Nollywood actress, Beverly Naya has relieved memories of her childhood, saying 'she never really thought she was beautiful as a child' because she had low self-esteem issues.
The beautiful actress made this revelation on her Instagram post, on Friday, August 25.
She said she was bullied for
“having really bad eczema, crooked teeth, a light bulb head and
football legs”.
“I never thought I was beautiful as a
child and once I hit my early teens, I found myself overcompensating
for my lack of self-esteem,” she wrote in a post on her Instagram
page on Thursday.
“I wanted to please in every way to
the detriment of my own happiness…this carried on into my early
twenties when after two years of living in Nigeria.
“I nearly completely lost myself
trying to fit in and be understood/liked. I guess growing up as an
only child has partly attributed to my reserved nature.
“I’m an introvert when you first
meet me but an extrovert when comfortable, most times socially
awkward on first encounter (first few encounters in some cases lol)
but my heart is always in the right place…I’m not perfect.”
Read her post....
thebeverlynaya I've come a long way from
the little girl who was bullied for having really bad eczema, crooked
teeth, a 'lightbulb head' and 'football legs'. I never thought I was
beautiful as a child and once I hit my early teens, I found myself
overcompensating for my lack of self esteem. I wanted to please in
every way to the detriment of my own happiness...this carried on into
my early twenties when after two years of living in Nigeria, I nearly
completely lost myself trying to fit in and be understood/liked. I
guess growing up as an only child has partly attributed to my
reserved nature. I'm an introvert when you first meet me but an
extrovert when comfortable, most times socially awkward on first
encounters (first few encounters in some cases lol) but my heart is
always in the right place...I'm not perfect.
I think I only truly found myself last
year, I stopped trying to make people like me, stopped trying to
force people to see the real me...the funny me, the happy and bubbly
me, the caring me. I realised that only those who are genuinely
supposed to be in my life would always be the ones who get to see
this. I only realised last year that you can't force people to like
you, neither can you dumb down/change who you are to be accepted. I'm
not perfect but God thinks I am and He knows it's been an emotional
battle to get my mind to where it is today, but I am so incredibly
grateful and proud of myself for the woman I am becoming...I say
becoming because I don't believe any of us are there yet, I don't
think we ever stop growing into our purpose, but the journey (if you
allow it to happen without manipulating it) truly is beautiful.
If I could speak to my younger self, I
would tell her:
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