Had my therapist look at me last week and say something that knocked me sideways. “You know those aren’t personality traits, right? They’re coping mechanisms.”
I’m sitting there in her office, sixty-six years old, and she’s telling me that everything I thought made me who I am—being punctual, keeping everything neat, never needing help, never causing drama—all of it was just survival stuff I picked up as a kid.
And the worst part? She’s right.
I’ve been running on autopilot for over fifty years, following rules I made up when I was seven years old trying to keep the peace in a house where my dad’s mood could turn on a dime.
The kid who learned to be invisible
Growing up, my old man worked as a pipefitter. Hard job, hard life, hard man. He’d come home exhausted, covered in dust, and you never knew which version of him was walking through that door.
Good day? He might ruffle your hair, ask about school. Bad day? You better be somewhere else.
So I learned. Be quiet. Be clean. Be useful. Be gone.
I kept my room spotless because a messy room meant getting yelled at. I showed up everywhere fifteen minutes early because being late meant disappointing people, and disappointing people meant trouble. I handled everything myself because asking for help meant being a burden, and burdens got dropped.
By the time I was ten, I had it all figured out. Keep things tidy, show up on time, handle your own problems, don’t make waves. That was how you stayed safe.
The thing is, it worked. Teachers loved me. Bosses loved me. I built a whole business on being the guy who showed up when he said he would, did what he promised, never complained.
But somewhere along the way, I forgot these were strategies. I started thinking they were just who I was.
When survival becomes identity
You want to know how deep this stuff runs? My wife Donna has been trying to get me to relax about being early for forty-four years. We’ll be going to dinner with friends, and I’m pacing by the door thirty minutes before we need to leave.
“We live ten minutes away,” she’ll say.
“Traffic,” I’ll say. “Parking. Something could happen.”
But it’s not about traffic. It’s about that seven-year-old kid who learned that being late meant being in trouble.
Same with the tidiness. My workshop looks like a museum. Every tool in its place, labeled, cleaned. My kids used to joke that I alphabetized my screwdrivers. They weren’t far off.
Is it useful to be organized? Sure. But there’s organized, and then there’s what I do, which is use order to feel in control because chaos meant danger when I was a kid.
The cost of never needing anyone
This one’s the hardest to admit. I’ve spent my whole life being proudly self-sufficient. Never asked for help, never accepted it when offered.
Broke my shoulder on a job site once. Drove myself to the hospital, drove myself home, figured out how to work with it rather than take time off or ask my crew to cover for me.
My son said to me recently, “Dad, you know it’s okay to need people, right?”
I wanted to tell him he was wrong. That needing people is weak, that real men handle their own problems. But then I remembered where I learned that. In a house where asking for help got you a lecture about being a burden, where showing weakness got you mocked.
My dad never asked for help either. Died without ever saying “I love you.”
The drama of having no drama
“Never dramatic” sounds like a good thing, right? Level-headed. Steady. Reliable.
But you know what it really means? It means I learned to stuff everything down so deep that even I couldn’t find it.
My family used to call me a robot. Not mean-spirited, just observing. Nothing rattled me. Nothing upset me. I was the calm in every storm.
Except I wasn’t calm. I was disconnected.
When my dad died, I handled all the arrangements. Picked the casket, organized the service, dealt with the lawyers. Everyone said I was being so strong. Truth was, I didn’t know how to do anything else. The feelings were there, somewhere, but I’d spent so many years learning not to show them that I’d forgotten how to access them.
Took me ten years to actually grieve him. Ten years.
Waking up at sixty-six
So here I am, retired, supposed to be enjoying my golden years, and instead I’m in therapy learning that my whole personality is basically a defense mechanism from 1964.
The hardest part is figuring out what’s actually me and what’s just old programming. Am I punctual because I respect other people’s time, or because I’m still afraid of getting in trouble? Do I keep things tidy because I like order, or because chaos makes me anxious in ways I don’t even understand?
My therapist says it’s probably both. That these strategies became part of me, but I can choose how much power they have.
Some days I practice being five minutes late on purpose. Just to prove I can. Donna thinks it’s hilarious.
I’ve started asking for help with small things. Let my neighbor help me move a workbench. Asked my son to help me figure out my new phone instead of spending three hours reading the manual myself.
Each time, I wait for something bad to happen. For someone to get angry, to call me a burden, to lose respect for me.
It never happens.
Bottom line
I’m not saying everyone who’s punctual or tidy is working through childhood trauma. Some people just like being on time and having clean spaces.
But if you’re like me, if you’ve got these rigid rules about how you have to be, if breaking them makes you anxious in ways you can’t explain, maybe ask yourself where they came from.
Were they choices you made? Or were they survival strategies from a time when you didn’t have choices?
I’m sixty-six years old and just starting to figure out the difference. Feels late, but my therapist says it’s never too late. She also says the fact that I’m questioning these patterns means they’re already losing their grip.
Maybe she’s right. Maybe not. All I know is that for the first time in my life, I’m trying to figure out who I am when I’m not trying to stay safe from dangers that disappeared fifty years ago.
It’s weird. It’s uncomfortable. But it might just be freedom.














