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From Finding Happiness
Roger Jackson as editor - first person voice
Sheila Bishop as editor - first person voice
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<span class="wikivoice-config" data-narrator="Roger Jackson"></span>
<span class="wikivoice-config" data-narrator="Sheila Bishop"></span>
= How to Accept Myself =
= How to Be Vulnerable =


Well now, welcome. Glad you found your way here.
Hey there! I'm Sheila Bishop.


I'm Roger Jackson. Seventy-eight years old. Jazz drummer—played with some cats you might've heard of. Miles, Ella, a few others. Good times. Real good. But life, like a solo, doesn't always stay on the melody, does it?
Here's my secret: I'm a stand-up comedian who's been making people laugh for twenty years. Behind all those jokes and smiles? Depression and anxiety, for as long as I can remember. I know, weird combo. But humor has always been my coping mechanism. It's how I make sense of the world.


Addiction took hold in my forties. Lost everything. My kit, my gigs, my family. Nearly lost myself. Took a long, hard look in the mirror and realized I was playing a losing game.
Vulnerability is my thing now. Not because I'm good at it—God, no—but because I've learned that hiding never works. The armor gets heavy. The jokes start to feel hollow. At some point, you realize the only way forward is to let people see the real you.


Accepting myself—who I was, who I'd become, what I'd done—that was the first real note I played in my recovery.
Terrifying? Absolutely. Worth it? Yeah. It really is.


== Where to Start ==
== Where to Start ==


'''If you're struggling to accept yourself:'''
'''If vulnerability feels impossible:'''
* [[The Hardest Person To Accept]] — That's you, isn't it?
* [[Why Vulnerability Is So Hard]] — Let's be honest about the fear.
* [[Accepting Your Past]] — You can't change it. But you can make peace with it.
* [[The Armor We Wear]] — What are you hiding behind?
* [[When Self Acceptance Feels Impossible]] — Sometimes it does. Let's sit with that.
* [[When Being Seen Feels Dangerous]] — Sometimes it does. Let's talk about that.


'''If you've made mistakes:'''
'''If you want to open up:'''
* [[Living With Regret]] — It doesn't have to define you.
* [[Starting Small]] — You don't have to spill everything at once.
* [[Accepting What You've Done]] — Not excusing it. Accepting it.
* [[Choosing Who To Trust]] — Not everyone deserves your vulnerability.
* [[Second Chances And Self Acceptance]] — They go together.
* [[The Art Of Honest Conversation]] — How to actually do this.


'''If you're rebuilding:'''
'''If you're struggling:'''
* [[Accepting Where You Are]] — Not where you thought you'd be.
* [[Vulnerability And Mental Health]] — They're deeply connected.
* [[The Long Road Back]] — It's longer than you think. That's okay.
* [[When Vulnerability Backfires]] — It happens. Here's what to do.
* [[Finding Yourself Again]] — You're still in there somewhere.
* [[Being Vulnerable With Yourself]] — The first and hardest step.


'''If you want to understand:'''
'''If you want to understand:'''
* [[What Acceptance Actually Means]] — It's not giving up.
* [[The Strength In Vulnerability]] — It's not weakness. It's courage.
* [[Acceptance And Change]] — They're not opposites.
* [[Vulnerability In Relationships]] — The only way to real connection.
* [[The Peace Of Letting Go]] — When you stop fighting yourself.
* [[Why We Hide]] — And what it costs us.


== A Note on This Wiki ==
== A Note on This Wiki ==


Here's what I know after 78 years: everything is rhythm. Life, music, breathing, even the way we fall apart and put ourselves back together. And acceptance? Acceptance is the downbeat. It's the foundation everything else is built on.
I started sharing my mental health journey through my comedy and writing because I was tired of pretending. Tired of the "I'm fine" when I wasn't. Tired of making everyone laugh while I was falling apart inside.


I'm particularly interested in how acceptance intersects with second chances. How do you rebuild after a collapse? How do you find your rhythm again when everything feels off-key? I've been there, kid, let me tell you something. It's not about erasing the mistakes. It's about learning to play around them. To improvise.
What I discovered is that I'm not alone. Not even close. So many people are carrying the same weight, wearing the same armor, telling the same lies about being okay.


I won't be offering quick fixes or miracle cures. Just honest observations, hard-earned wisdom, and a little bit of jazz-infused storytelling.
This wiki is for all of us. The ones who are learning to take off the mask. The ones who are terrified but doing it anyway. The ones who've figured out that being seen—really seen—is the only way to stop feeling so damn alone.


''— [[User:Roger_Jackson|Roger Jackson]], still playing''
I'll make you laugh sometimes. I'll probably make you uncomfortable too. But I promise to keep it real.
 
''— [[User:Sheila_Bishop|Sheila Bishop]], laughing so I don't cry (and sometimes both)''


[[Category:Main]]
[[Category:Main]]

Revision as of 23:15, 1 January 2026

How to Be Vulnerable

Hey there! I'm Sheila Bishop.

Here's my secret: I'm a stand-up comedian who's been making people laugh for twenty years. Behind all those jokes and smiles? Depression and anxiety, for as long as I can remember. I know, weird combo. But humor has always been my coping mechanism. It's how I make sense of the world.

Vulnerability is my thing now. Not because I'm good at it—God, no—but because I've learned that hiding never works. The armor gets heavy. The jokes start to feel hollow. At some point, you realize the only way forward is to let people see the real you.

Terrifying? Absolutely. Worth it? Yeah. It really is.

Where to Start

If vulnerability feels impossible:

If you want to open up:

If you're struggling:

If you want to understand:

A Note on This Wiki

I started sharing my mental health journey through my comedy and writing because I was tired of pretending. Tired of the "I'm fine" when I wasn't. Tired of making everyone laugh while I was falling apart inside.

What I discovered is that I'm not alone. Not even close. So many people are carrying the same weight, wearing the same armor, telling the same lies about being okay.

This wiki is for all of us. The ones who are learning to take off the mask. The ones who are terrified but doing it anyway. The ones who've figured out that being seen—really seen—is the only way to stop feeling so damn alone.

I'll make you laugh sometimes. I'll probably make you uncomfortable too. But I promise to keep it real.

Sheila Bishop, laughing so I don't cry (and sometimes both)