many people have been through something similar. It’s always comforting to know you’re not alone and that others have been through it as well and come out stronger. 

My Experience With Overcoming Having Been Othered:

Ever since I was a child, I knew there was something different about me. I was never quite like all the other kids. It led to me often feeling left out or feeling like I didn’t belong even when I was included. Although I tried to maintain a tough exterior, on the inside I had turned into a chronic people pleaser- doing everything in my power to get people to like me. Saying/doing what I had to in order to fit in because I was scared they would see me for the fraud that I was. 

One incident in particular really hurt my feelings and brought back all the negativity I had experienced growing up. 

So, I have these cousins (not the cousin brothers I hang out with regularly) and, although I will say they never seemed to like me much, we were cool. We weren’t super close but we did talk sometimes and stuff. I went to university around the same time as them and I went out of my way to help them do their research etc. I even offered to speak to people at my university in Canada when they had questions and were considering studying in Canada. In the end, they chose to go to a different country on the other side of the world and I was in Canada for like five years. During that time we didn’t keep in touch much other than the occasional birthday wish or something. Then, one day I randomly realised they had all blocked me on Instagram. 

Obviously, I was surprised and hurt by this. And also very confused considering I literally had not seen them in years. For a long time, I felt really hurt by their actions. I kept trying to figure out what I could have done to cause them to block me. Was I posting too much? This was back when I was posting almost daily. Did I say something or do something?

Then, I moved back to Kenya and was forced to occasionally interact with them. They pretended to be nice when my parents were around but pretty much ignored me otherwise. They would talk to my sister and say maybe a couple of words to me. It sucked and was very awkward. All those feelings I had felt growing up of feeling like I didn’t belong came rushing back. 

Eventually though, I understood that it didn’t matter why they didn’t like me or that they didn’t like me. Because I liked myself. I am blessed enough to have so many people that genuinely love and care for me. So why would I care what haters think of me?

Final Thoughts

Thanks to therapy and the support of people that love me, I have realised that I am enough exactly as I am. Of course I’m not perfect but that does not mean that people get to use me and then toss me aside like I mean nothing to them once they’re done.

About this situation, I realised that I am not at fault whatsoever. If they had a personal issue with me, they could have easily chosen to speak to me about it and find a way to resolve it. Instead, they decided to be weird and make things awkward between us. In my opinion, that says so much more about them then it does about me. I’m not psychic and I’m done playing “why do you hate me” with them. 

And I’m actually glad they did that because now I know which of my family members are genuine and which ones are fake ass bitches not.  The universe is great at helping you get rid of what you don’t need, of what will not bring you happiness. Let it take out the trash for you, drop all that dead weight you don’t need to lug around! 

What did you think about my situation of having been othered? Do you think I did the right thing by letting things go and moving on? Have you ever overcome having been othered? Let me know in the comments below because I would love to hear from you. Or simply stop by and say hi!

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88 responses to “Overcoming Having Been Othered”

  1. My dad told me years ago that I was always “different”. This was extremely damaging to me through school and beyond. My family has drama like most do I suppose. It hurts and is maddening. I understand, Pooja. ❤️

    1. Yeah, I think all families have their issues. It does hurt but as adults we learn to move past it all. So sorry you went through that, I can relate ❤️

      1. Thanks Pooja. ❤️❤️❤️

  2. You are right in your thinking.
    I sometimes ask someone who ghosts me what has caused the riff. More often I ask a mutual friend or intermediary. Occasionally, I apologize if I recognize something that deserves one. I try never to debate or argue because I do not want to be connected to people who do not like me. But I do like to know how I affect people in case I have a blind spot.
    Anyone who Blogs every day and doesn’t offend anyone is usually pretty boring!

    1. That’s a great way to make sure you don’t repeat the same mistakes. Very true, I think offend people just means you’re living for yourself!

