A Lot Can Change in A Year.  Or Not.  (Thoughts for When You Feel Misunderstood)

About a year ago, I was reading a blog in which the author made a recommendation to her readers to “soften.”  I’m pretty sure she didn’t mean to do so by eating excessive amounts of peanut butter- although I may have tried it ahem, tossed that idea around.  I believe she meant to soften in regards to how we interact with others.  You know… trust people, show them compassion, forgive them, smile, be vulnerable, look for the good.  

*vomits in mouth*

Soften????  Uh, no thank you.  I’ve been through some shit.  I have walls up.  I don’t need anyone.  I lift heavy weights.  No one gets me.  Softening is the last thing I’m willing to do.  Oh, and fuck off.”

You see, this idea was not acceptable to me.  I was going through a time when I felt utterly and completely misunderstood.  Behind all my walls, I was terrified to soften.  Because that meant looking at myself and others through a different lens.  It meant agreeing to face my demons and admit my flaws.  It meant choosing to believe that I am in charge of whether or not I’m happy – that other humans are just doing their best and are not to blame for my circumstances.

I don’t know the exact moment I began to disarm and look on the bright side but eventually and very gradually, I did.  (It had a lot to do with this book.)  To make that mental shift was the best decision ever.  It was magical. 

  • I gained new friends who had been through similar circumstances and could support and teach me. 
  • I gained inspiration to start a blog and begin coaching. 
  • I gained deeper relationships with old friends who hadn’t given up on me. 
  • I gained skills and tools that help me confront challenges rather than hide behind my walls. 
  • I gained a new appreciation for my hometown, my clients, and my loved ones. 

 

It wasn’t about becoming delusional or deliriously happy.  It was about consciously searching out reasons to be grateful.  And dammit, I found them.  A ton of them.

Choosing to move on from past hurts doesn’t make you naive, clueless, or stupid.  It doesn’t make you weak.  It opens up your world.

Right now, what does your world look like?  I’ll tell you:  It looks exactly like you expect it to.  You can choose to believe that people are evil, disgusting, twisted, and out to get you… OR you can choose to believe that people are good, loving, compassionate, and doing the best they can.  Either way, they’ll prove you right.

Remember that you’ll always find what you’re looking for.  If a person were to look for nastiness, deceit, insecurity, and jealousy in me, they’d undoubtedly find it.  I know because I found those things when I decided to take a good hard look at myself.  Ouch.  But I also found humor, love, strength, empathy, and determination.  And those are the things I’ve chosen to build on.

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The other day I was talking to my brother about my next business venture and comparing it to a past one.  He said, “This time will be even better because you’re doing it without the chip on your shoulder.”  #littlebrospeaksthetruth

A lot can change in a year.  You could be in a new headspace with a lighter heart, a cheerful attitude, encouraging friends, and fresh perspectives. 

…Or nothing can change in a year.  You could be in the same headspace, with the same bitterness and distrust you had before, waiting for others to say they’re sorry or to take away your pain.

Life is short.  I’d rather be in charge of my own happiness.  

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Crap-Ass Massages, Fake Peanut Butter, and Why I Don’t Do Zumba

In my old age, I have decided that everything I do needs to meet at least one of the following criteria:

  1. Make me happy.
  2. Make me better.
  3. Make me money.

 

Uh huh.  I look for a good return on investment from my time and energy.  And I don’t feel bad about it.

 

I know, I know, I know.  “Kristen, you selfish cow!  What about altruism?!?!  I thought you were a good person!  Clearly all you think about is yourself.”

But this isn’t about being uncaring, greedy, or self-serving.  Being an egotistical miser wouldn’t truly bring me happiness, would it?  I’ve already explained here and here why being “selfish” is actually better for the common good, so I won’t go into that again (today).  Today I want to talk about YOU.  A precious, valuable being who just might be selling yourself short by acting out of obligation rather than passion.

 

Lately I’ve encountered a surprisingly high number of folks who hang out with people they don’t like, do activities that bore them, stay in one-sided relationships, or don’t charge enough money for their services… ALL BECA– USE THEY FEEL OBLIGATED.

 

Also, they are miserable.  How do I know that?  They’re angry.  They’re sad.  They’re mopey.  They’re complain-ey.  And it’s really no wonder – their resources are being constantly drained.  Their vessel is empty and not getting filled.  The bummer of it is, I know that these very people would be absolutely vibrant if they were doing more things that set their soul on fire.  How vivacious, loving, and kind would humanity be if we ONLY invested in relationships that serve us, activities that bring us fulfillment, conversations that improve us, and work that pays us what we’re worth???

Really freaking vivacious, loving, and kind, right?

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I don’t necessarily want you to do the easy things.  Or the most comfortable things.  I want you to do the things that feed your soul, your body, your mind, or your bank account.  And in order to have time for those things, you’ll probably need to cut out other things.

