Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
Menu

I Can’t Find Myself In You

Posted on February 1, 2020January 31, 2020 by Megan Amato

How I learned that my self-esteem can’t come from others’ bodies 

Megan Amato // Associate News Editor

Sex and I have a very complicated relationship. It was often an unhealthy one, based not on mutual pleasure but on whether or not a person wanted me. I had little to no self-esteem, undiagnosed mental health issues and a family who had taught me that love was conditional. I treated my body as a commodity that I traded for a temporary kind of love. I looked for who I was the only way I knew how to find myself—through other people. It took many unsatisfying and often humiliating sexual encounters and a couple of abusive relationships to realize that what I was looking for couldn’t be found in others. I couldn’t trade sex for my self-esteem and self-worth. I had to find those things in myself.  

I’m not slut-shaming those who are sexually active, who love sex and find pleasure in variety. Instead, this is criticism of using sex as a tool for sex-validation. Simply stated: sex won’t make someone love you, but more, it won’t make you love you. Self-love doesn’t come when you do—and I rarely did anyway. 

I hate clichés in media about loose women having “daddy issues.” I may have deep-rooted issues with my father but those issues come primarily from the worst daddy of them all: the patriarchy. Sure, my father told me that he hoped I wasn’t a slut because that’s all I would amount to no matter my accomplishments, but that was just wisdom passed down from big papa patriarchy. Women are criticized as both the virgin and the slut; there is no winning when it comes to sex, and the harder you try to find that self-worth in others, the more elusive it becomes.  

I was 15-years-old the first time I had sex with my boyfriend of one week—and he dumped me the next. The second time was with a slightly older guy who was very sexually experienced—to this day I don’t know how he got so many girls to sleep with him because it was the most unsatisfying sexual experience I’ve ever had. I had sex with him because I ached to feel wanted, and for those two days leading up to it, I did. He stopped talking to me almost as soon as he was done. After that, his friend messaged me on MySpace to kindly inform me that I was a whore. It was the second time I’d ever had sex but because it was with a guy who was promiscuous, I was the slut. Boys will be boys and all that rubbish.  

Unfortunately, I didn’t learn my lesson. I kept handing my body over to people in hopes that I would feel some sort of connection that would provide me with a sense of self. I questioned my self-worth and value daily. I choose romantic engagements over friendships because they made me feel more immediate and hurt people who cared about me. When I turned 19, the bar scene made sex more easily available. There were some fun interactions, but I realized that I wasn’t hugely turned on by the person but by my own power and I slept only with those who chased me. It didn’t last long. It was six months before I was tired of the club scene and my self-esteem had hit an all-time low. I crashed and burned, hurt someone I cared about and began living with someone. That short relationship was emotionally abusive and he made me think that I owed him my body for every kindness he had given me. For a while, I thought it was my punishment and stayed until one incident made me fear for my safety.  

After that, I spent six months with myself and away from the toxic relationship I had with sex. I entered a long-distance relationship and being separated from the person and unable to throw my body at problems allowed me to discover who I was, what I liked about myself and my complicated sexuality. In the end, being alone made me confront myself and my issues and opened the door in a way that sex or other people never could. Find who you are by yourself. You’ll thank yourself later.

Category: Opinions

Post navigation

← MSP Premiums Eliminated
The Race to Representation →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

  • International Tuition Increase Approved, and 432 Letters From Students Disregarded
    Tuition fees have increased by five per cent for all international students, and a substantial portion of the student body is disappointed […]
  • Carney Says Canada to Recognize Palestine
    Western powers align, but little to change on the ground    Theodore Abbott (he/him) // News Editor   As Israel prepares to force […]
  • AI Slop: ChatGPT Shown to Kill Brain Gains
    A recently published study from MIT brings to light the effects of relying on AI models to think critically for us   Kayla Price […]
  • Stalled Negotiations for Unionized Student Employee Wages
    The MoveUP union and Capilano University fail to find common ground to start negotiations that would address the urgent issue of student […]
  • Cybersecurity Breach at CapU
    Reporting on the recent phishing incident that encouraged students to send $850 to scammers Yasmine Modaresi (she/her) // News Editor […]
  • 2025 CSU Election—Record number of disqualifications & three directors removed from office
    The trend towards greater rates of participation in CSU elections after the pandemic is interrupted, and the rise of disqualifications had […]
Video Production
We are bringing back The Courier Corner podcast! 

Welcome to season 3. Join our co-hosts Sara (former co-EIC) and Adam (co-EIC) as they unpack the theme of our last issue—Trash. 

Follow us on all platforms @capilano.courier

capilanocourier.com
Trash | September 2025
Subscribe
© 2025 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme