The Living Paradox | Teen Ink

The Living Paradox

November 28, 2013
By oneeyore BRONZE, East Brunswick, New Jersey
oneeyore BRONZE, East Brunswick, New Jersey
1 article 0 photos 0 comments

For Koreans, the emotions and messages one’s eyes convey are crucial to human communication: they are called the ‘noon-beet’. The word is used to compliment people with gentle eyes; the word is used to chastise those with cold stares. I was a victim of the latter. Acquaintances would call me the epitome of a living paradox: “Your name is Joy but you’re more like...Scary.” My few close friends would admit to thinking that I despised them before we talked and family members would often advise me to make smiling a habit because my blank expression looked intimidating. My small, mono-eyelid eyes were deleterious to my social life.

Commonly believed to be the windows to one’s soul, eyes are the first thing people look at when approaching someone. I wish this weren’t true because this primitive instinct left me friendless and lonely for a large fraction of my life. For years, I blamed my parents for the way people saw me; had they not cursed me with such sharp blinking orbs, I would have more friends like my Bambi-eyed sister. I never pointed my finger at myself because I wasn’t the one who planted the fake anger in my eye sockets, but I soon came to realize that I had the power to kill the cold fire in my eyes. My raw noon-beet was my doing, not anyone else’s.

It was the beginning of tenth grade when I finally decided to become a new person. My goal that year was to smile and laugh more because I wanted to live up to my name. My mother had named me Joy so I would bring joy to others’ lives, but aloof, terse and usually expressionless, I am positive I didn’t follow up to my mom’s expectations. I was determined to change my noon-beet and the way people perceived me.

Smile, Joy, smile. I reminded myself as I sat in class.

She waved to you. Wave back. I forced myself midwalk.

Hurry up and wish him a nice day, I urged. People think saying that will change things.
Everyday was a struggle.

I didn’t understand how people could do all this without thinking. Did I lack a certain chromosome that carried friendliness? Was I just a natural born antisocial freak? Was my noon-beet destined to sting forever?

Even sitting here two years later, I can’t lie and say my noon-beet is the complete opposite of what it used to be. However, I know it has gotten a lot softer by the way strangers smile at me. And although I look—and am—happier, there is still an ongoing war inside me: my direct nature vs. my willingness to match my name. I don’t know if the battles will ever stop but I believe it’s better than complete silence from me and my thoughts.

Being bright isn’t my second nature—nor my third, fourth or fifth. Yet my efforts to mold myself into a joyous person have earned me the nickname ‘Happy Virus’ from my friends, church and family members. On one hand, I’m not joy; on the other, I am Joy. I am not my appearance or an internal force, but both my engraved and sketched personalities.


The author's comments:
I wrote this for the first Common App prompt about identity. I didn't like this piece much until I got a lot of positive feedback from my friends and family.

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