For example, here are a few circumstances I have deemed not worth my time and energy:

  • Mary Kay/handbag/nail art parties
  • crap-ass massages
  • shallow friendships
  • men who jerk me around by lying and being unpredictable
  • Zumba
  • blind dates
  • peanut butter made with hydrogenated oil  (How to make peanut butter:  Take some peanuts.  Crush them into peanut butter.)
  • house-sitting (I’m 31.  Please stop asking.)
  • reading magazines

 

^^Now bear in mind this is MY list, not yours!  I happen to know a Mary Kay consultant who absolutely loves her job.  She is always glowing (maybe from the makeup?) and consistently has a wonderful smile on her face.  Clearly, Mary Kay parties are totally worth her time and energy.  She is amazing and I would venture to guess she truly helps many women.  I love that.  Because we all have something different to contribute to this Universe, which means we will all have a different list of things that are worth our time.  If it fills your bucket to read People and shake your ass to Shakira, you go for it.  No judgment here.  I just want everyone to be happy.  For real.

*A moment of silence in which we thank the Universe that Kristen is NOT in charge of makeup advice.*  Amen.

 

So what are you worth?  Knowing your value is one of the most important steps to being in charge of your life.  Once you quit doing things out of obligation, you are acknowledging your significance.  You will feel free to make time for only the most worth-your-while friendships, music, sex, workouts, coffee dates, books, careers, and yep, peanut butter.

 

Your time and energy are valuable.  YOU are valuable.  Please start acting like it.

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Approval’s Expensive; Don’t Buy It!

We discuss with our kids and teens the importance of thinking and acting for themselves.  We remind them that they don’t necessarily have to wear whatever clothes may happen to be trendy at the moment… and that they don’t in fact have to listen to music that blows just because their pals do.  ?  We understand the value of encouraging them to think independently.

…But what about us?  We adults may not be tempted to wear outfits such as this:

 

…however we buy approval from each other in much more subtle ways.  And that has consequences.

Basically, if you are doing something you don’t want to do in order to keep the peace, you are buying approval.  At the cost of your own integrity.

  • “I hate handbag parties, but [insert gal pal] will be pissed if I’m not there.”
  • “I can’t quit my job; my husband would freak out!”
  • “No I never sleep enough; but I have to do X, Y, & Z for my kids before I go to bed!”
  • “I can’t express how I really feel; people will think I’m overreacting.”
  • “I have to work 7 days/week; my clients expect it.”

^^Notice that every single one of those statements puts your power in the hands of someone else.

I have had countless conversations with people who believe that they must run themselves ragged, or do things they despise so as not to “let anyone down.”  Smiling and nodding, silent acceptance, or grinning and bearing it are what we do when we are afraid to ruffle feathers.

So let’s think through this logically for a moment….

If the people in your inner circle want you to do X but X makes you miserable, may I gently suggest two things?  Either 1) your peeps don’t really want you to be miserable and would be open to you not doing X…  OR 2) it’s true they don’t care that X makes you miserable, and it’s probably time to find new peeps.

If you don’t know if yours is case #1 or #2 above, the easiest way to find out is to, uh, yeah- just go ahead and do what you want to do.  Your inner circle will sort itself out.  We live in a gigantic beautiful world.  If the people around you at the moment don’t happen to approve of you being you, chances are reallyreallyreallyreallyreallyreally good that you will find other people who do.  

Think for a moment about the ratio between what you do for yourself and what you do out of obligation to somebody else.  Everything from your facial expressions to your clothing choices to your social media updates to your habits to your lifestyle to your chosen relationships.  I guarantee that the people who feel the most free and happy are the ones speaking their minds, taking action, and being “selfish” more often than not.  

^^”Noooooo but Kristen, I can’t be selfish!!!!  I want to make others happy!  I love taking care of people!  I am a peacekeeper!  It’s just who I am!”

Ok, stick with me here….

Are you a better spouse when you are truly happy and freely expressing yourself OR when you are gritting your teeth, holding back your words, and pasting a fake smile on your face?

Are you a better parent when you are well-rested, exercised, and clear-headed OR when you are frazzled, under slept, and frantically racing around with no time to collect yourself?

Are you a better employee/business owner when you love your work OR when you have to fake your way through each day, smiling and nodding so you don’t piss anyone off?

Are you a better friend when you can have open and honest conversations, OR when you silently agree with and/or accept everything your pals say so as not to create an argument?

My friends, what good is it to keep the peace on the outside if your insides are in complete turmoil?  That’s what martyrs do.  That’s what victims do.  And it’s a great recipe for misery.

Author Byron Katie alerted me to the fact that true love does NOT require us to buy the approval of our nearest and dearest, but to just show up for them genuinely as we are.  You aren’t doing anybody any favors by telling them what they want to hear or doing what you assume they want you to do.  Give them the chance to accept YOU.  If they can, your relationships will be deeper and more solid than ever.  If they can’t, then you can choose to keep your power and move on.

If moving on scares you:

  1. That’s normal and ok… I recommend acknowledging the fear.  And then moving forward anyway.
  2. At the end of life, do you want to look back and think about how pacified you kept everyone?  Or about all the cool things you did?
  3. Remember that plenty of people (including me) will have your back when you decide to go out on a limb.  ?

 

Ok?  Ok.  Now, carry on being rockstars!

 

Related Posts:

On Independent Thinking: Not All Advice Is Good Advice

Why It’s Important to Never Run Out of Peanut Butter

Tell Your Truth (Why Doing the Hard Thing Ultimately Makes Life Easier)