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Championing
Oneself
by Dorothy M. Neddermeyer, PhD The
concept of championing oneself is foreign to one’s view of oneself
within the world. Somehow it has become shameful to publicly believe in
oneself. The prohibition of self championing was established long
ago and it is insidiously self-defeating. It is simply ubiquitous
and has infiltrated the corporate marketplace, professional sports,
interpersonal relationships, and everything else you can name. A
person doesn't necessarily need competition-level talent to earn the
right to believe in oneself and champion oneself. Championing
oneself is as important as good nutrition, exercise and a spiritual
connection. Are
you a supporter or defender of you? If so, how do you support or
defend your beliefs, ideas, opinions, decisions, actions,
accomplishments, successes and causes? Have you thought about the
importance of championing yourself? Do you champion yourself for
ALL that you bring to this world? noun verb So,
what did you think? You were thrilled to have created such a
commotion. Wow! What power you had with your world.
So, you did it again and again, each time evoking a reaction. You
experienced the same phenomenon when you took your first step. Your
parents/caretaker cheered, hugged, kissed and created an even bigger
commotion than before. Parents/caretakers
continue championing for other achievements until the child has
‘mastered’ the task and for some reason the parent/caretaker has the
mistaken belief that once a task is mastered championing is no longer
important, thus they give cursory championing for subsequent success
for the same task. Hm-m-m-
the message is clear—Unless, I do something new, novel and/or earth
shattering, my achievements aren’t worth recognizing/ championing—and
the doldrums of life set in at a young age—unless and until something
new is accomplished. This sets up the pattern of experiencing
everything we do as a ‘task to endure’ rather than a ‘task to enjoy and
champion’ ourselves for accomplishing. Their
freedom to champion themselves was short-lived, however. Six
weeks after my daughter entered kindergarten I encouraged her to
‘champion’ something she had done. “Mommy, that isn’t nice—that’s
bragging,” she admonished using a tone of authority and ridicule.
I was
shocked and sickened—my well-planned parenting had been undermined in
one fell-swoop. Needless to say, I had a long talk then and later
about the ways of the world—some people believe certain things and
others believe other things. It was
a new challenge for me to teach her to champion herself to herself and
to her family and close friends without thinking she had broken a
coveted rule. Like American Idol, Gedeon, she was forced to restrict
‘championing’ herself at will, whenever, or to whomever she chose. ~~~ Dorothy
M. Neddermeyer, PhD, specializes in: Mind, Body, Spirit healing and
Physical/Sexual Abuse Prevention and Recovery. As an inspirational
leader, Dr. Neddermeyer empowers people to view life's challenges as an
opportunity for Personal/Professional Growth and Spiritual Awakening. http://www.drdorothy.net ~ ~ ~ |
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