5 Motivational Tips for Starting Something New

Photo by Jordan Christian on Unsplash

In light of it being the start of a new year, I thought it might be helpful to discuss the concept of starting something new. It seems like there is a lot of glamour and mystery in the idea of starting something new. A new job, a new school, a new opportunity, a new hobby, a new sport, etc. The opportunity to start fresh and make a good impression. But there is also the fear and anxiety of the unknown that accompanies that excitement and mystery. And if it has been a while since you have started something new, you might have forgotten how painful it can actually be to find yourself in a situation where you are not the expert on the matter. You may have experience with the task or the topic. You may have done it a long time ago. You might know that you will be great at it once you finally get it down. But it’s the ‘getting good’ that presents the challenge. And this is even harder for our egos to swallow if we have become accustomed to knowing how things are done and now we find ourselves starting all over. So here are some tips to keep in mind when you are feeling particularly challenged by your new experience:

  1. Rome was not built in a day. – I know there is a strong desire to dive in headfirst and prove to yourself and everyone that you are a rockstar. While it is extremely valuable to be eager and ambitious, it is also smart to proceed with caution and build a good foundation prior to taking the plunge. In the beginning, slow and steady might just win the race. If you rush through the basics, you may find yourself scrambling when you increase the difficulty of the task or activity. A good solid foundation is always a great recipe for success in the long run.
  2. Be open-minded and listen carefully. – Learning something new is what you choose to make of it. If you choose to question everything, you might be hindering your ability to open up to a new way of looking at things. And that new way of looking at things may, in fact, be your key to your future success. Just remember that you only know what you think you know and you don’t know what you don’t know. 
  3. Be prepared for the unexpected. – You may be surprised that something you thought you knew well, you might not know as well as you thought. This makes me think of Forrest Gumps’ “Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get” quote. You may think that you will be great at something right out of the great, but then you may struggle where you never thought you would. The more you can choose to embrace the reality of what is instead of what you believe to be true about yourself and your ability, the stronger you will come out in the long run. And you may find that you are more perseverant than you imagined.
  4. Embrace what you know to be true for you. – If you know you are a visual person, speak up, create visual components that will help you succeed. Do what you know works for you. You have been yourself your whole life. No one knows what works for you better than you do. And you might have to be your own advocate. You might have to create your own version of things. But knowing that and doing what it takes might just be what gets you where you need to be and you will be better for it.
  5. Stick it out ‘til you figure it out. – Do not quit. Do not ever give up on yourself. Even if you determine that you may not end up being the best, complete the program, finish the course, learn one song, play one game. There is something to be said for seeing something through. Even if you determine that it is not for you. Honor your commitments. It reflects on your character, but more importantly, it speaks to how you see your own value. If you promised yourself to try, you owe it to yourself to see it through for your own personal value and integrity to yourself. And who knows, you might surprise yourself. Often we tend to quit, give up, or sabotage ourselves when we feel challenged so we can blame someone else when we fail. But this only hurts you, because now you will never know what would have happened if you had stuck it out.

Here is a fabulous music video by Avicci called Broken Arrows that I think displays the concept of persevering extraordinarily well. Enjoy!

Additional Credits:

Recharging After the Holidays

I don’t know about you, but I always come out of the holiday season drained. All the events, the rushing, the extra-exertion can really take it out of you and leave you feeling depleted. And if you are an empath like I am, you may also notice that you are on energy absorption overload.

Empath – (loosely defined) A person who absorbs the emotions and energy of others involuntarily – click the hyperlink above for a more complete definition.

I thought it might be helpful to suggest a few ways to rejuvenate your energy field and reconnect you with yourself. Not so much as to say a new year a new you. More like revitalizing who you already are and clearing the way to let you shine in the new year!

Remember that these tips are really great tools not just to use when you are feeling depleted. They are good to incorporate into your daily, weekly, and monthly routines. You will find that taking a little time for personal restoration and care can be quite a transformative experience.

Please share in the comments if you have any suggested personal restoration tips or techniques or any of your own personal experiences. Remember this is an opportunity for us to all learn and grow together! I hope you chime in!

