This is just a quick post, because we just moved to San Diego, yay! But this means there are a ton of items on our To-Do list. And while it's tempting to quietly shift them to our Let's Pretend We'll Get Right On That list, they are things that actually need to get done. Whereas writing a blog post for a handful of readers with better things to do? That doesn't fit on any sensible list.
Yet somehow here we are.
Anyway, so for a few days my feeds kept adamantly pointing me to an Atlantic article about the upside of not fitting in, explaining all the nifty benefits that come from being an outsider. The underlying article is four years old, so I'm not sure why they were pushing it, other than that they somehow sensed I needed something to blog about.
I actually agreed to the premise, in theory... yet something about it stuck in my craw. I seem to be someone with a very sticky craw, given the number of things that accumulate in there. (Note: I went to double check what a craw was and discovered that all these years I'd had it wrong! It's a pouch in the throat that certain birds use to aid in digestion. I'd somehow always pictured a large Crow clutching something in its Claw. Crow + Claw = Craw. It's unsettling to realize one has reached one's sixties with kindergartner's understanding of a common expression for something not sitting quite right).
So what did the article say about the benefits of being an Outsider and what made me grumpy about it?
The Benefits of Not Fitting In
Let's go ahead and quote the Atlantic, because I'm lazy:
The loneliness, the self-doubt, the sense that everyone else has the map except you: Those are often signs that you’re stretching, not failing. Over time, Brooks writes, outsiders tend to grow more resilient and emotionally strong—not in spite of the discomfort, but because of it.
Outsiders, Olga Khazan wrote in 2020, are freer to question assumptions, break rules, and imagine alternatives, because they’ve already learned what it feels like to stand apart. She draws on social-science research showing that people who feel excluded are often better at original thinking, precisely because they’re less bound by group norms.
Well sure, that makes sense. The underlying article goes on to suggest you jet off on a sabbatical in a foreign country, or at least go to a different gym or church, to reap the benefits of an outsider's perspective.
Why I Call Bullshit
So yeah, not fitting in does shape you in ways that can be beneficial later on. But whether this is a good thing or a bad thing depends a lot on how and why you don't fit in, doesn't it?
For example, the author of the original article, Arthur C. Brooks, mentions that he's biased, because he too was an outsider! He was put on academic probation in art school, and so instead went to Spain in his twenties to play the French horn. He had to learn the language and he did not fit in for a while. He later came back to the U.S. and became a Harvard professor and has written a bunch of self help/personal growth books. For him it was a very enriching experience despite being difficult at first.
And so yeah, I can relate: being a privileged white person voluntarily pursuing adventures in a foreign country comes with a bit of discomfort! Especially if you don't already speak the language. And it does come with all sorts of long term benefits, if you choose to cultivate them. I could (and probably will) write a whole post about these.
But I think what gets me a little riled is the way the article seems to trivialize what it really means to be an outsider involuntarily. To be not just different, but marginalized, condemned, bullied, excluded, oppressed.
Whether or not it ultimately makes you more of a creative thinker, I don't think anyone should feel they need to live a full "outsider" experience.
Risking your life to flee war, poverty, torture, famine and disease only to end up in a country that doesn't want you, who treats you as less than human? Being born with disabilities, or being neurodivergent, or being the "wrong" race or religion, or being gay or trans in the wrong time or place?
Yes, in the long run these struggles can make you an independent thinker! But bullying and discrimination and ostracism can lead to low self esteem, chronic stress, even suicide, and a whole lot of other shitty outcomes as well. And this may be a stretch, but promoting the idea that people's experience of being excluded and discriminated against is really, in the long run, good for them? I think it's a bit problematic during times like these where bigotry and white supremacy and other forms of intolerance are so prevalent and politically powerful.
The Bottom Line: Compassion
So there's so much more to say about Being an Outsider, versus Feeling Like You Belong. Another day maybe. But I think one of the best outcomes one can have from feeling on the outside is understanding what it's like for other outsiders.
I don't think it's necessarily inevitable. Have you noticed how many people who are oppressed or ostracized or bullied will turn right around and vicimize others? Just think of how many mass shootings have resulted from that dynamic. But for many of us who have at one point been seen as Undesirable Others, it's worthwhile to keep remembering what that feels like, and be mindful that there are always ousiders in our midst who may be struggling, and to lend a hand or an ear or a shoulder to cry on or whatever body part might be appropriate.
Are You, Or Have You Ever Been An Outsider?
My experience living in a foreign country feels fairly trivial on the scale of Outsiderness. On the other hand, growing up gay in the '60s and '70s felt much more impactful, although ultimately it has brought more joy than trauma, somewhat validating the premise of the article. And my neurotic, introverted, weirdo personality has also made me feel a bit like an alien at times, but a stubborn alien who doesn't necessarily want to assimilate with normal humans.
There are lots of ways of being an outsider, of feeling excluded. You may feel conspicuous, or, almost as bad somehow: invisible. Perhaps you're a woman in a male dominated profession. Or a Muslim in a conservative Christian neighborhood. A Yankees fan living in Boston. There are lots of ways of not fitting in.
How about you guys? Have you ever felt like you didn't belong? Was that a good thing or a bad thing for you?

Have nothing but muddled thoughts on my experience of outsiderness. Growing up female in the sixties with liberal, nay radical, relatives (who fought for "desegregation" as it was called then, and asked girl-children what they wanted to be when they grew up, and if the answer was "a mother' the response was "That's nice, dear, but if you had to support your children what kind of job would you want?") I experienced considerable disorientation when I looked at society around me.
