How You Can Stop Feeling Like a Failure

You can’t fall in love with your life — you can’t play the Hero — if you don’t first cast yourself in that role — if you can’t see that you — and only you — are PERFECT for the part.

Stop Feeling Like a Failure

I was asked to write a post listing the things I do every day to “Be a Success.” I’ve found this to be too challenging; I don’t feel comfortable or useful or helpful telling people how to be Something Bigger and Something More if they don’t know Who they are — if they don’t already recognize themselves as the Stars of their own Stories.

Questioning Success invokes more Questions than Answers:

  • What is meant by Success?
  • Successful at what, exactly, in what context?

It also raises the issues of Piety and Hypocrisy:

  • Who am I to tell YOU how great I am and why I’m so great?
  • Is your definition of success anything like mine anyway?
  • Who died and made me an expert?

How can I TELL you what you NEED or what you SHOULD do?
Beware anyone who begins sentences with “What you NEED is…” or “What you SHOULD do is…” If someone speaks to you in this manner, it should always be a Red Flag — these kinds of statements indicate that the speaker is attempting to control you.

You can NOT be overpowered; power over you is something you must allow. You must agree to that power. Refuse to give that permission.

The concept of What I Do to Be Successful also raises the questions:

  • Am I successful?
  • When do I start BEING successful?
  • Do I feel successful?
  • When am I supposed to FEEL like I am?
  • Successful compared to Whom?
  • Successful at What?

I must recognize that I AM indeed successful — according to my own definition — but my personal idea of Success may be completely irrelevant to you. And should I congratulate myself in front of you? Will that make YOU feel successful, or is it an invitation to compare yourself to me, and perhaps feel LESS than All that You Are?

Who Gives Permission for Success?
Most of the people who write to me — for direction — for Readings, informal or otherwise — those who ask me for my assistance do so because they do NOT feel successful. They do NOT feel empowered. They feel like they’ve made it halfway, but they feel stuck. They know they’re getting some things right, but they feel that something is missing.

I realize that telling a gardener how to harvest their abundance if they haven’t even planted seeds yet — if they haven’t properly planted something to nurture — is skipping too quickly to the end, and giving them only more useless information — or worse — the tools with which to judge themselves unfairly, and arrive at failure.

Telling you how to be a Success, if you’re still stuck defining yourself as a Failure… It would only make your situation worse. And I’d be sitting here begging somebody to knock me off my self-important Pedestal.

If I jump to my end without sharing my beginning — without sharing the critical, everyday steps along my Path — I am not helping YOU find YOUR way. And so, I respectfully refuse the invitation to itemize my personal ideas of Success.

Preaching to the Choir
You must realize by now that I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. If I relay the information I receive from my spirit guides — or yours — OURS — I am only reinforcing the Messages of the heart. I do not have access to messages that are forbidden to you. I am called to act as interpreter — I am asked to articulate.

For many years, I felt uncomfortable when people asked me for this Permission — permission to believe what they will, permission to create the life they want to live, permission to love themselves, permission to be okay. I know where that permission comes from — it comes from you — who am I to play the provider of that authority?

I observe that most of the world’s ills can be tracked back to the root of self-esteem, or lack of it. I see that empowerment and self-esteem come from the permission to love yourself.

Do you need me to tell you it’s okay to fall in love with your life? Are you afraid to be the star in your own story? The alternative is to be a supporting character in someone else’s life. Even if your story is a tragic one, claiming that starring role is still a first step in the right direction.

I always find myself asking my guides “Aren’t I just re-stating what we all already know? Is it really necessary to keep on saying it?”

I asked them what to write here today, then I asked your guides what to say — it was a bit like the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. I’ve tried to find a consensus, some way to distill the information. I’m always repackaging what your Heart has already heard. That’s why it resonates.

You don’t discover truth; you recognize it.

The only thing different between me and the Magician who pulls the coin from your hair — my trick is not a slight-of-hand — I don’t have the truth hidden up my sleeve — I really do pull it from you.

A little grace in your face…

Mirror, Mirror
Your life purpose — like mine — is taken from you — by those who require it of you. They ask you for what they need from you, and you reflect it.