Happy New Year! And until next time!

Taking the Leap

Hey Friends! I am going skydiving for the first time for my 35th birthday and it has got me thinking; when was the last time you took the leap? When was the last time that you threw caution to the wind and took the chance you’ve been too afraid to take? Maybe it’s something huge,  or maybe it just feels huge. Maybe it’s time to heal that relationship that’s been rocky… maybe it’s time to turn the page… maybe you’ve been wanting to start a project… maybe you just want to make a change. Whatever it is… the time is now. Do it! Stop worrying, stop letting fear rule your life. It’s time to face up to what you are afraid of.  Stare it square in the face and tell it that you aren’t running anymore. Then see how you feel. Has anything changed? Has everything changed? Do you still feel stuck? Do you feel liberated? Do you feel something? Anything? Even scared? It’s ok to feel… It’s ok to be scared. It’s not ok to not feel. It’s not ok to ignore it. Life is meant to be lived, felt, experienced to the fullest. We are only here once! As my husband would say, we will never be here again! So take the leap! Choose to live, choose to feel, choose to be scared and do it anyway. Whatever is plaguing you, face it, embrace it! That is why we are here!

Today is the day to fall back in love with life, with yourself! If something isn’t working, address it. I know how it can feel when it seems like there are no answers, no way out. But the truth is, you always have more power than you know. You can make choices, you can choose to think differently,  you can choose to see things from another perspective. Would that make a difference? Today, I will be choosing to see things from a birds-eye-view. I don’t know what that will change, but I am certain it will shift my view of life. That is the beautiful thing about being human. We are always growing, always changing, always able to shift our lives, our thoughts, our perspective. And frequently, that “trapped” feeling is actually a product of our conditioned mind that has been molded by society, our parents, our friends, our family. And that is wonderful, as long as it is working for you. But if you ever find that it is not, remember that you have the power to choose for yourself, think for yourself, live in your truth. So if you aren’t living your truth, today is the day for you to take the leap! Dive into the person you are instead of the person others have told you to be. Take a deep breath, take the leap, and take it in! As for me, I’m diving into the sky and planning to enjoy the sensation, the fear, the excitement, and the view. See you on the other side!

Dealing With Conflict

Do you know that feeling you get in your gut that tells you something is wrong? That gut reaction that comes up when you are around someone and you feel as though they are not forthcoming about their feelings about you? Or maybe you feel like they are not telling you the whole story. Maybe you feel like they are laughing or talking about you when you aren’t around. It is always important to trust that feeling. It is your natural defense mechanism alerting you that there is foul play going on in the situation concerning you. But the question is, what do you do when you get that feeling? How do you handle it? How do you protect yourself from the threat that you are being faced with? How do you respond when action is taken that confirms your gut instinct that something is wrong?

I have certainly been faced with this situation more than a couple of times in my life. However, only a few times where I was left to my own ability to reconcile it within myself as communication was simply not an option. So I am going to share some of the lessons I’ve learned throughout the process, as I am convinced that I am not the only person who has been faced with this situation and had to cope with this issue. I have found that the main source of empowerment is to change your way of thinking about the person or the situation. If you feel trapped or stuck, that is going to perpetuate that trapped feeling as you navigate the conflict. If you can find a way to shift your perspective to one of empowerment, you can begin to regain your power in the once seemingly hopeless situation you find yourself in. 

While listening to an Oprah interview with Byron Katie discussing her book titled, Loving What Is. Katie was talking about this same notion of changing your thinking, specifically when it is in contrast with close friends and family members and what they think of you and expect from you. I was instantly inspired while listening to the interview because it made me think of a situation where I received the most heartbreaking feedback from someone that I was genuinely trying to connect with. These debilitating comments leveled me to my core and stopped me in my tracks.

After the experience, I did a lot of introspection on how I believed I had failed. Now, the first thing I was realized was that I felt judged. That helped me to understand that I was behaving in a very reactive manner. This was in contrast with the behavior I desired to portray. I wanted to demonstrate a position of confidence in myself and my choices that I was making. Truthfully, I was caught off guard in many ways and I tried to react in the best way I could, but I had not yet developed the skills to handle the situation in the positive way I would have liked. Considering the depth of angry emotion being projected toward me, I’m not sure it would have changed the outcome, but I would have felt better about how I was handling myself at the moment. One thing I learned is that sometimes we are always doing the best we can with where we are at and that principle, by default, applies to the adversary in the situation as well.

One of the principle lessons I took from the Byron Katie interview was her take on the fact that an act of defense is the equivalent of engaging in war. I certainly felt that applied in the situation I was referencing above. It makes sense though, that the mere act of reacting to the adversary is thereby engaging in battle with them. What if you chose not to react. Let’s say you opted to simply ignore their taunts. If they cannot engage you, they cannot battle with you. Now they are merely battling with themselves. 

The lesson here is to remember that YOU CANNOT CONTROL OTHER PEOPLE. You cannot control their thoughts, you cannot change their thoughts about you. But YOU CAN CONTROL YOU, YOUR OWN THOUGHTS AND YOUR OWN ACTIONS! 

It seems like such a simple concept, but I assure you, remembering this in the heat of “battle” is life-altering. It allows you to regroup, regain your footing, retake YOUR POWER OVER YOU! In my situation, I realized I was allowing someone who truly knew very little about me, who had taken little to no initiative to know or understand me and I was giving them the power to make me question who I was as a person. The truth is, they can think whatever they want about me as a person and there is nothing I can do about it. 

Let’s examine the facts. The individual in question never asked or sought to know me, so their opinion is merely based on just that, their own opinion of me that can only be based on assumption, hearsay, and the minimal interaction they engaged in with me. I, on the other hand, have known myself my whole life. I am intimately familiar with my shortcomings and my strengths, the great successes and epic failures that I have experienced and learned from. That feels like a stronger ground to stand on. It was harder to accept that I would not be able to convince this individual of my worthiness of love. Then it hit me, I already know I am worthy of love. If they do not choose to partake, that is their choice and it absolutely has nothing to do with me, even if they would desire for me to believe that it does. It is my choice to assess and reject that notion based on my own experience engaging with the individual.

So the next time you feel your gut radar go off, always remember to trust it. Next, analyze the situation, remove the emotion it is evoking in you and review the facts. From there, you will begin to see more clearly and it will become easier to regain your individual power and transform your thinking. This will allow you to more easily choose not to engage in battle in the trivial effort of trying to change someone else’s perspective of you and focus more on your own perspective. This is where the real source of empowerment begins to reveal itself as you begin to discover that you are no longer controlled by other people’s thoughts and actions. You are free to be yourself, adhering to your own principles instead of other’s impossible expectations that were designed for you to fail in the first place. When you realize this, you can begin to release the adversary’s powerful hold on your mind and grant them the freedom to choose their own thoughts. You, in turn, become free to choose your own way of thinking about yourself, forgiving the adversary acknowledging that they are entitled only to control their thoughts based on their experiences in life, not yours. You can finally take a deep breath, and let it go! 

Love the life you have, Get the life you want

What if you lived your life believing that you had already accomplished your dreams? How might that change your mental state? What would you do if you weren’t worried about where you were headed because you had already arrived at your destination? Would you take more time to smell the roses? Would you find yourself feeling more peaceful? Would you be more appreciative of the journey and how you got to where you are?

My bet is that you would. So my question for you is, what are you waiting for? Why are you waiting to get somewhere else to be grateful for where you’re at. The world has conditioned us to believe that the journey is something to be endured only to arrive at our destination. But really, isn’t life meant to be lived, felt, experienced? And shouldn’t we feel grateful for those experiences we encounter on the journey of getting where we are going? So why are you missing it? Why are you belittling all that you are right now for a belief that what is coming will be, has to be, needs to be better?

I have a feeling your answer to that question is that you aren’t happy where you are? So what is there to relish? What is there to be grateful for when you’re working a horrible job while going to school in order to forge a better future? What if I told you that it is that very desperate and debilitating mindset that is actually generating that miserable experience you are feeling?

I know that we as humans do not generally like to accept responsibility for our misfortunes, but indulge me here. What if I told you that learning to find gratitude in where you are can transform your current experience and the negative vicious cycle you are generating begins to shift into a journey full of potential, opportunities and growth?

What would change by shifting that perspective? I am telling you everything would change. The reasoning here is two-fold. First, the most rewarding feeling you can have is to learn to appreciate where you are at. I mean, let’s face it. None of us are actually promised a tomorrow. And we can never truly be anywhere other than where we are at any present moment. So why are we waiting for tomorrow to find value in our lives? All we are ever guaranteed is where we are and what we have right now. The second reason living your life with gratitude for where you are, not just where you are going, impacts how you are communicating with the world about who you are and what you are attracting to yourself. When you focus on all that you do not have, you are sending a message to the universe that you are lacking in your life.

I know what you are probably thinking, Well I am? So why wouldn’t the world respond by giving me what I want? But that just isn’t how it works. It is sort of like the notion of misery loving company. The more you complain, the more you attract others who complain. Meanwhile, those who are trying to look at the more positive side of life tend to distance themselves from the complainer because it is hard to remain positive in the presence of negativity. And by distancing themselves from that negativity, they become more in tune with themselves and all that is good in their lives. They, in turn, tend to start noticing other things that are good around them. Other opportunities seem to present themselves that may have always been there, but they may have been too busy being negative to notice them. Perhaps others weren’t interested in sharing the opportunities with them on the assumption that they simply wouldn’t be interested since nothing seems to make them happy.

The ideology behind this is that when you live your life longing for what you do not have, you are coming from a place of lack. It actually affects how you make decisions and interact in the world. Now, of course, I am not suggesting that you spend money you do not have or anything of that nature. However, if you approach your life grateful for what you already have, you tend to make different choices, better choices that may lead you to your “better life”.

Maybe you are going through something challenging right now like changing careers or finishing school. If you are constantly focused on the struggle that change and starting over often tend to bring, then you are going to make more defeated choices. This could cause you to miss an extraordinary opportunity because you were so focused on your despair.

What if you imagined that you were already where you wanted to be? What if you recognized that where you are is setting you up for the future, not the waiting room for your future?  How would that change your interaction with others? You would likely be a more pleasant person to be around. You would maybe make a new connection that might lead you to that big break. I really cannot promise you what would change, but things would change. Because you are now CHOOSING to be grateful for who you are and where you are in your life. And Gratitude is a powerful thing!

Embracing Your Truth: Learning To Do You

In my previous post about Embracing Your Truth, I shared with you a personal story that inspired a revelation in my life. I would like to continue to build upon this notion however, to further discuss the concept of learning to focus on who you are, what you believe, and what you want. We spend a substantial amount of our lives focusing on others, what they think, how they react, and how their actions make us feel. It feels like we are being incredibly caring by letting them know how we believe they are getting it wrong for us.

While sharing your thoughts and feelings with those you love is an incredibly important aspect in developing a mutually sustaining relationship, it is also important to understand that harboring a belief that you have the power to control or change another’s behavior serves as an invitation to personal disappointment. What I mean is, you will likely be disappointed if they do not react or behave in the way that you desire. But it is simply a delusion we have been duped into believing; this notion that we have the power to control and change another’s thinking in order to make ourselves feel better. But what we can control is our way of thinking about their behavior and, in turn, we can modify our thoughts and behavior about the situation or the person. We can only control our portion of the relationship or the situation.

My dad, Dennis Miller, a philosopher, and retired philosophy professor, introduced me to this concept by calling it “The 50/50 Rule”. You are only responsible for “Your 50%” of the relationship. The other 50% is the responsibility of the other person. You might not like how they handle their 50%, but you have no control over that. So being upset about it is inevitable due to that lack of control. Not unlike what I discussed in Great Expectations, you are setting yourself up to expect something that you simply cannot alter or change in any way.

Here is an excerpt from some of the writing Dennis Miller has done on this topic:

The 50/50 Rule of relationships is a “mindfulness training” or practice designed to enhance our awareness of the nature of relationships and a deeper understanding of our role and function within the relationship. Attention to the Rule can change the way in which we relate to our partner which suggests that the only thing we can change in our relationship is our Self and the way we relate to our partner. [..]