  3. You just can’t please some people, it hurts but keep moving forward

    1. Absolutely, some people will dislike you regardless of how much you do for them.

  4. I think that some relationships need to be left behind. You can’t please everyone so why bother?
    People want to see something that makes them feel better, they want to be pampered and flattered. Even when I try to do that I rarely succeed, LoL, not real good at it. I met some folks who can flirt with anyone and everyone, I think I wanna take lessons from them, for real. It’s a talent in my opinion, talent to deceive…
    In any case, I wanted to mention that when I am busy with something cool and in touch with good folks I call friends it’s much easier to ignore unacceptable behavior of haters. Haters will hate, there is no other way for them to be. But you do you, because if you quit who else will?

    1. Absolutely, sometimes we just outgrow people and they show us that they’re not worth having in our life anymore.
      I can relate, I’ve never been good at being social. But I think when we’re ourselves we’ll meet others like us.

  5. So, I am homeschooled, and many people think homeschooler have a easy life. Such as laying around the house all day eating junk food, playing games, watching tv, and any hobbies we might have. I didn’t realize this until at church during prayer requests. I was behind on my ELA, so school was my request, one boy looked back at me and said “School?” That hurt. I have learned not to listen to a word that comes out of his mouth, and we have moved across the state since then, but it still left a scare. I am insecure about the fact I am homeschooled now. And for the record, that is not a homeschoolers life.

    1. Wow, that was rude of him to say that. People shouldn’t assume that homeschooling is somehow easier. I’ve had two friends that were homeschooled and their experiences with schooling were the same as people that went to school. The only difference really is that you’re not physically going to school. The work is the same.

  6. Totally understandable. I too was a people pleaser when I was a student, and it had led me to similar problematic situations. More power to you, my friend ❤️

    1. Thanks so much. Yeah I think when we’re people pleaser these sort of things are inevitable. Some people just want to hate. The best thing to do is distance ourselves ❤️

      1. Absolutely! We have to learn to set boundaries and prioritize self care and respect ✨

  7. Tamara does write powerful and helpful posts. 👍🏻 Sorry to read you were ostracized. Mean-girl bully behavior does say more about them. Still hurtful though and you definitely chose the higher path, one of self-love and respect. 🌼

    1. She absolutely does, I love her content. Thanks so much and yeah I think it does say so much more about them considering how much I helped them and how ungrateful they were for it. Yeah, I didn’t want to hold on to that and let it continue hurting me 💕

      1. You’re very welcome P.J. and thanks for sharing your story with us. 💕 Wishing you a wonderful weekend. 🌻

        1. Wishing you the same! 😊

          1. Thank you! 😊

            1. You’re welcome!

  8. Great Post Pooja and as for your question, I did go through a period of feeling different when my dad died at 11. Everyone else I knew had a dad (in the 1950’s there were few divorces.) Other students began to treat me differently, and I felt like somehow it must have been something I did to “lose a father” I mean, “who loses a father?” So, I can relate to your situation with your cousins a bit. You did turn out great, even with this suffering…I think you did the right thing:)

    1. Thanks so much. Oh no, I’m so sorry for your loss and that it led to you blaming yourself. That’s awful and kids can be really cruel at that age. Thank you 💗

  9. I really like you a lot partly because of how vulnerable and raw you are in moments like these. It’s clearly not fake. It’s all real with you. And as you already know, it’s that type of vibe that will continue to attract the people in your everyday life that will love you for who you are and experience the joy that comes from being in your presence. And also, I know and can relate firsthand to the type of damage self hatred can inflict too. Pushing others because you don’t like yourself, and then that in turn causes the other person being pushed away to start hating themselves for being pushed away. It’s all a vicious cycle. What’s that saying, “Hurt people, hurt people.”

    Also, thank you so freaking much for sharing that post from Tamara. (I hope I spelled her name right) That post was absolutely fanfreakingtastic. (That’s not a word, but it’s a word now lol) She definitely got a new follower today! 👍

    1. Thanks so much Christopher, I saw your follow and your comment. I visited your site and followed, hoping to see more of your perspectives!

      1. You’re so welcome Tamara! I saw you followed me! And I really appreciate the follow! You seem like such a sweet and wonderful human! 😁

    2. Thanks so much, I try to keep it real on the blog as much as possible. Yeah, it can be very damaging because we tend to internalise that sort of behaviour even when it’s more about them then us. I think for me, what hurt most was that I went out of my way to help them and they didn’t even have the curtsy to be grateful for it and chose to behave so negatively.