15 Things You Can Do to Stop Feeling Like a Failure
What I CAN offer are some suggestions — tools for pulling the Weeds away from your Path. You can’t grow anything without basic preparation and transformation of the mud you find yourself mired in — that’s the soil you gotta sift around in — now, that’s what I call grounded.

So, instead of the 10 Things I Do Every Day to Be a Success — I offer you, like, 15 or More Things You Can Tell Yourself Every Day to Stop Feeling Like a Failure:

You are already everything you’ve ever wanted to become. You’re not missing anything. There’s nothing outside you to add.

You are imminently worthy; All Things Pass.

Stop Time Travelling. Past and Future are imaginative illusions, only the Present exists. Anxiety and regret are trips outside reality. When you worry about something that has not happened — IS not happening to you right now — you are investing in delusion.

Worry is like paying back interest on a debt you haven’t even signed off on or benefitted from.

Joy only happens in the Present.

Stop Judging Yourself. You CAN’T fail at life. You fulfill your life purpose, already, with every breath you take.

Your life purpose is not a JOB; it is the part of you that comes through no matter what job you do. You don’t invent a life purpose — it is inevitable and it is pulled from you by other people. It’s what other people get from you, not what you necessarily decide to give them.

Look at what others ask of you — what advice do they want from you? What do they ask you to perform? What assignments do they give you? It is a pattern — once you identify what it is, then you can simply do more of it. You can direct it with intention. You can perform it on a greater Scale.

Define Success. Who is the author of this definition — you or someone else?

Stop perpetuating failure. Insanity is repeating the same patterns of actions and expecting the results to change.

Do things that you’re good at.

Make a list of your personal heroes. Why are they your heroes? What do they do that you do too? What do they do that you think you can’t? Find someone who’s already doing what you want to do and adopt their expertise, their process. Copy them, as a starting point.

Define the Thing you want to manifest with as much detail and emotion as possible; do not define HOW it will happen.

Don’t Make Sure. Proceed on faith. Intuition and integrity are instantly delivered by your consciousness. When your spirit guides advise you, it is immediate. Laboring over the truth unravels it, takes you away from it.

Put yourself on a Whine Diet. Pessimism is a bad habit. Start retraining your conscious mind to process challenge in a new context.

A Diary or Personal Journal is a particularly fertile breeding ground for manifesting negativity. There are two prescriptions that will, over time, cure pessimism and literally change your life – Gratitude and Challenge Renovation.

You hear about “changing your vibration” to accommodate the positive things you want to manifest more of in your daily life. You can do this by keeping a Gratitude Journal. Make whining and complaining totally OFF limits. You are only allowed to list what is good.

To Renovate Challenges, try this: whenever you find yourself wanting to write down What Sucks — what problem has been thrown your way, what life has slapped you with — express it in terms of what you could do about it.

For example: “I’m broke. I don’t have enough money.” Translate this when you record it into something like “I am going to address my financial problems by…” And list the way you’re going to change it. Problems – Challenges – Life lessons always have built-in solutions.

Name the forces and powers and entities you interact with in your life — personify them — and start having relationships with them, as opposed to letting them be DONE to you. Start relating to your Problems as entities you have hired to tutor, teach, and coach you through the lessons they bring.

Transform who you are and what you love to do into a project with a mission by teaching someone else how to do it.

Change the scale on which you operate. If you can teach one person how to do something you love, you can potentially teach millions. Employ a new vehicle. Maybe YOU should be an author.

Surround yourself with kindred souls. Again, publishing a blog is an incredible means to bypass the limitations of physical space, reach other like-minded individuals, and act as mirrors for one another. Don’t discount the very direct spiritual communication we perform for one another, as human beings, with human words, in human terms.

What are you placing on the Throne of Your Attention? Anything you give energy to — positive or negative is irrelevant — attention is energy, and like attracts like.

Instead of focusing on what you don’t want or what you want to remove, focus on adding more of its opposite. If you stop doing something, you create a vacuum. You create a hole through abstinence — simply NOT doing something is a misguided step in the right direction. Replace the old action with a new, more desirable one.