The seed idea of the 50/50 Rule came from my own experience and I was facing divorce in a  marriage of 27 years. Through much meditation and mindfulness practice, I discovered that I had failed to understand something about love and relationships, which presented an opportunity for self-growth and greater awareness of love as a mindfulness practice.

I discovered that I had not understood the 50/50 Rule of relationships because no one bothers to teach us the practice of learning to be in a relationship and so we often simply repeat the patterns and habits we absorbed from our environment. The Mantra that began to change my perspective about relationships was: “It’s never about that …” but rather the problem was always in my relation to “that”.    This changed my perspective in realizing that problems in relationships arise when we step across the “/ mark” into our partner’s space. We blame, accuse, etc. our partner for making us feel this or that and declare that we would not be or feel this way as if our partner is the cause and we are powerless and incapable of relating in any other way to the situation.

The 50/50 Rule reminds us that we are responsible only for “our half” of the relationship, not that of our partner. When we cross the line we transgress the boundaries that define us as separate individuals and disrespect the space of our partner who is likewise responsible for only for his or her half. We can be responsible and change something only in our self and our relationship to our partner; we cannot and should not try to change something in our partner which intrudes upon his or her space and freedom also to choose to be responsible and change something within his or her self. This is respect for the one we love.

In this excerpt, Miller fleshes out the general premise of the 50/50 Rule and his personal experience of discovering it. I think his story beautifully illustrates the impact a lack of understanding of the 50/50 Rule can have on our lives and our personal well-being. Perhaps you are questioning why a discussion of how you interact in a relationship is relevant to your individual well-being. But the reality is that, as humans, we are social beings by nature. A simple anonymous interaction with another individual inhabits the same dynamics of a relationship despite its brevity. Imagine that, when you are buying coffee, the clerk insults you. You are likely to spend the remainder of the day complaining of their behavior and soliciting others to affirm your opinion on the interaction. Now imagine that the clerk compliments you. You will conduct yourself in a similar manner, telling others how kind the clerk was this morning. You don’t even know this person, but they have fully impacted your day!

Let’s look at this interaction under the scope of the 50/50 rule. In this scenario, as it has currently been depicted, the actions of “their 50%” have full control over your emotional state. They insult you, you’re upset. They compliment you, you’re elated. Now let’s locate “your 50%”. They insulted you, did you do anything to them? Let me interject here as I feel the anger rising, this is not about blaming you and indicating you “deserve” anything. The truth is, that is not how the universe works. That is part of the myth. No one deserves anything, including happiness. Our personal state of mind is earned and created only by our own interaction with “our 50%”. What I mean is, if you review all of your behavior and you believe that you interacted appropriately and they insulted you, then let it go. It simply does not matter. You have no control over their behavior. You are pointlessly rallying an army to make yourself feel better when all you had to do was determine within yourself that it was not merited and therefore disregard their comment and go on with your life. If you determine that your actions may have been less than desirable by your own standards, you have discovered an opportunity to learn, grow and move forward more the wiser.

So why does our 50% matter if they compliment us? That’s simple. While their personal choice to compliment you reflects well on “their 50%”, it still has little to do with you. How do you think about yourself? If you were down on yourself and needed to hear that, why were you down on yourself? I hear your point, why do that matter? It matters because you are not guaranteed to receive a compliment from someone else’s 50%. So were you just going to have a bad day if they hadn’t complimented you? This is why your focus on your 50%, defined by your actions and your thoughts, is all that really matters to bring you peace of mind.

I say peace of mind because, while happiness is typically what we seek, you cannot be happy all the time. The universe also works on 50%’s: Happiness and Sadness, Joy and Anger,  Yin and Yang. We can discuss this further in another entry. I bring it up now simply to highlight that, in focusing on your 50%, I am not promising happiness. I am promising clarity about how you feel, how you can understand it, and how you can control it. I am giving you the key to understanding your feelings and how to gain control over something that we were told was controlled by everyone else. I am introducing you to your power over you. Learning to master this concept is the key to learning to attract what you want into your life and not latch onto the things that you do not want to by lending them your attention.

