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It Should Have Happened Naturally…

By January 13, 2012 8 Comments

There’s something about my life that has really surprised me.
 
I had so much of what we all want every girl to have: I had a supportive family. I grew up hearing lots of praise and loving acknowledgement of my gifts. I had access to a great higher education.
 
So wouldn’t you think, that with all that, I’d grow into a woman who found it totally natural to play big? That I’d come away from all of that with a natural confidence? With courage to follow my heart?
 
That wasn’t what happened. In some ways, I excelled – got prestigious degrees and did well in my career in the nonprofit sector. But on the inside, I had given up a lot. I lost my creativity – writing, theater, and dance. Self-doubt and self-judgement gnashed everyone of those passions to pieces. I had rationalized my way out of my childhood dreams and took a safe path.
 
Turns out, I’m not the only one. I’m one of millions of brilliant women who has so much to share with the world and has the intelligence, vision and gifts to make a huge difference – but who has some trouble really believing that herself.
 
And if we don’t believe it, we don’t play big. We don’t think we deserve to be at the table.
 
I’ve spent the last few years in the trenches: finding my own path to playing bigger, working with hundreds of women to help them find theirs, and learning everything I could get my hands on about what helps women lead and become empowered.
 
I learned a lot from the many hours of sitting in my coaching office, across from brilliant women who longed to play bigger. When I coach, sitting there with someone who I so want to see soar and whose self-limiting stories are staring both of us right in the face, that’s when the rubber hits the road. You have to figure out what is going to change the pattern – what really helps women play bigger.
 

Here’s some of what I learned:

 
1. For most talented women, playing big doesn’t come naturally. It just doesn’t.
 
2. There are a few big ideas that make a huge difference. It makes a huge different to understand that we are hard-wired for fear – to avoid any possible emotional risk – to learn to manage the conflict between the safety instinct and the self-actualization longing. It makes a huge difference to realize, nope, that wasn’t your brain talking, that was your inner critic talking – and inner critics make up lies. It makes a huge difference to know that you do have a calling, and that no one has to think it “makes sense” – not even you. You just need to respect what has been planted in you. All of those philosophical shifts make a huge difference.
 
3. But I’ve also learned, we need more than ideas, practices and tools. As important on my journey as those ideas were, having a coach to call, or a supportive group of women to meet up with, were just as important. Having someone who held me accountable when the old ways reared their had was critical. It was in community that the concepts became real to me.
 

One Day…

One day a few years out in the future, you and I will make a pact. We’ll decide to make sure every girl in the world learns the basic ideas and tools she needs to play big in her adolescence. Fourteen year-olds around the world will learn about callings and their inner critic and their own value. It will become as rudimentary and as universal as seventh grade math.
 
But first, we have to staff up the faculty. We have to fill ourselves up with tales to tell of our own journeys to playing bigger. We have to walk an uncharted path. Because never before have women had so much power to play big. Now it is our time to do it.
 
That is why I do this work, and why I write the words you read here every week. It is why I created Playing Big, a six month journey for women who want to play bigger. Registration for Playing Big is now open. For the next 24 hours, I’ll be adding a gift – a signed poetry book, inscribed to you. I hope you’ll join me for the journey. Visit here to learn more and join the circle.
 
Love,
 
Tara

Join the discussion 8 Comments

  • Bonnie says:

    So true. And we need a community that provides a re-nourishing place to land when we stumble. Playing big is process with no static end-goal as it changes and evolves as we do. We need a place where we can shed the restrictions of what no longer fits along the way.
    As a woman with artistic desires I often heard the stories of all great artists being born that way, child prodigies like Mozart, for example – and that if it didn’t come easily, it wasn’t meant to be. I understand now that this is such a limiting philosophy and completely misses the mark on the awareness that every life is an artistic creation. We can’t help but all be artists in some way.
    I”m looking forward to Playing Big with this supportive community…….something I have never allowed myself before. If you are new to Playing Big, as I am, fear not, you will not be the only one!
    Bonnie

  • Thank you for this piece of beauty today. xo

  • Gwendolyn says:

    Tara, You are so right. Playing big is a leap for so many of us. Having a career doesn’t equate to playing big. Playing big seems to be more of a committed mission, the stake for one’s life. I was the first in my family to attend college, had a husband with 2 degrees, and the perfect home with 2 children to fill it. And from there I was lost. I supersede my ideas with the needs of family, relocations, then apathy and my own fear of connection; my peace of mind tormented by what I could do if I only had the kind of support I gave. Every day I wonder if I should give up the mission to write, to share with the world at large or keep helping my family. They all are in the same boat of trying to do big things with very little support. Could I accomplish more in life in continuing in the traditional role of mother, grandmother? How do I support my ideas without guilt or give them up and simply enjoy supporting my aging parents, my career bound children and my executive spouse? It feels like being caught between 1950 and 2050 roles and I want them both; the intimacy of family, order in the home, nutritious meals and relaxation. I also want the fruits of sharing my ideas in print, on the net and groups but it seems like too much to ask for and thus the stalling and pondering whether my mission is ego or greed. I hope your playing big course can be a space to shift into a committed direction for me, a place to feel the call and move into a true direction. I love your writings….You are so loved!

  • Gabrielle says:

    Tara, I love your emails. They are much needed reminders. Recently I heard Jennifer Siebel Newsom speak and present her new documentary, MissRepresentation. It was a sun dance film and is about how media has and continues to shape our culture and harm girls self image. If you haven’t already, you should look at the website http://www.missreprenstation.org and, better yet meet Jennifer. You two have common passions and might form a beneficial alliance.

    Thank you. Gt

  • Uzma says:

    Tara, This is so beautiful and pertinent to all of us.

    Security and self actualization, so keep tearing at us. Right now, just to be aware of this, feels so huge. To overcome, will be awesome.

    The pact to make one day, tugs at me. In a third world country, I come across young girls all the time, and I know I want to work with them, help them find their inner strength, tell them to dream and watch the beauty. One day, it is 🙂

    God bless

  • Christine says:

    Thank you for your gentle clarity!

  • Tara,
    It’s disconcerting and puzzling to me that at a time when girls and women have more opportunities than ever; when girls are outpacing boys in graduation rates and other things our society measures, that many, many, many girls and young women continue to struggle with self esteem issues. It seems to be a generational holdover that hasn’t yet changed. I, too, want to help change that. One small thing is to ask you to be one of my interviewees for the Confidence Chronicles – True Stories of Becoming Strong series. I’ll email you about it. Thank you for an important, well written post. Cherry

  • Jess Morrow says:

    I’m so happy that you put this into words & on the screen.

    I’m in on yr pact. 😉

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