I Built This Prison: Excerpt: High Achiever with Low Self-Esteem


From I Built This Prison, Chapter 1, Pride Desperately Seeking Validation

“…I used to think of my unhappy self as some sort of a special brand of weirdo.  And in many ways the circumstances that have shaped my life were very specific.  However, the tangible outcome, the resulting state of mind – that yearning for validation – and not by everyone, but by a particular someone – it is not unique at all.  In fact, many people live the same daily struggle and suffer the overwhelming despair that comes with it.  

Since the moment I accepted that I have a problem and began examining my own condition, I started seeing it in others as well…

…Various forms of this desire for one’s value to be acknowledged and appreciated by the specific people we anoint as our yardsticks can be traced all the way to biblical and mythological sources. “Father’s blessing” as a token of love and recognition is at the center of practically every single sibling rivalry in Genesis, Greek mythology, and Norse lore.

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Despite its relative commonality, it’s not easy to define this condition in one straightforward formula. It’s full of paradoxical qualities.

For example, one of the most prominent common denominators among people who suffer from the rift within their self-image in the same way I do is the drive for overachieving. In spite of the deep, dark emotional abysses inside, on the outside we go out and display the superior levels of functionality.

It’s easy to confuse low self-esteem with the lack of confidence. Even some dictionaries explain one’s meaning with the other.  But they are, by far, not the same. Somehow, being absolutely clear about the extent of my capacities and striving to fully utilize them have always coexisted in me with thinking of myself as utterly worthless. In fact, the awareness of the merit I invested into my accomplishments made my craving of the acknowledgement that much more intense.

This malady is a bizarre cocktail of contradictions. It definitely paralyzed my aspirations and stunted all impulses of positive daring, but conventionally I was doing just fine. I still went about being a straight A student, acquiring multiple academic degrees, expanding my professional expertise, positioning myself at the executive level of the companies that hired me.

It’s like a dual-action trauma: on one hand, I was pounded into the chasm of neglectful diminishment; and on the other hand, I was motivated to swim up and out…”

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Beyond my parents “…my recognition-thirsty psyche… fixated on the worst option possible: my bosses. Granted, I’m not talking about some middle-management hired hands. At the very beginning of my professional career back in the 1990, I made a conscious choice of advancing it in the precarious environment of flat-structured, privately-held, owners-ran companies. I’ve held Controller and CFO positions since 1993 and I’ve never had any layers between myself and the Founder/CEO/President. It placed me and my efforts into the spotlight held by ‘the only people who mattered’ – the ones directly responsible for my appreciation and rewards.

A totally unbalanced logic led me to seek and expect (!) approval from these little Napoleons, the tiny kings in their kingdoms, the self-made entrepreneurs, from whom I chose to accept employment. It is mind-boggling that, even though I usually managed to quickly identify their professional shortcomings and human deficiencies, I remained completely blind to the futility of my hopes to be assessed by them in accordance with my merits.

Nietzsche saw the conscious understanding of one’s value as a natural distinction of someone with a ‘master’ mentality. And he attributed a man’s ‘waiting of an opinion about himself’ to the concept of a ‘servant’ mentality. He called the latter an ‘immense atavism’, implying that it belonged to the old times, when the society was clearly divided.

No matter who we are, when we submit into Employment, we are forced to adapt ourselves to the idea of servitude. And in some of us, it clashes terribly with our true identities.

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Naturally, the continuous mental battle between the two modes of existence – the one, in which you know your value and are recognized for it, and the one, in which you are ignored and mistreated by those who matter the most – builds an incredibly debilitating pressure inside. This constant back-and-forth switches between someone’s recognition vs. someone else’s disregard, make you sick – and I don’t mean dizzy.       

My agitated mind needed to defend itself in one or another way. While I consciously refused to admit to myself that I had a problem, my subconsciousness has built a defense mechanism all on its own: It learned to seek comfort in the familiar groove of misery carved into my psyche by the repetitive escapes into the dark corners of depression, anxiety, self-loathing, and self-pity.

Just like a gramophone needle, I would drop into this loathsome rut and let myself run, and run, and run in it. And then again, and again, and again…  Every time I felt hurt by one or another situation, a word, or someone’s action – big or small, didn’t matter – I would habitually seek solace in an emotional state most psychiatric professionals would consider highly problematic.

I guess, my depression symptoms have always been somewhat plain to see, because even my primary physicians would suggest a medication. I’ve been on one or another anti-depressant and anti-anxiety pill for some stretches of time since I was 18 years old.  And then I’d stop taking them for the periods just as long.  Sometimes, for very legitimate reasons – like when I was pregnant. And sometimes I would quit for no reason at all. Probably, because I didn’t want to think of myself as crazy or weak.

But you see, even when I did take the medication, it didn’t really work on the internal turmoil.  Like most pharmaceuticals, psychiatric drugs are not the cures; they don’t treat the underlying conditions, they just mitigate the superficial symptoms, which is presumably important but hardly sufficient. 

I would come to a doctor and within the allotted appointment time give a brief description of the darkness and the jittery nervousness that in me manifested itself in cardiological-like aches. “It’s stress,” was the invariable conclusion that satisfied all parties involved: the doctor knew what to prescribe and the patient accepted the chronic nature of the affliction.  What can be done about Stress in the contemporary circus of bread-winning intercut with the single motherhood?  Nothing, really.  And who has the time to look closer, let alone deeper?

