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Finding and Keeping Our Authority

March 31st, 2010

What happens to our Authority? What happens to our deep trust in ourselves? What happens to our ability to listen for and trust our creativity, which allows us to sing, write, speak, and live without fear?

The answer is simple: we are ashamed and ridiculed out of who we are meant to be.

Our ability and love of writing is shamed out of us when people ridicule us for our inability to spell, or when our handwriting is poor, or when we don’t organize a paper the way someone has told us we must organize it — as if there is one way to organize anything. I have written an article about my strong feelings about how the five paragraph essay has stolen writing from millions of people. Click here to read my mock five paragraph essay: Why I Grow Edible Pod Peas As If You Care.

Singing

Once, when I asked the question, “When did you lose a sense of yourself as a singer?” a woman answered by telling me her grandfather had told her she “couldn’t carry a tune in a bucket,” and she has never sung since. She was four years old when her grandfather took her singing away; or, rather, when she gave away her authority. She wept as she told the story.

I’m sick of these stories and I hear them all the time. If I ask a group of five-year-olds if they are singers, what do they say? “Yes! I’m a singer!” And they are right. And if they are not taught to hold onto what is Good and not give themselves away to anyone who wants to steal a part of them, they will give their singing away to family members, music teachers, friends, and perhaps even to American Idol.

Speaking

The top three fears of Americans are death, blindness, and public speaking. Talk about not being able to own your own voice! Just as with writing, there is a brilliant speaker in all of us. Give me five minutes with you, and I’ll prove it. For now, I will settle for you entertaining the idea that possibly, just possibly, you might be a singer, a writer, a speaker — anything your deepest heart desires.

Living without being afraid of making fools of ourselves

We all need to honor our inner authority. Not doing so creates despair, disconnection, disillusionment, and depression. It is dangerous indeed to ignore who we really are. But how do we balance this trusting and knowing of our deepest selves with being open to coaching? We all need to be willing and open to learn new things. But how do we stay open while staying connected to the deepest truth that is in us?

Here’s my answer: it is a balancing act.

Right now I feel as if I am on a high wire. I have invested thousands of dollars, thousands of hours, and my heart in building this new business of which this article is a part. I know how to be a performer. I know how to get audiences and my clients excited about their lives, ready to take risks to remove the debris from their path so that their lives can unfold before them with glory and magnificence. I’ve spent the last 25 years working to learn all of this.

But I have not spent much time learning the business part of things. Marketing? Not so much. If I am to do what I am meant to do, then I must get help from people who know more than I do about getting myself out in the world so that the people who need me the most can find me. That is why I hired Suzanne Evans as my business coach.

Spending all this money has created a crack in my sanity that has allowed an old enemy of mine, Urgency, to creep in and smack my joy. Other friends have joined the party: Frustration, Overwhelm, and Self-Doubt. This has made the challenge of whom to listen to even more difficult. I feel I am on a high wire with no net.

On this high wire that I’m walking on, I have a balancing pole. On one side I have my own authority, my own sense of what is true and good and right for me, my own best guess as to what needs to happen so the world can find me. On the other end of the pole, there is Suzanne, my Mastermind group, my friends, my family, my husband, and anybody else who has an opinion, which turns out to be most everyone else.

If I listen too much to other people’s opinions — even Suzanne’s opinion, which I’m paying a lot of money to receive — the pole leans too far one way and I lose my balance. But if I only listen to myself and my best guesses as to what I need to do, my pole will lean too far on the other side and I will topple.

I know in this realm, this realm of marketing and business, I’ve been doing my best guess. While it’s worked on many levels, getting me all over the world for example, it has not produced the revenue I need to do the work in the world I was brought here to do at the level I am capable of providing.

Sometimes in this process there is a bit of frenetic balance pole wavering. I listen to one voice, then another, then my voice, then another, then my voice — and soon I’m a bit of a crazy person.

It comes down to me and it comes down to you.

In the end, I must trust myself and what is right for me. I must be willing to listen and to try new things, but always bring it back to Me. The “Me” that lives inside me that I have spent many years getting to know and getting to trust. I must not abandon this Me. Ever.

My job as a coach

This is what I help my clients do — get to know and trust themselves deeply. I also help my clients find the courage they need to trust themselves and take that next step, even when the people they love the most around them think they are Wrong, Wrong, Wrong.

Our lives are not five paragraph essays all neat and tidy and well organized.

ee cummings said it best:
“for life’s not a paragraph
and death I think is no parenthesis”

Blessings,

Vicki

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