Prioritize. Fill your life with too many of the things you love — if there IS such a thing. If you prioritize correctly, after completing the things you MUST do, you start on the things you love — if you put enough things on the list, you’ll simply never get around to the extra things you despise that you don’t HAVE to do.

Here Comes the Hypocrisy
I suppose having delivered all THAT about pessimism and positive manifestation, it’s truly ironic that the only way I could explore Success was to invert it into Failure. (What does that say about MY self-esteem, my gratitude…?) But it is precisely the Shift that freed me. I attempted several different lists; I tried writing lists beneath specific definitions of success, in a variety of contexts — they all failed.

Which brings me to another suggestion:
Have you ever mistakenly pushed against a door that swings inward?

If something isn’t working — if you’re throwing yourself against the front door, and none of the keys on the ring will unlock it — STOP. Leave and come back. Find a window to slither through, or break in the back door.

Or wait for someone else to come along and let you in. Something’s gotta give — and maybe it’s you giving up on the WRONG strategy… Real solutions are never complicated.

I’m not passing judgement on anyone who attempted this exercise. I thank Damian for passing the talking stick to me, because it reminded me of a lesson that I always find myself repeating — as nice as it might be to participate in the conversation, to go along with the crowd, usually the only uniquely worthy contribution I can make is to be the one who says the thing that we’ve all heard before, that we all seem to know, but that no one else is saying.

Once you speak your truth, you realize that no one else CAN say it — or ever will — because maybe it really is the piece that only you can bring.

Maybe the thing you most need to hear — that you most need said — will simply come out of your mouth. Maybe the Universe you’re waiting on is actually waiting on you.

Seek Wisdom — Practice Love
Slade's signature

28 Responses to How You Can Stop Feeling Like a Failure
  1. Jeff Lilly
    March 19, 2007 | 11:08 am

    Slade, it sounds like you wrote this especially for me — particularly the first part, where you talk about self-love. Did you read my comment on Blogickal from earlier this week, and see what my “soul card” was…?

  2. Slade
    March 19, 2007 | 1:23 pm

    Jeff,
    I’m glad it sounds like I wrote it especially for you — my hope of course would be that everyone who reads it will feel that way. I wrote it as much for myself as anyone — there’s that Transparency and Scale at work — there was no voice for this that wasn’t Authentic.

    You, more than anyone, seems to respond most to when I “struggle out loud.”

    I DID wonder if you were wringing your hands over this Tag as much as I was… (Since you and I were tagged on this together.) I kept checking to see if you’d come up with something yet.
    : )

    You and I both fire off quickly — this stumped the hell out of me, and I could hear you sweating it, too…

    But ultimately, I felt everyone who was in the Audience reading this, and I simply could not stand Up There at the microphone… So I took the mic down into the crowd.

    Crowd surfing at the Congress, man
    : )

    Will you head over to Blogickal and help me with my Math?

  3. Jeff Lilly
    March 19, 2007 | 4:07 pm

    You bet I’m struggling with this tag! :-) And your post doesn’t make it any easier! It really is an awesome post, so much stuff packed into so few words. I’m going to be coming back to this for months at least. And you went all “meta” on me… Am I going to have to go “meta-meta”??

    I’m going to have to pull out some big guns for this one…

  4. Slade
    March 19, 2007 | 7:37 pm

    Jeff,

    Thank you for appreciating this lengthy scroll – only YOU, my friend, could actually use the phrase “so few words” to compliment a long-winded rant!
    : )

    It is a true blessing that you would point out what I would’ve called a weakness. More lessons in self-worth…

    I don’t know that this satisfies the tag – I wanted to beg off, and just throw in the towel – but it was really starting to piss me off that I couldn’t get my head around a top 10 List! Hell, I even lost count.

    I have to assume the difficulty is important – where you stumble, there your treasure lies.

    Go meta to the power of three – you could have a field day deconstructing the word Success from a purely linguistic position, I know you can…

  5. Slade
    March 19, 2007 | 7:43 pm

    Incidentally, since I have to tag someone, and since this exercise broke me into pieces, I’m going to tag PageCoach and try another angle.