I would like to end this piece with another anecdote from Dennis Miller that further demonstrates the game-changing power of the 50/50 Rule:

Driving a school bus for many years in addition to teaching philosophy at the university a young 12 year old schoolboy, I will call him Tom, before he was about to get off the bus at his stop said to me, “Hippy, [that’s what the kids called me] I’m afraid to go home!” I asked him why? He told me that he got into some trouble at school that day and was afraid when his Dad found out and had to sign the “form” to take back to school the next day, that as he said, “my Dad will kill me and I am afraid” [not literally, of course, it was an emotional fear].

So I asked Tom what usually happens at home when you get in trouble at school? He said that since he is afraid of his Dad he usually goes to his Mom first and tells her. In response, his Mom sends him to his room and gives him some romantic novel to read as punishment and then quizzes him later to make sure he read it.

Having heard the usual routine, I challenged Tom to “change the conditions of his usual behavior”. He didn’t understand what I meant (he’s only 12 years old) so I explained to him. I told him that I see his Dad’s truck in the driveway and that his Dad is home now so instead of avoiding his Dad (and running from his fear, as usual) I challenged him to change the conditions and instead go straight to his Dad and tell him what happened at school. His first response was “I can’t do this, he will be so angry at me!”

The challenge for Tom was to change his usual routine and habit of avoiding his fears and instead face his fear and go to his Dad and explain. I told him he to apologize to his Dad and tell him that he got into trouble at school today and that he knows he disappointed his Dad and feels disappointed in himself for his behavior. He then got off the bus saying “I can’t do this!”

It was a Friday and on Monday morning when he got on the bus I asked him what happened when he got home on Friday? With a look of amazement he said in an exuberant voice, “Hippy, I can’t believe it, nothing happened to me. I did what you said. I was so scared. I told my Dad what you suggested and you know what he said to me? He said, thank you for being honest with me. I see you understand your misbehavior so I do not see any need to punish you.”. He was elated and shocked not realizing that the whole time he had within himself the power to change his relationship with his Dad by changing something within himself. He took responsibility for his half (50%) of the relationship and changed the dynamics of his relationship with his Dad.

I hope you have enjoyed this entry! I encourage you to give it a try! Remember, this is a complex concept that is meant to be practiced and the truth discovered, not an overnight revelation. I promise it will bring you closer to becoming your best self and living your best life! Until next time my friends!

Embracing Your Truth

How do we come to intimately embrace who we are, how we feel, how we treat people, how we react to situations? I wish I could tell you that there is some sort of magic antidote, but alas, that is not the way these things go. But I do have a personal experience that I will share with you that greatly impacted me and has helped me to understand that, in addition to honing in on where you are focusing your attention externally, it is also important to take notice of how you are talking to yourself. This part may even be more important than focusing on your external thoughts as those internal thoughts carry more weight and can have a severe impact on your mental health, let alone your motivation to accomplish your goals.

I recently had a major breakthrough while meeting with my coach. I was sharing with her how I tend to be really critical of myself. I reprimanded myself for not making time to keep up with the ambitious goals that I had set for my blog despite the fact that I simply had a lot of personal things come up that prevented me from being able to dedicate the time. She asked me if I had anything traumatic happen in my childhood, as this harsh self-talk was proving to be a recurring theme. Instantly, I recalled that I had a bully in kindergarten and explained that it was very traumatic because I grew up in the country. So I was devastated by the ridicule and judgment I experienced during my first exposure to society. She then asked me if that was precisely how I was treating myself? Tears instantly welled up in my eyes. Despite my efforts to hold it back, I just could not. Anyone who knows me knows that I am not one to cry easily and that I am a fairly tough person that holds my emotion back until I am alone. But I was amazed that she was right. I knew it instantly. And I had been doing this to myself for a very long time, despite the fact that I am someone who has focused on my own development and healing a lot over the years. I was stunned that I had never stopped to ask myself why I was so hard on myself.

