When Larry shows up oozing
respect, takes a careful look around, asks the right questions, gets to the
root of the problem at hand, and explains in layman’s terms absent of condescendence I decide he is
someone who has earned the right to do more for me. In this single interaction I have no doubt he
will fix what’s broken and
have my back. My son’s free-wheeling approach to procuring contractors
for work in our home finally pays off. I’m blanketed
in stuckness again; a stranger’s appearance
a gift I spot as a relief valve when this, the smallest of clogs, starts to
open with the promise of dislodging the dam of my life into a cathartic
watershed.
My foot is pushing the
accelerator to the floor, yet I’m not
moving. I’m a dune buggy spinning sand
thinking speed will bring traction. It’s even invading my sleep. This week’s recurring dream is most telling: I’ve remarried
my ex-husband, more miserable than ever, but it’s clear I’ve somehow
allowed myself to be coerced into this place again even though I know I don’t want it. It
seems obvious it’s me I have
the problem with. Where has all my
confidence gone?
As Seth Godin puts it, it’s easy to be confident when you’re having success:
When you’re bringing
in gobs of revenue at work, guiding motivated teenaged over-achievers, basking
in the glow of an attentive partner showering you with admiration. Who wouldn’t be bleeding confidence? What happens when instead the results of your
work are less visible or take years to come to fruition, your child stands
on the threshold of his future yet doesn’t know what
he wants to be when he grows up, or your partner barely seems to notice
you’re around?
I’m fascinated by how easily, how abashedly I allow
others to rob me of my confidence, stalling myself in feelings of unworthiness,
recusing myself of this inalienable right.
It’s not easy to “be your fabulous self” as my friend Tracy puts it, when the highly
engaged audience at the conference loses all energy the minute I start
presenting my topic, or when the decision to press for early graduation for my
high school senior results in a state of limbo without a job or a plan, or when
the former boyfriend I’m embarrassed
to admit I still harbor feelings for shows up at a party with someone else
fabulous and proceeds to get my name wrong when he makes the awkward introduction.
We start to think maybe we’re not so great after all.
We all seem to depend on some
degree of outward affirmation of our fabulousness to coax our inner confidence
out of hiding, but life is not always there to profess this faith. We need to manufacture confidence and
continue to produce it no matter what the environment. So how do we each own
our confidence and stand tall when circumstances can cause us to feel like the
world is out to get us?
I don’t have any magic formula, but what I’ve learned is this:
You’re not
always going to be able to exude confidence. It’s more about striving. Even when you know you’re walking into a potentially volatile situation,
it’s impossible to be completely steeled
and prepared for whatever awaits. The only unequivocal certainty is that
whatever situation you play out in your head will not happen. Accepting that
you may not be able to course correct in the moment as adeptly as you’d like is a kindness you need to
grant yourself.
One failure doesn’t define you. Standing in front of twenty-five people and putting them instantly to
sleep with a boring monologue doesn’t mean every
presentation is awful. We’re made up
of a multitude of data points and experiences factoring into who we are. The same is true when we think of the
circumstances composing one failure. You
are only one factor in a complex equation, and there is usually a next time to
get closer to right.
You’re allowed
to feel down when things bomb. When successful
advocacy for early graduation for my struggling child creates new challenges I
don’t anticipate, I can choose to wallow
in this outcome and second-guess myself. Or I can acknowledge the frustrations
as I remind myself of the many reasons this choice was the best one to make at
the time. No one skates through life getting everything right. No one should be expected to pretend it feels
great when it doesn’t.
Don’t leave love
on the table. Even in your darkest moments,
those times when you’re embroiled
in what feels like a colossal failure, there is likely at least one advocate or
champion in the room, someone who knows what it feels like in your shoes, who
can see your breath as it’s literally
sucked out of you and finds a way to rescue you with a protracted and
protective hug. Take it. Don’t suffer in
silence because you’re
embarrassed or ashamed. It’s amazing how many people want nothing more than to
comfort a wounded soul.
When one thing goes wrong it can
seem like everything is wrong, leaving us in this place of stuckness as we
helplessly watch our confidence ebb. Conversely, when one thing goes right, everything
begins to look better and confidence returns. So I’m pausing to change gears, looking for places where
I can gain traction, even if it’s only the
lowest common denominator inching forward.
This is why hope springs eternal
for me when Larry does such an impressive job with the entire experience of diagnosing
the problem with my oven. When we find someone who brings good into our lives,
we latch on hungry for more. I haven’t soaked in
my bathtub in several years. I can
hardly contain myself when I realize Larry can make this possible again. I’ve been stuck here for a long time, unable to ask
for help where it’s demanded. But now this feels solvable. I eagerly
question what needs to happen with my hot water heater so my bath isn’t stone cold before it ever fills to the brim. He even has a friend who can trace the source
of the water spot on the ceiling below my tub so I don’t end up bathing in steamy water on the kitchen
floor. Ralph will be here tomorrow.
As I write the first two sentences
of this post I think what if I use the Larry rule to decide who earns the
right to the leadership I bring to my work and the love I have to offer in relationships? I may never feel stuck again.