  6. Adam
    March 19, 2007 | 7:53 pm

    A meta-cube? That would be an interesting take on it…

    The answer is, of course, subjective… Nobody can define success except for the observer, and by defining it, he becomes an aspect of what is observed…

    So, the meta-meta-meta-list of habits that bring success would have to describe life, the universe, and everything…

    There’s your answer, Jeff… 42.

  7. Jeff Lilly
    March 20, 2007 | 10:23 am

    Well, I guess technically the number of words is large… But it seems to me that any one of your points could be expanded into another full-length article. Picking one totally at “random”: “Do things you’re good at.” It’s simple, direct, meaningful — but you could take pages and pages to explore all the subtleties of it. I mean, you can’t just do things you’re good at, or you’d never learn anything new. So what are the details?

    The “where you stumble” comment is spot-on. For me, tearing my hair out over this post, and thinking about what I learned at Blogickal, and ruminating over yours, I realized that I don’t think of myself as particularly “successful” — but I don’t think of myself as “unsuccessful”, either. So that led to an entirely new train of thought… Which you’ll see the fruit of soon.

    Good luck at PageCoach! At least there you have a predefined definition of success.

  8. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 12:35 pm

    Adam,

    Nobody can define success except for the observer, and by defining it, he becomes an aspect of what is observed…

    I think you’ve summed up our recent behind-the-screens correspondence – and my attempt at this discussion -perfectly.

    Have you been tagged yet with this topic? Care to give it a go?

  9. Adam
    March 20, 2007 | 12:50 pm

    Yep, I’ve already been tagged… and I turned around and tagged both you and Jeff as well.

    I tried to tag seven people, but four people had already been tagged, and two of them have also already responded, leaving three who only I tagged directly. Of those, one responded with her concept of peace, and the other two have not posted anything since that time.

    Here’s the ill-fated post, which seems to have jinxed so many people…
    http://www.adamspeace.com/blog/2007/03/13/tagged-again-simply-successful-secrets/

  10. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 12:57 pm

    Jeff,
    You’re right about every individual suggestion’s being a starting point for a full-length post. (Why do all my posts feel like that?)
    I even considered cross-linking points to posts I’d already written – there are many repetitive observations. The voices that told me to throw in the towel were responding with things like “Isn’t this kind of an underlying mission of the entire blog?”
    Do things you’re good at. It seems to me that even the struggle to write this post is a perfect example of just HOW much more energy gets siphoned off into the difficult tasks we take on. Our brains are wired to solve problems. It puts me in mind of the old marketing 80-20 rule – that 20% of your clients, 20% of your efforts, 20% of your business generates 80% of your success, profit… What works is actually the minority of what you work – and all that you work to death is probably not working so well. By identifying the sweet spots that carry the greater bulk of your endeavor, you can prioritize, maximize, and capitalize… Think key words and search traffic, and that small cluster of posts that bring in the most people, over and over again.
    I think we all have to tendency to just generally make things more difficult than they have to be. We believe that if something is easy, it must be less important. We believe we are meant to struggle and suffer. Starving Artist, Job – all that sickness.
    And think of all the people who really have a problem saying No to what they don’t want. It’s easier to overlook success, and keep teasing our hair out (LOVE that expression!) over the weak spots. While engaging those challenges and transforming them is worthy, the simple act of embracing what you’re good at builds confidence and trains power.
    There’s a reason why you’re Good at something – when you do something really well, it’s usually because of two things – 1. You’ve done it often; 2. You’ve done it often because you liked doing it enough to do it often.
    Doing things you’re good at reinforces Quantity, and from there you refine Quality.
    Do things you’re good at. is meaningful. Yet why do so many people punish themselves – and deny themselves – the very things that are shortcuts to joy?
    When I speak to Money, he doesn’t tell me to do anything complicated, anything I hate – he tells me, quite simply, to do more of what I want to do most.
    Your joy, your gifts, are not selfish endulgence – they are a contribution.
    You are SO much more likely to be successful at what you love.

