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Am I “Dying of Politeness”?

Morgan Kilger Student Contributor, St. Bonaventure University
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at SBU chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

Currently, I am reading Dying of Politeness by actress Geena Davis. This is a simple memoir about Geena Davis’s early life and career based on her personality. Her personality is shy and polite. 

Going into reading this, I wasn’t too interested because I’m reading this for a class, and memoirs aren’t necessarily the first type of book I’d pick up. This one, however, had me in a chokehold from the moment I picked it up. 

Geena Davis talks a lot about her struggle with being too polite and not speaking up for herself enough, something she’s struggled with since childhood. She’s very in her own head. As I was reading the first couple of chapters, I realized that I also don’t speak up for myself and can be too polite. 

Growing up, I watched adults around me do this and not even notice—my mom especially. 

I would see my mom nod and smile in an uncomfortable situation to avoid conflict. She will bend over backwards for anyone, no matter how they treat her. If there is a potential conflict, she will not be the one to point it out, but instead, let it fester inside her. 

Now, I am not shaming my mom for this at all. I am the last person to do this. But it makes sense as to why I do it. It’s like a “monkey see, monkey do” scenario. 

I’ve been made aware for years that I let others walk all over me to avoid conflict. I am a true people pleaser to my core, and I genuinely hate myself for it. It doesn’t resolve anything but instead makes it worse. 

Learning how to deal with this has been a difficult but efficient matter. I’ve started to speak up for myself more instead of letting it build inside me until I freak out over the most minuscule thing. But with this, I still have setbacks. Last week I had the worst day ever, and the tiniest thing forced me to freak out and call my mom sobbing at 10 p.m. on a Monday evening. 

Brutal. 

Here’s the thing, though, things like that happen. Setbacks happen. Life happens. 

It keeps me wondering if I am experiencing the “dying of politeness” thing that Geena Davis is. If I’m letting my insecurities and thoughts boil over into a pool of tears, am I being polite? Here’s the thing with that: I’m probably not. 

I’m not Geena Davis. I’m not a movie star who’s overcoming her fear of impressing a director. I’m a college student who’s honestly just taking it day by day.

Morgan is a second-year writer and co-social media chair for St. Bonaventure University’s chapter of Her Campus, and is very excited to continue writing about what she is passionate about. This includes: mental health, pop culture, academic tips, and life experiences. She is also excited to be part of the executive board this year and help bring HCSBU to life on social media.

Outside of Her Campus, you can find Morgan as Communications Officer for SBU College Democrats, a student ambassador, and dancing with the SBU Dance Team. As for her studies, she is a senior history and women’s studies double major with a political science minor. Morgan aspires to work in a museum or university archive.

In her free time, Morgan enjoys being herself with her loved ones. Whether it’s watching Riverdale with her roommates or taking post-dinner trips to Wendy’s, she loves to spend time with her friends. She’s also working through her “to be read” list before she graduates, which is pages upon pages long (every pun intended).