Since this experience, everything has changed for me. It’s like a weight has been lifted and I no longer feel the need to punish myself for not living up to what are typically extremely high expectations. I am no longer allowing my mental and emotional state to play a factor in how I gauge my individual success, both daily and overall. Of course, this is a work in progress, but I have continued to have a lot of personal things popping up since this experience. I have been amazed at how forgiving of myself I have been, keeping my positive thinking up and opting just to focus on the tasks at hand, reminding myself that I will be able to resume working on my goals, but I must deal with any issues that take priority first.

I am awed at the state of peace and calmness that has come over me since this experience. I feel like I have awoken to a more enlightened state of consciousness. I have even reflected on situations where I would normally react in anger and instead, I have embraced a more positive and forgiving line of thinking. I have also noticed that I have felt entirely more confident. These are changes that are extremely difficult to embrace and implement, yet they seem to be flowing out of me without effort.

I am sharing this with you as I hope that this will either inspire you to share a similar experience so that we can learn from each other and build each other up. If that is not your case, I hope this experience with inspire you to take notice of how you’re treating yourself and a) work to modify any harsh criticism you are telling yourself, and b) make an effort to identify where that negative self-talk is originating from so that you might have a similarly transformative experience.

Since this breakthrough moment, I have been analyzing some past experiences I have had where perhaps I reacted defensively in an effort to learn how this behavior was impacting me and my relationships with others on a deeper level. There is at least a handful of times in the past couple of years where I know that, as a result of feeling personal judgment by another, I lashed out in attack rather than seeking to understand their viewpoint. Of course, I was doing the best I could at the time, but I have had a few people describe me as intimidating, mean, or even scary at times, and I have always questioned where that was coming from. But now I think I know. Any time that I felt as if someone was passing judgment on me as a person, my bullied-child, alter-ego-self emerged ready to pounce and protect. I had inadvertently developed a subtype of my personality that was ready to protect and defend me at all costs after experiencing the bullying situation where I felt so helpless as a young child. I truly believe that the alter-ego-self served an important role in my adolescence while I strived to define who I was and find my way in the world, continuing even into early adulthood. But now that I am a full-fledged adult, that side of myself was coming off as aggressive rather than protective, which is something I would never want to do to another person. Understanding this about myself has been a little hard to acknowledge, but it also feels liberating to finally understand what others were experiencing from their point of view.

I am sharing this intimate revelation with you to show you that we all do the best we can with the knowledge that we have. So if you have ever behaved badly, forgive yourself. But also, seek to understand why; what is going on with you to prompt the reaction or action that you are taking that you do not like. Initially, it will feel like the prompt in external, but I have to be brutally honest and tell you that it is unfortunately ALWAYS INTERNAL. While the problem feels like it is out there, it is definitely in here if you know what I mean. This is a hard concept to embrace, but it is also one of the most eye-opening and liberating revelations once you can see it and own it. It is also a lesson that will likely reoccur in your life as you face various difficulties and challenges.

My hope is that by opening up to you about this experience and the self-examination it inspired me to seek, this might help you cope with or deal with any of the personal challenges you may be facing. My hope is that you will be able to look at that difficulty and ask yourself, Why is this upsetting me? Why am I reacting this way? What has happened to me in my life that is inspiring this reaction that is in contrast with my true self?

Fighting Convention, Embracing Your Truth

I have been called a dreamer for my unwillingness to believe that we must simply settle for the limitations that exist in the world around us. I am always looking for that something more, the possibility that is tucked deep within the cocoon of impossibilities. I am always encouraging others to try to see things through the lens of what is possible, rather than get caught up in all that prevents that possibility. It is remarkable when we are willing to admit our limitations and understand that we do not know what we do not know and that if someone views the world differently, perhaps it is derived from an experience that we have not yet lived, a lesson that we have not yet learned.

Mona Lisa Smile (2003) is one of my all-time favorite and most inspiring films. There is one character that I find particularly interesting. That is Elizabeth Warren (Kirsten Dunst), better known as Betty throughout the film. The reason I find Betty Warren’s character so fascinating is because she is the most changed from the beginning to end of the film.