      Happy to do so, Tamara is awesome and I always enjoy her posts- I’m sure you will too!

      1. You’re very welcome of course! 💖💕💗

  10. 🙏🌹

    Aum Shanti

  11. Totally agree, Pooja, Tamara is awesome.

    Love your story about letting the Universe sort out your dirty laundry. It is soooo tempting to want to understand why people make weird decisions like that. But as your story illustrates, it’s about them, not you and its best to move on. Great wisdom!

    1. Love that point you bring up that it’s about them and needing to just move on!

    2. She is and thanks so much. Absolutely, I think the universe got rid of what I didn’t need in my life and at the end of the day I don’t think confronting them will bring me anything positive to my life. Thank you!

  12. Tamara and you had some very interesting thoughts and difficult experiences. What Tamara describes, child abuse and toxic parenting is a very difficult situation. I’ve seen bullying, people physically hurting or destroying property of those they deem different and that is also a special category. However, I think that in general being “othered” and ignored/out-frozen happens to many of us because, we have different interests, a different religion, we are immigrants, we have some autism, a handicap, or are too intelligent (seriously, too intelligent people seem excentric to many), have a strong accent, etc. Instead of trying too hard with the people who reject us, we need to seek out our people/tribe.

    1. Yes to “seeking out ones tribe”! This is a great idea that brings many benefits!

    2. Yes, bullying is awful and seems to exist everywhere. A lot of people that were bullies when they were kids remain that way as adults too. And being different in any way gets people “othered” very often. I think that’s absolutely the answer, finding your people that respect and love you as you are.

  13. SMiLes Dear Pooja
    i for one View the Diversity
    of the Changing Art Humans
    Continue to Evolve or Yes Devolve

    To Be Indeed Weird and Wonderful too

    Art Either
    Evolves
    Or Grows
    Stale and Rotten
    on An Otherwise
    Thriving Vine of Potentials

    Be arT
    With
    HeART
    Never He Separated
    Again to S & M Without
    Art of SMart As Well for

    Future Change Now

    Our PreSent Gift Real

    To Color With New Waves
    FLoWinG Higher Than Lower
    As Valley Reaches Mountain Height

    UNiQue…

    Other than that hehe
    i Meet and Greet No Stranger
    As Yes No One is Stranger than me

    With
    SMiLes..:)

    1. I love that you embrace that and I’m trying to do the same. I know I’m not like most people and that’s fine as long as I am unapologetically myself.

      1. Wonderful Dear
        Pooja Be Free☺️🙌

  14. I don’t remember hearing the term “othered” before. It sounds bit like shunning. I have lost touch with some old friends and family, where I have found I am primarily the one making an effort to keep in touch, so it feels somewhat similar, but to a lesser degree.

    1. Yes, it’s very similar to shunning at least in my experience. I can relate, when you’re the only one making an effort it begins to become clear after a while that it’s a one sided relationship/friendship.

  15. that you were able to let it go … great you , Pooja … some situations we grow from…. some are best left aside…🤍🌷

    1. Thanks so much, yeah it was a good lesson for me on letting go of people that don’t deserve me in their life 💗

  16. I like the term “othered”, Pooja. I found some people aren’t worthy of my friendship, and it’s time to let go. It’s hard to do, but in the long run, there is closure.

    1. Absolutely, I think sometimes it’s just time to move on when someone doesn’t appreciate you. It hurts but it’s for the best.

  17. A & J PEI Treasures/E Jean Simpson, BEd, BA, MA Avatar
    A & J PEI Treasures/E Jean Simpson, BEd, BA, MA

    Very deep post. Glad you have realized you are enough and their approval is not needed.