Meanwhile, the banal shield of ‘stressful life’ had completely obscured the fact that amidst the unyielding battle between my self-value and low self-esteem I have gradually become severely addicted to Praise and would do anything to achieve it.”

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               

I Built This Prison: Teaser #1: Parental Judgement


“Moms and Dads are the most frequent appointees to our personal value-judgement benches. It appears to be a natural trait for the of humanity, not just the clinical praise addicts like myself.”

                                    “I Built This Prison”, p.10

Note: Marina Guzik was my maiden name

The Frustrated CFO Suddenly Peeps Out: Did you miss me?


Well, would you look at that?!! It’s been more than 7 (SEVEN!!!) years since my last post… One president went away; the ambitious blonds didn’t manage to replace him: their archenemy won instead and then barely survived his term and its consequences; and then another president stumbled in… And even he is already three quarters of the way through his term… All sorts of fucked up cultural upheavals occurred… A pandemic happened with all of its socio-economic consequences… And all the while, the Frustrated CFO remained silent… What happened? – you may ask…

(And some of you are probably also wondering why the hell this strange person shelled out seven-years-worth of fees to keep this blog dormant, yet alive? And the truth of the matter is that I couldn’t bring myself to extinguish my posts out of the Internet existence even if only one of them had a potential of attracting a single reader… But also: I knew this day would come…)

What happened was that by venting in this blog’s posts my annoyance with political, social, and cultural issues – all that tangent, entertaining, but not crucially relevant shit (since 2010, no less!) – I was simply deflecting from the actual problems in my life, letting the real genuine desperation building, and building, and building… To the point when it eventually achieved a critical mass and I went kaboom! As postal as can be…

Maybe if I myself stuck to the truth I was originally propagating by starting this blog – that writing is therapy – and openly discussed my problems here, I could’ve prevented myself from psychological and moral deterioration… Maybe, maybe not… There were so many triggering factors in my life, which I never revealed to anybody – kept it all inside! And clearly, snapping from time to time under the “Bosses” category at the people who employed me didn’t alleviate the accumulating tension…

But no, when the time of passing into the dark came, I didn’t go at them with guns blazing and got it over with in one violent burst… I hate all sorts of outright violence… Wouldn’t touch anyone one with my pinky… The subversive criminal violating – that’s a different story… The stretched out, torturous  self-destruction of continuous embezzlement… Millions… And none the wiser – for months, more than two years – no one noticing, not having a clue, or inkling… In spite of my burning desire to be found out… So, why the fuck would I write about it here?

A few weeks after I wrote my two-blonds jokes, I finally got caught. It took mere 48 hours for me to return more than a third of the embezzled funds back and get pushed into the hands of Justice. I got arrested… and so on, and so forth.. A short stint at Rikers, sixteen months of legal proceedings, three solid years of imprisonment… The aftermath… Not exactly blogging-inducing circumstances… 

And when the time for the redemptive revelations has come, the scope of it seemed so much bigger than a series of blog posts… Hence, the memoir: I Built This Prison. By the time I started writing it, I was done hiding. This book is possibly the most honest I’ve ever been with myself… About the genesis and the perpetration of the crime. About the various punishments that I inflicted on myself and others as well as those exacted against me. Bringing it to completion took as long as the time I spent in the NYS correctional system. Go figure…

Dear God, forgive me my sins and send me readers! I will even settle for just one…

Hence, you can be sure I will continue talking about my memoir here. Ultimately, it ended up to be a therapeutical exercise – as only writing can be. And I want you to share the experience of it… 

  

   

  

 

  

I Built This Prison: A Memoir of Rage, Revenge, and Repentance


NOW AVAILABLE ON AMAZON

“What are you doing here?” was the question everyone asked me in prison – the guards, the inmates, the civilians. They didn’t think I belonged behind the barbwire and couldn’t imagine me doing anything criminal… I just seemed so fundamentally out of place there…

In a way they were right: under our contemporary standards of morality, for most of my life I was viewed by all as an upstanding citizen. Yet, my imprisonment was well deserved: After devoting 25 years of my immigrant life to staying afloat as career Controller and CFO in the unforgiving environment of private entrepreneurship; channeling my various frustrations through this blog for as long as four years; and writing a CFO guide for Springer – I began stealing from my employer, embezzled millions, and got caught… 

What happened? How could a fairly decent person with strong moral beliefs and exceptional work ethics get transformed into something that repeatedly committed one act of thievery after another? Disappointment and  resentment overwhelmed all coping mechanisms and deteriorated into cunning deception. The depletion of personal means coincided with the overflow of the corporate profits… The distorted mind found the way…

My story is very particular and acutely personal, but in many ways it’s also quite typical… Because this memoir was conceived out of my need to repent, I strived to be honest and as objectively revelatory as I could, unflinchingly analyzing the genesis of my moral degradation and its psychological underpinnings. The book also details the specifics of this white collar crime and reflects on the different stages of its aftermath, depicting my quest for some inner clarity under the most oppressive conditions, in the grittiest of places…  

The result is part chronicle, part cautionary tale, part heartfelt confession, part inquisitive commentary… And I sincerely hope that the readers will find my conversational style compelling enough to forgive the verbosity…