Squidy: The Stuffed Animal That Held My World Together
Describe an item you were incredibly attached to as a youth. What became of it?
There’s an item from my childhood that I was incredibly attached to. His name was Squidy. He was a stuffed animal, though even now I couldn’t confidently tell you what kind. Maybe a dog. Maybe a bunny. But what mattered wasn’t what he was, it was how he made me feel.
For some reason, Squidy’s arm became my security blanket. It was my soft spot. Not just in texture, but in comfort. I would wrap my fingers around it and rub it between my nose and upper lip. I did this whenever I needed soothing, whenever my body felt unsettled or my emotions felt too big.
Squidy himself was a bit of a mystery. He wore an unmistakable pastel, 80-s style clown jumpsuit, and somehow fit perfectly int my world during a time when I needed comfort more than anything. The touch of his fabric against my skin grounded me in ways that I didn’t understand back then.
I didn’t know it at the time, but looking back now, I know what Squidy was for me. He was sensory regulation, emotional safety, and he was my stimming—my body’s way of calming itself during times of internal chaos.
Squidy never left my side. He traveled with me everywhere I went. He absorbed my ffears and held space for my anxieties. There was a reassurance in his presence. A reminder that meant everything will be okay.
Time hasn’t been kind to him. Squdy is quite literally falling apar at the seams now. His fabric is worn thin, though still soft, his structure is fragile. He’s from 1988 after all. But, I still have him and quite honestly, I’d never be able to let him go.
He’s tucked away now but is still very much a part of my life. He’s a reminder of how I learned to comfort myself long before I knew words like anxiety, overwhelm, or sensory sensitivity.
Squidy represents the earliest version of me learning how to cope, how to self-soothe in a world that felt too overwhelming. As I grew older, my coping mechanisms evolved.
During my teenage years, I became a hair twirler in times of nervousness and anxiety. I’d pick at my split ends, hyper-fixating on each strand as if I were searching for relief from being either under- or overstimulated. It became an effective habit.
Now, I vocalize.
I hum. I sing at random moments. And I repeat the same phrase over and over in my mind: “It’s okay. You’re fine.” Sometimes I mutter it under my breath when I’m around others, trying to keep it contained, trying not to draw attention.
There are moments when everything builds too quickly, when it feels like I need to shed a second skin just to breathe. In those moments, I have to admit that I’ve engaged in unhealthy coping—hitting my legs, slapping myself, punching myself to release the pressure. These moments are rare, but they are real. They’re part of my journey, even if they’re difficult to say out loud.
Other times, the release comes through scream crying—deep, uncontrollable sobs that pour out when I feel empty and completely spent.
I also struggle with what to do with my hands. When I’m nervous, they become sweaty, and I rub them together incessantly until my skin feels raw. It’s another attempt to ground myself. Another outlet for energy that has nowhere else to go.
From Squidy’s comforting arm to whispered reassurances, from hair twirling to humming melodies—every coping mechanism I’ve had has served a purpose.
Some have faded. Some have changed. New ones may come into play.
But one thing has always remained constant: I will always find a way to calm the ache during times of extreme discomfort.
Squidy may no longer be tucked under my arm, but he’s still here—and so is the part of me that learned, very early on, how to survive through softness.
What are some of your coping mechanisms? Do you still hold on to a special item?
“Sometimes the smallest things take up the most room in your heart.”— A.A. Milne
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