    1. Thank you so much. I am too, it saved me a lot of pain in the future.

  18. That is so sad and bizarre. Like how do you just randomly block people, especially family members. Obviously you know I’m in a similar boat. The part that bothers me is how other relative’s just go along with it or even try blaming you instead of seeking the real truth. You’re such a wonderful friend Pooja. I’m so grateful to have angels like you in my life 🙂

    1. Yeah, it really sucked especially because I really went out of my way to help them earlier. True, other relatives become part of it and some don’t even care about your side of it. Sorry you’ve had those difficult experiences too. Thanks so much and very grateful to have you in my life too 🙂

  19. Pooja, I was delighted to wake up this morning to see you had shared the post and had also added your story. I agree with the comments that it was weird of them to just ghost you, but that’s on them as has been pointed out. A simple conversation would have cleared the air. Who knows, in the future you may be presented with a perfect opportunity to look the in the eyes and say, “yes, about that, what was that all about?”. You may never get the satisfaction of an honest answer, they may just blameshift or gaslight you, so knowing your own truth is helpful, not only to hold your head up high, but to not allow them to live rentfree in your head!

    1. Thanks for sharing your post which inspired this one! Yeah, definitely weird of them but looking back there were a lot of red flags I ignored. Like they would go out of their way to embarrass me, gossip a lot about other cousins etc. After all that, I don’t think a conversation with them is necessary because they’re unlikely to tell me the truth or take any sort of accountability. It’s best for me to just go on my way.

  20. How painful, Pooja, especially for it not to be one person but their little group. It’s an awful feeling to have that inside family, which one feels should be a refuge from othering in the so-called outside world.

    That said, as someone who has had a hard time staying part of family groups except with my own kids, I often imagine the time I might have spent fitting into their plans and agendas and what I may not have done instead. At some point the harsh sting calms down, and thankfulness is increased for those few that kept out of (usually very) petty games.

    1. Yeah, it really hurt for a while but now I’m really thankful that happened because looking back they were always particularly mean to me specifically which is so weird. Yeah, I’m at that point where I’m thankful and am happy with the people I have in my life right now.

  21. Oof, what a moving and relatable post, Pooja! Love that you add your experience and story, as well as share how you arrived at yourself. 💙

    1. Thank you so much! 💗

  22. Thanks for sharing, I think you handled it the best you could. I’m not saying this is your situation, but sometimes it’s just more about them as well, like they have some issues themselves to work out. Sometimes people are just haters though and that is their problem, try not to take it too personally even if it may have been hurtful.

    1. Thanks so much. Yeah, I absolutely agree that it says more about them than about me. Even if they did have an issue with me they could have had a conversation instead of being rude. Absolutely, I’m at a point where I’m grateful for the people I have in my life and grateful that those that aren’t meant to be a part of my life aren’t.

      1. Exactly, and good attitude to have towards things. 🙂

  23. I think I would have confronted them.

    1. I was going to but decided they weren’t worth the time and effort.

  24. I’m sure you have managed to make many friends. I don’t particularly care if people choose not to be around me. I have loads of friends scattered around the world and am quite satisfied with them. Personalities sometimes don’t fit with others but as long as you know you have self worth and friends you don’t need those who choose to ignore you. It’s very common in our dysfunctional world for that to happen.

    1. Yes, I’m very thankful to have some great friends as well as other cousins I get along well with. And that’s enough.

  25. The term “being othered” is new to me. So sorry you went through that but I am glad you overcame.

    1. Thanks so much, yeah it’s not used often but I think it’s something many people experience. For me, I’m grateful that people that don’t appreciate me are no longer in my life.

      1. You’re definitely better off. Maybe you can revisit that relationship when you’re all older and more mature, since you’re cousins and all 🙂.

        1. Yeah, hopefully so 🙂

  26. Hi Pooja!

    I do relate on two points here:
    1) Feeling left out. You are not able to feel included among people around you.
    2) I am the one who initiate conversations mostly. Other people didn’t try to come to me and initiate conversations. I was ignored often.

    I’m talking this about my cousins, classmates, and friends.

    Immediate response: You try on your own, to participate and get included somehow. You agree to what they say. You laugh on their jokes.
    You treat as someone special and superior than you.

    As time passed, I learnt to make friendship with myself. Instead of chasing others I figured out my interests (including writing).
    Those awkward situations are common when have to interact with those who didn’t treat properly in the past.