Betty Warren begins the film is as the iconic, traditional, well-bred young woman of the 1950’s. An intelligent, young lady seeking a collegiate education from Wellesley College, a privilege in and of itself according to the school’s president. She is the epitome of the unspoken role for young women of the time with the ultimate goal being to marry, set up house with their husband’s, and restore women’s place in the home, a fact which she verbalizes as the school journalist. Her voice serves to critique and attack anything that occurs that threatens the traditions embraced by the school, students and tenured faculty.

This is in stark contrast with Katherine Watson (Julia Roberts), an Art History professor who was extended a one year contract to teach at Wellesley. Ms. Watson’s character represents the new age woman who is unmarried by choice, without children, and looking to inspire the women of the future to seize the opportunity to pursue their wildest dreams. She is, of course, devastated to discover the battle she is up against when she realizes that the education seems to merely be a token experience prior to marrying and returning to the traditional role for women to rear children, have dinner on the table by 5 and be waiting for their husband at home.

The two characters butt heads frequently throughout the film as Betty sticks to her traditional beliefs and publicly denounces Ms. Watson’s subversive teachings. However, Katherine is not easily scared and fights back, going so far to insist that she attend class or Betty would fail the course. Betty, on the other hand, informs her that it is in fact she who is educating Ms. Watson.

So why do I find this dynamic relationship so fascinating? It symbolizes an invaluable lesson in life. We hold on to our beliefs so tightly, ready to march into battle over these beliefs that we mistake to be moral truths of the way things are and should be. That is until something occurs in our lives that makes them all come crashing down. That’s when it gets interesting.

For Betty, she follows all the rules of tradition with the promise that it will lead to happiness and prosperity, except it doesn’t. Her husband begins cheating on her, she learns from her mother that this is the true bargain in life that she signed up for, and very quickly, her fairytale unravels. And so, in the end, she files for divorce, a very controversial act for the era. She seeks a contact from none other that Katherine Watson to obtain an apartment and room with a character that had been portrayed throughout the film as loosely-moralled and self-destructive. Basically, she strikes out on her own, now willing to view the world with new eyes where she begins to embrace ideas and people she had previously judged in an effort to find her own perception of truth.

“Not all who wander are aimless. Especially not those who seek truth beyond tradition, beyond definition, beyond the image.” Betty writes this quote in her final editorial as a tribute and send off to the lessons she learned from Ms. Watson’s example to follow her own pathway and not to be bound by the societal rules made to encourage conformity over free-thought.

The truth is, we are all Betty Warren in some way in our life. We all enter the adult world with certain ideals that we cling to, until something shatters them. Then we are left to our own devices to make sense of our lives, to find meaning in our suffering as well as our happiness. And that is the beauty of life. And we cannot skip the step, we cannot skip the lesson. We all believe our truths until it becomes evident that they no longer serve us. It can be even more frustrating to have to watch a friend, a child, a loved one go down that path of confidence to devastation to vulnerability. But it is extraordinary when you can witness yourself or your loved one emerge a stronger, more well-rounded person that no longer sees the world in black and white, but rather shades of gray because now they have begun to understand that the world does not look the same to all people at all phases in life. Life is meant to be discovered, embraced, questioned, as I said before.

Betty did educate Ms. Watson, but not in the way she thought. She taught her that even the most difficult of prospects can surprise you, and you may get your greatest teachings from your most unlikely source. And Katherine Watson showed Betty that life is not always what it seems. You have to look closer, beyond what you think you know, to see the true potential of existence.

So I challenge you to question what you know, consider what you reject, and embrace those whose values starkly contrast your own. They may become your greatest teacher, your dearest friend, or your soft place to land when your own fairytale unravels.

Mona Lisa Smile Quote and Clip

“Not all who wander are aimless. Especially not those who seek truth beyond tradition, beyond definition, beyond the image.”

– Mona Lisa Smile (2003)

Mona Lisa Smile is one of my very favorite films and the quote that I referenced above highlights what I believe life is all about, seeking truth, our own personal truths. That is the purpose of life, to live it, learn it, feel it, question it, change it. That is the definition of A Journeyful Life ! Talk to you soon! Hope you enjoy the clip below!