The self is a sedimented thing, a geological column of discarded selves and preserved agonies. When I stand in the "now," attempting to wrestle a singular emotion to the ground, I am rarely fighting a solitary ghost. To possess the will to overcome a feeling is, in truth, an act of redirection—a desperate, subsurface desire to suppress a dozen other specters that have begun to howl in unison. We speak of "getting over" sadness as if it were a fence to be climbed, failing to realize that the fence is built from the timber of old shames and the rusted wire of forgotten failures.
We are notoriously poor map makers of our own internal geography. We point to a sharp ache in the chest and call it "anxiety," but beneath that clinical label lies a complex bouquet of fragrances wafting from the past. It is the metallic tang of a childhood defeat, the cloying scent of a love that rotted before it could bloom, and the heavy, incense-like musk of a secret we have kept even from ourselves. To feel "now" is to inhale the totality of "then."
This is the central friction of human existence: the delta between the man who stands in the mirror and the phantom he intended to become. When I experience a sudden, inexplicable surge of anger at a minor slight, I am wrestling with the version of myself that was too weak to speak up a decade ago. I am battling the "I was" who allowed a boundary to be breached, and the "I wished I were" who would have stood tall. The current emotion is merely the theater where these two ancient combatants choose to meet.
We often mistake our willpower for a forward-moving force, a clean blade cutting towards the future. But the will is more like an anchor being dragged across a crowded seabed; it hooks into everything it touches. To "overcome" a sense of inadequacy in the present is actually a clandestine attempt to rewrite a chapter of shame from the past. We are trying to heal the child by punishing the adult. We tell ourselves we want peace, but what we often seek is an alibi—a way to prove that the person we were is no longer a part of the person we are.