  11. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 1:20 pm

    Adam,
    I’ll go read yours immediately! I wasn’t jinxed by your tag, so it must be the tag itself…
    The authors who’ve gone before must be cussing us – they all made it look easy – they certainly didn’t get anything WRONG. You and Jeff and I must be creating a blogospheric equivalent to the Bermuda Triangle phenomenon or something – Cubing the Meta, perhaps?
    Uber-protestant?

  12. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 1:31 pm

    I’ve decided to START some tags – that should be easier. Yes… I’m going to stew on it for a bit, and then I’m going to carpet-bomb the blogosphere with Questions.

  13. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 1:43 pm

    Adam,
    About the deconstruction triangulation – it’s interesting that, after reading your post, I saw that you DID indeed introduce the 1st Degree Meta – you starting pulling the seams apart – the evidence is in your Rebellion of the Ordered List.
    Even though I hadn’t read yours before posting mine, it was a 2nd degree unraveling.
    So, yes, Jeff, it falls to you to give it the 3rd Degree…

  14. Jeff Lilly
    March 20, 2007 | 1:47 pm

    The 80/20 rule! I love that thing. Did you know that the 80/20 rule appears everywhere in language, too? Quick example: 80% of verbs take the past tense -ed marker (walk/walked, access/accessed); the remaining 20% are irregular (buy/bought, fly/flew, go/went). BUT if you look at how frequently the verbs are used, 80% of the verbs you USE are irregular, and only 20% are regular! That pattern shows up everywhere in all languages, and linguists have been trying to figure out why for decades. Most throw up their hands and say that language is capricious. There is one linguistic theory that can explain it; it’s called Optimality Theory, and it’s based on neural networks. One day I’ll take a week’s worth of posts and lay it all out…

    I think we all have to tendency to just generally make things more difficult than they have to be. We believe that if something is easy, it must be less important. We believe we are meant to struggle and suffer. Starving Artist, Job – all that sickness.

    Yes. And I’ve got to move past it. My kids deserve better.

  15. Adam
    March 20, 2007 | 2:43 pm

    The 80/20 rule applies in programming as well.

    20% of your code will be run 80% of the time… In reality, it tends more towards 99/1, such as a web server handling simple requests compared to processing information that a user enters. Games spend about 99% of their time creating the graphics and only 1% handling logic…

    How much time does a person spend consciously pursuing abstract thoughts, compared to simply reacting to stimulus? That might be a key to the 80/20 rule…

  16. Slade
    March 20, 2007 | 5:36 pm

    I did NOT know the 80/20 applied to linguistics, but I did know it applied to code.

    Am I surprised that it works in so many environments? Not at all – and I am comforted every time I discover things that I do on instinct have this kind of truth behind them.

    So many people feel like they have to be conscious of everything or else they’ll MISS something important. Like, if you don’t know the Rules, you might fail to use them, or use them incorrectly.

    I don’t know about you, but I breathe a sigh of relief knowing I don’t have to control everything in order to get it right.

    I wonder if we spend 80% of our energy mentally time traveling into illusive past and future experiences, and only 20% in the present (with most of that eaten up by survival, reaction, putting out fires…)

  17. Lola
    March 22, 2007 | 11:44 pm

    Lawdy – y’all wear me out! ;)

    Slade – I just wanted to say thanks for these lines:

    > Not so much now. I’m getting it!

    > Ummm. Yeah. Kinda.

    >

    I’ve spent most of my life (46 yrs) playing the supporting character to everyone else (and I do mean EVERYONE) in my life. I was a daughter, sister, student, wife, stepmom, mom, friend, employee, boss…and adapted my SELF to be the “best fit” in every scenario. That turned out to be a really bad plan and got me in some tough situations.

    But now? For going on two years now I’ve been deconstructing all of the above and reconstructing my identity. It’s equal parts thrill and terror trying to figure out who I am without the definition of playing a supporting role.

    Thanks for writing your words down. I don’t always comment but always read and always come away with something to ponder…

  18. Lola
    March 22, 2007 | 11:48 pm

    Oops – I guess I coded my quotes right out of existence…

    I was referring to these lines
    First – “Do you need me to tell you it’s okay to fall in love with your life?” (Not so much now I’m getting it!)

    Second – “Are you afraid to be the star in your own story?” (Ummm. Yeah. Kinda.)