ReplyDeleteThat's so cool, Mary Anne, that your family was so progressive and ahead of its time! Did you get any crap from kids at school with a more conservative upbringing, or was it pretty much live and let live?
ReplyDeleteI don’t think anyone in elementary school knew any of this. By the time we were in high school all my friends were pretty liberal. It’s only looking back at it that I can analyze why I felt other people were so strange.
DeleteI think there’s a difference between feeling like you are an outsider, like the whole world is “out there,” and having others ostracize you and treat you like you don’t belong. One is feeling that way from within, the other is forced on you from the outside. If it’s from within, you do learn and adapt and get stronger.
ReplyDeleteThose of us who have always felt like the world is something “out there” are, well, I can’t explain it as well as it’s explained at a website called The Wakefield Doctrine. I tried to do a link, but your blog won’t allow links, so it’s wakefielddoctrine(dot)com.
You might find it interesting, and if you do decide to visit, on the right side at the top it says Clarks/Scotts/Rogers. Start with reading each of those.
Wow, I'd never heard of the wakefield doctrine! It's indeed fascinating. I'm clearly a Clark, but I'm not sure I buy the idea that Clarks are actually longing to be like everyone else. I'd say we value our idiosyncratic and cerebral take on everything and secretly judge the Scotts and Rogers as much as we may occasionally envy them. Or maybe I'm just a very naughty Clark?
ReplyDeleteNo, you aren’t naughty. I think it’s the point of why the article made me think of the Doctrine. We eventually become able to value our outsiderness, so to speak. With those who are Rogers who want to be just another herd member, being ostracized is exactly what they fear most, so they suffer most from it all the things you were talking about.
DeleteI can definitely relate to being an outsider. I have always felt that I didn't fit in, for a variety of reasons. And now that we all have to choose which political tribe we belong to (ahem), I am definitely on the outside in my community of right-wing separatists who want to destroy Canada because they have been told to feel slighted! It's disheartening, at times, to know that people you've known for a very long time are so ... so .... dumb.
ReplyDeleteNot exactly the well thought out, nuanced reply I had planned - I heard that dreaded "hork hork hork" from the kitchen, which made me push publish before I leapt to my feet and ran, arriving just in time to see the cat projectile vomit all over my chair, my unfortunate sweater hanging on the back of said chair, and acres of the floor. Sigh. At least I belong to the club of cat owners who know exactly what I mean about hearing that sound!
DeleteOh no! On both counts, the being surrounded by right-wingers as well as the dreaded hork hork! It's dispiriting, isn't it, when otherwise good people get pulled into this reflexively selfish, combative, ignorant cult where facts no longer matter, so there's no communicating with them? I always think of Canada as somehow above all that, and generally you are SO far ahead of the U.S., but is there something about living in the middle of wide open spaces, that make people less open to "others," and more stubborn about entitlement? And the hork hork made me laugh: after almost 20 years petless, due to our ridiculously vagabond lifestyle, we are considering getting a cat again. A good reminder that they are not maintenance free! Although I'm already sold, we'd already have one if it were just up to me. Working on the Lobster, but she's getting there. I won't remind her about the Hork Horking.
DeleteI've been an outsider in most situations through my life, for reasons I won't burden you with, but I think the most important part of that statement is the word "most". Every once in a while I find a place, a group, a situation where I actually DO fit, and once I get over the initial surprise I think I appreciate that sense of belonging all the more for it being an infrequent thing.
ReplyDeleteAs to whether being an outsider is in any way beneficial in general, I agree with you that that very much depends on the who, how, where and why of the situation. If one size really fit all, none of us would ever be outsiders.
You make a great point, Outside Duck! I do think one of the best compensations for Outsiderness is the way it makes "belonging" feel so special and appreciated when it happens. Finding one's Tribe in the midst of a society that feels Other is actually kind of thrilling. I don't think the Normies get quite the same thrill being surrounded by other Normies, it's like fish trying to appreciate water.
DeleteI have felt I was an outsider for all kinds of things, for all my life. As a young gal, it was me being a Tom-boy. I liked being one, but felt it made me less of a female so I didn't fit in. As an adult, I hide the fact that I am agnostic/atheist (depending on the day). I live in the Bible-iest of the Bible belt and it can be oppressive.
ReplyDeleteWhy is it that we have to be so afraid to be ourselves...to express ourselves? Why do those, who we think of as not being outsiders, think they can oppress us but we don't have the right to BE us?
All that said, recently I have realized I am not as much of an outsider as I thought I was. There are a lot of 'me-s' out there! It's just that they too, are afraid or hesitate to share their true selves for fear of retribution.
I hope this post makes sense. Between three hours of sleep and the continuous escalation of world/US events, my brain is fried.
You make perfect sense Walkerlady, and sorry about the lack of sleep! And same on both counts: I was also a tomboy, so much so I'd probably have called myself trans or nonbinary were I born a few decades later. And I was a very early agnostic-- I was about 6 or 7 when I asked to stop going to church because I had trouble believing the fairy tales in the Bible were real, and my mother secretly agreed with me. I grew up near San Francisco toward the end of the hippy era, so I didn't get overtly oppressed, and in grade school people just accepted my differentness. Yet as I hit adolescence, it became much more painful to be different, and I tried to conform for a few years before deciding "F--- it," I have no desire to be what society says "female" should be. (And in the SF bay area, agnostics were not exactly rare, no one ever cared about that!) So yeah, there are a lot of "you's" out here. :)
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