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Do What You Love and Continue to Grow Every Day
by
Jennifer Louden
Can I tell you, frankly, how sick I am of the story that because we do
what we love, we should always be jubilant, light hearted, blissed out,
can't-wait-to-get-out-of-bed every-bloody-morning happy and content?
Have
you ever fell into this belief?
What a disservice this myth does to women like you and me and the two
glistening creative souls quoted below--Carla Blazek and Kirsten Oppe.
Here is my claim: you can do what you love, for a living or a part-time
living or simply because you love it, and you will still suffer.
You
can do what you love and you will still hit the same rough spots,
doubts, and dark nights of the soul that you would if you weren't doing
what you love, they will just be different ones!
I
would even go so far as to claim that those of us who are living our
dreams are more susceptible to doubt and dark nights because we are
more aware and often, by listening and pursuing our passions, we
increase our overall evolution--which can certainly increase our
dissonance and discomfort!
I
would also add that if we think we won't have days in which we hate our
dream, we are declaring we won't continue to evolve, because life
conditions are what help us change and grow.
Here is a juicy and liberating idea I'm meditating on these days: What
if, instead of thinking I'm wrong, off track, or screwing up when I'm
uncertain, afraid, lost, don't know what to do next or aren't enjoying
some aspect of living my dream, I held the interpretation that I am
moving to a new level of development, that I am at my learning edge and
the learning edge is never comfortable.
I'm
not screwed up, I'm evolving! Just think back to a time before you
learned something significant. Were you feeling all light and happy and
comfortable? Or edgy, irritable, uncertain, worried, fretful?
What if losing our way is a good sign? (Now, I don't believe it always
is and in other writing I have shared guidelines for discerning when
lost is good and when lost is a swim in the ole' river Denial or about
biological or cognitive disconnects.)
Here's what Carla Blazek, creator of www.zenamoon.com, had to say about
living her dream and the potholes she's fallen into along the way:
"I know that I once believed that following my dream meant happily ever
after.
"Years ago, on Oprah, there was a woman who had followed her dream of
making elaborate handmade dolls. Sitting in her beautiful
antique-filled studio surrounded by mountains of lush gorgeous fabrics,
with a look of serenity and bliss on her face, she said she was so in
love with her work that 'every day was like Christmas morning.'
"For years, I carried that metaphor as my idea of what following my
dream should feel like [Jennifer's note: notice the word should, always
a dead giveaway we are pushing ourselves out of our center and toward
the outside world's dictates].
"I
believed that if I, too, was skipping along my Divine path of
expression and creativity, there would be no hardships, no fear, no
struggles. If I was doing it right (whatever that means!), my days
would be filled with vivid inspiration, crystal clear decision-making,
fantastic feelings 'round the clock and a big fat bankbook to boot.
"WELL: Now I know this serene dollmaker was either fibbing -- to
herself or to Oprah's producers -- or she'd been in business less than
a year and was still in the honeymoon phase.
"Falling in love with our work is like falling in love with a person.
At first our world revolves around our beloved work. We eat, sleep, and
breathe our work; talk about it incessantly. It is the answer to our
prayers! We feel so alive! How did we ever live without this?
"Moving through disillusionment has been a natural cycle in my
relationship with my company zena moon. Some of my illusions lost so
far include:
• I will always feel passionate about what I do
• When I follow my intuition, I will not make poor decisions or choices
• Because I operate in integrity, I do not need practical safeguards
(i.e., legal) to protect me
• My fears will go away
• My dream(s) will not change
• Saying yes to business and customers is more important than saying no
• I have to do everything by myself
"I gave birth to zena moon, and she has a life and energy all her own.
I've learned it's incredibly important to LISTEN to how I feel in
relationship to her. And to listen to what SHE is telling ME!
"I can now:
• Say no when I'm resentful.
• Schedule (and actually take) days off.
• Pay attention to what brings me joy -- What caresses my days? What
drags me under?
• Court fear! When I'm complacent, I'm stagnating -- fear means I'm
stretching and that is goodness! [Jen's note: Yes! I agree! Fear can be
a great sign that we are evolving, that we are at our learning edge!]
• Allow my dream to grow and change and develop in unexpected ways.
• Invite, and allow, Mystery.
• Practice surrender (I'm not in charge 24/7 and who wants to be!)."
Brava, Carla!
A similar story from photographer and artist Kirsten Oppe about her
fear of staging her next exhibit:
"Perhaps I forgot that even when one's path is one of bliss .... even
when it starts out with that joyous burst of energy in the spark of an
idea and the wide beaming smile of initial reactions to that
idea........ it does not inoculate one against the actual work, the rub
of the proverbial grinding stone against one's shoulder!
"Funny,
but that knocks me every time! [Jen's note: There is that learning edge
again! We need a more generative story about what is normal when we are
creative, when we are learning, that it is normal to be lost, scared,
bored, frustrated and that those experiences are not to be judged as a
sign we are doing the wrong thing, not to be pushed away.]
"When I first discovered my life's purpose many years ago, I thought
everything difficult and painful (in that part of my life) had been
resolved. From that moment of revelation onwards, life would be nothing
but smooth and easy.
"I was
so shocked to discover that on the other side of discovering one's
bliss lie all of these challenges and stumbling blocks! I wonder if
it's like this in marriage, too ..... we (who are single) look so long
to find that one, true special someone and then everything is
supposedly going to taste like sweet marmalade from then on ....... but
I have a hunch that it is when we meet our 'true' match that the
learning process really begins ... any blocks we ever had inside to
love would come right up and meet us like the blow of a 2x4! ...."
Thank you, Kirsten!
Does this all sound rather blatant to you?
Is
this a syndrome you've never succumbed to?
Have
you never said, "I'm scared/uncertain/don't know how, so maybe this
means I shouldn't do it," (it could be: open the shop, write the book,
speak to the board, say no to the job, say no to the man).
One of the most powerful ideas I've ever encountered is that learning
isn't about information. Learning, to paraphrase consultant and author
Fred Kofman, is the capacity to accomplish results that you were not
able to accomplish before. The capacity to close the gap between your
current reality and the reality you would like to produce.
The
closure of that gap, through the expansions of one's consciousness,
through awareness and choice, through shifting how you see the world,
and through taking in new information and applying it in action, is
learning.
He
compares it to riding a bike more than reading a book.
We in the west are not comfortable with learning in this way. Our
education system is all about finding answers. Our corporations and
government mostly reward people who claim to know, even if that knowing
is leading straight into the jaws of disaster.
It is
better to appear to know than to appear "stupid." Why is not knowing a
sign of stupidity? I maintain it is a sign of spiritual brilliance!
This comes into play so strongly in all areas of our lives but
especially when it comes to our story about what should (there is that
word again) happen when we are living our dream.
It is
as if we think we will have to cease being learners. What a horrifying
idea!
I love to hear about your experiences. Send stories to
jennifer@comfortqueen.com.
Jennifer
Louden is a best-selling author of five books, including her
classic, The Woman's Comfort Book, and her newest, Comfort Secrets for
Busy Women. She's also a creativity and life coach, creator of the
Inner Organizer, and a columnist for Body + Soul Magazine. She leads
retreats on self-care and creativity around the country. Hear her live
on Martha Stewart Living Radio, Sirius Channel 112 every Sunday at 8 am
Pacific, 11 am Eastern.
Visit
her world at: ComfortQueen.com
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This article also published on SelfGrowth.com
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