    Third – “The alternative is to be a supporting character in someone else’s life.”

  19. Slade
    March 23, 2007 | 1:02 pm

    Lola,

    Honey, is the Boy Chat wearing you out? : )

    Guys like to stand around with the hood propped up and talk detail about machinery, you know. Even when we discuss matters of the heart and soul…

    Thank you for being moved beyond reading to commenting. You may not be able to see it, but there are a lot of others “always just reading,” and they see themselves in your words as well as mine.

    You speak for a LOT of people, and they are somewhere right now, seeing that mirror held up before them, and their hearts leap a little bit for your reflection and honesty.

  20. Money Makeover
    March 24, 2007 | 6:18 pm

    [...] Where do these blog tags START? Someone has to plant them — start them — right? I love a writing assignment, I usually find the restrictions liberating, but I’ve only managed to fulfill the recent tagging exercises by totally deforming the rules of the game. I was one of those 8 year olds that liked to elaborate the rules of Monopoly to a ridiculous extreme. In my family, part of the fun of a board game was spontaneous adaptation. It’s amazing the way that kids play — they turn House & Office — the opposite of adult desire or fun — into creative performance art. [...]

  21. [...] And with yet another wonderful article on the nature of success and failure, I LOVE this one from Slade at Shift your Spirits – How you can stop feeling like a failure. [...]

  22. The Art of Surrender
    April 1, 2007 | 12:09 am

    [...] Today, I’m just not feeling like much of a pro. Of course, I seem to have no problem listening on behalf of others, and delivering messages of faith and hope…to anyone but myself. I’m feeling angry right now about my skills as a relay medium — I can perform as a medium for YOU — but it never fails that when I demand assistance and information for ME — instead of letting it come — I find myself flailing in a spiritual quicksand. [...]

  23. [...] Where do these blog tags START? Someone has to plant them — start them — right? I love a writing assignment, I usually find the restrictions liberating, but I’ve only managed to fulfill the recent tagging exercises by totally deforming the rules of the game. I was one of those 8 year olds that liked to elaborate the rules of Monopoly to a ridiculous extreme. In my family, part of the fun of a board game was spontaneous adaptation. It’s amazing the way that kids play — they turn House & Office — the opposite of adult desire or fun — into creative performance art. [...]

  24. [...] Today, I’m just not feeling like much of a pro. Of course, I seem to have no problem listening on behalf of others, and delivering messages of faith and hope…to anyone but myself. I’m feeling angry right now about my skills as a relay medium — I can perform as a medium for YOU — but it never fails that when I demand assistance and information for ME — instead of letting it come — I find myself flailing in a spiritual quicksand. [...]

  25. [...] The Western concept of Success was grievously founded on the principle that spiritual beings should be — can be — are to be — defined by their job titles, as opposed to the size and function of their hearts. This, from the same nation that brought us How The Grinch Stole Christmas — go figure… [...]

  26. Patricia Singleton
    May 25, 2007 | 3:24 am

    Slade, as i told someone at church on Sunday, I am back. I sat down last night and read several of your most recent articles. Your writing is always so inspiring to me. I have recently asked myself why am I not writing. I have the information and the talent. I also have the fear and that is what I am looking at in myself and those people who are most influencial in my life. What I discovered is that not all of my fear of success/failure is mine. The last few years, I have allowed a close friend to influence me in ways that I am no longer comfortable with. Because of her fears, I stopped moving forward with my own life. I chose to stop my own spiritual growth so that she wouldn’t get left behind. Part of that is because of my own fear of change, of moving forward, of being alone. Why are we so afraid of the things that we want the most. Yes, as you said at one point, self-esteem plays a big part in our fears. Fear of success/failure can stop us dead in our tracks. I am now willing to face my fears. I may very well lose my friend because she is not willing to face her fears. I am willing to take that chance. I got out my notebook of your e-book on creating your own blog. I am going to learn how to do that and see where it goes. I guess the next step for me is to pick a name and a subject for my blog and start writing again. Writing brings me joy. That is a big reward all on its own. Thanks, Slade, for your continued encouragement. Patricia Singleton

  27. Slade
    May 26, 2007 | 3:22 pm

    Patricia,

    I am glad you’re “back.” I was about to have to come looking for you!