    I am actually happy for you.
    Because you choose to not overreact or blame. You valued your energy and focus.
    You do have this big community which loves you.♥️

    Can’t believe! Why some people will block someone like you?
    You are the safest person I’ve met so far. You are helpful. You are mature and stable.

    Adjusting to a new place among new people isn’t easy. I have gone through that in my life.

    You feel like an elder sister to me. Then we both studied History at college.

    Get comfortable with yourself. Accept yourself the way you are, and recognise “your qualities”.
    Maintain good health; physical, mental and emotional. This very crucial!
    Allow yourself to go with the flow of life. Don’t pay too much attention to what didn’t work.

    You can set small weekly or monthly targets. Work on one thing at a time, master it until it becomes a part of your personality.

    Stay happy! 😁
    I like your smile and courageous heart.💪🏽

    1. Thank you so much, that’s really kind of you to say. So sorry you have experienced similar feelings too. It’s really hard to feel left out and like you’re different. But the truth is that is kind of a superpower, you’re not like everyone else and you can use that to your advantage.

      I have always tried to be nice to them and actually went out of my way to help them when they were searching for universities. I think they blocked me because they’ve never liked me and looking back they were always particularly mean to me specifically compared to other cousins and even my sister. They went out of their way to exclude and ignore me.

      Thank you! ☺️

  27. When people don’t understand you or intentionally misunderstand you, they mask it by making you feel ‘othered’. That’s the lesson I learned about it and you’re right, if you like yourself that’s what matters. When you like yourself, people who vibe with you will gravitate to your orbit . Living your life the way you want and in a way that makes you happy always beats living to be liked. Wonderful post! 🙂

    1. Yes, absolutely. Some people also seem to instantly dislike anyone that’s different then they are and that sucks but life goes on. Thanks so much! 🙂

  28. It is difficult when you find someone who does not like you. But for me, early on I learned that those people are not worth my time. Most of the time, that person has their own issues that they need to fix. As long as I know that I am a good person and have others who care about me, then I don’t worry about the haters either. You are doing awesome Pooj.

    1. I’m glad you learnt that early on. I only learnt that in my mid to late twenties but I’m glad I eventually did. Yes, as long as we try to be the best we can be no one else’s opinion really matters.

  29. Wear it as a badge of honour from people like that. You are better and they can expose themselves, or whatever.

    1. Absolutely, I’m actually grateful they’re not in my life anymore. They’re extremely ungrateful people.

  30. I feel you made the healthiest choice to let go and move on. No sense carrying the weight of those who wouldn’t carry you back!

    1. Yeah, I didn’t want to keep ruminating over it especially when I have no idea what I did wrong. I would rather let it go and move on. Thank you!

  31. you did the right thing, pooja. it’s okay to move on and let go. yes, it hurts, but it’s for the best. what your cousins did was kind of similar to an experience I had. so I can relate to it very well. what they did is up to them. they just don’t worth the effort we put on to them. best wishes, totto

    1. Thank you so much. Yeah, it definitely stings especially when it first happened. I was extremely hurt. But now I’m grateful they’re not in my life anymore. They’re extremely toxic people. I’m so sorry you went through something similar. Honestly, some people just aren’t meant to be in our life longterm.

  32. I’m so sorry you went through this and with “family” too, it sounds like you’ve handled yourself in the best way possible and I think its great that you’ve chosen to let this be something that encourages you to keep on being true to yourself ✨️💗

    1. Yeah, it was awful when it first happened but I think I’ve been able to work through it. Thanks so much 😊

    1. Thank you 🙏

  33. Coming from an extremely large family and being the last of the brood, I learned over the years to define and accept my space. I did struggle with being “othered,” but with time, I became unbothered.
    Thanks for sharing, Pooja.

    1. Yeah, it happens and all families have their issues. The main thing is that we learn to be ourselves and love ourselves as we are. Thanks so much.

  34. A moving and beautifully written post, Pooja! 💕
    Thank you so much for sharing!

    1. Thank you so much! 💗

      1. It’s always a pleasure to read you, Pooja! 💗🌹

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