    Your issues with your friend resonate with me — I’ve lately been confronting some “psychic vampirism” myself. It’s difficult to define healthy boundaries when you know someone is a) a good person b) someone you truly want to help.

    It’s easy to believe it’s your job to “save” people you care about — but this is the sticky trap of co-dependency. You can’t drown yourself saving someone drowning… I’ve also been reminded recently (not just by my guides and my soul searching on the subject, but also with the input of a trained psychotherapist) it’s actually heavy-handed to behave as if it is your right or responsibility to save anyone, but yourself.

    Saving someone communicates to them that you don’t have confidence in their own ability — the exact opposite of what you hope to inspire.

    Know that one of the best ways to help save someone — show them an example of what YOU look like saving yourself. Let them observe and use your personal empowerment as a guide toward the ultimate solution: that they will be inspired to find their way, on their own.

    You’re not abandoning anyone by doing this. Keep in mind that no one can drag you down without your permission, and no one can travel UP with you without deciding to join you on that journey.

    If someone you care about says “I can’t go on, you go ahead without me.” You have to respect that your paths may diverge at that point.

    I was stunned by the fall-out I had in my personal life at a few points — not because of the mess I had made, but as a result of what I thought were great leaps and bounds toward peace, personal success, and fulfillment.

    It broke my heart that what I needed to do to improve my life meant that some people who were closest to me were not uplifted by that or even happy for me — they deserted me because of it.

    I can’t remember where I read it — I believe it was in a Julia Cameron book — but one explanation I found for this unhappy scenario is that When You Change (even for the better) it challenges those around you to change. They may compare themselves to you and feel they fall short of your evolution; it is a reminder of what they should be, could be, doing in their own lives.

    Many people don’t want to be confronted with your personal power, because it ultimately forces them to look their own in the face.

    I believe the brilliant way Julia Cameron describe this was “Sometimes people want to make you the Monster staring back at them in the mirror” because they can’t bear to acknowledge who it really is.

    Having said all that, I am thrilled you’re BACK. Every time I engage in some blogging community activity, like tagging other writes to share, I am aware of how much your voice is missing. How much I want you to be here with us, participating.

    Not only is there room for you here, Patricia, sharing your light and your wisdom — that space is one that can ONLY be claimed by you.

    I for one can’t wait for you to do that, and I will consider it a personal triumph for both of us.

    Don’t withhold all that great stuff locked away in your notebooks; it is your duty to share it. I can’t wait for you to experience the results of that brave act. It only looks hard from where you’re sitting right now.

    Dive in! The water’s great!

    Love, Slade

  28. Patricia Singleton
    May 27, 2007 | 12:06 am

    My friend and I had a conversation today after she received a card from me telling her my thoughts. I have not actively been telling her that she was too stupid to know what to do with her own life. I learned a long time ago with my children that when you “help” someone by telling them how to live their lives and how to make their decisions that basically you are telling them they are too stupid to take care of themselves. I would never consciously tell someone that. But being co-dependent, we are not always conscious of what our words and actions are telling those that we love and think we are “helping”.

    What I was doing was sitting and waiting for my friend to decide that her life was worth living and in the process, I put my own life on hold. I joined her in her isolation. That didn’t do either of us any good. The dynamics of our friendship has changed over the past year and I have been trying to figure out my place in the relationship. My friend has SUFFERED some major losses over the past year. So have I. We both reacted to those losses differently. We are very different individuals in the way that we deal with life. Did you notice the word suffered was all in capital letters. My friend does suffering very well. That is why I have lost all patience with her. My way, no more right or wrong than her way, is to deal with it and get on with living. She hates it when I call her a Drama Queen and that is what she is. I told her that my choice is to stop isolating and to become more active with people and activities. I am again reading The Secret which has some great information. I am also listening to some great meditation tapes from Centerpointe Institute that are helping me to look at my own behavior rather than that of my friend. Back to your article, what fears kept me isolated and stalled so long? It may take some time but I am beginning to figure it out and move forward. It really does feel good to write. Patricia

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