Mantra #4: The Only Way Out is Through

Every time I look at social media (why do I keep doing that?) or read the news, there’s a new crisis.

It’s exhausting. And yet, it feels familiar.

We’ve have been here before (job loss, Covid, illness, injuries, etc.).

There is some comfort in that.

You have faced hard things before and you can do it again.

I originally wrote this post on March 20, 2020, as the pandemic was just beginning.

It applies to our current time as well. Replace Covid with 2025 and it works.

So, to help us through, here is Mantra #4: ๐™๐™๐™š ๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™ก๐™ฎ ๐™ฌ๐™–๐™ฎ ๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฉ ๐™ž๐™จ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™ง๐™ค๐™ช๐™œ๐™.

The coronavirus changed our world in an instant. People are hurting. They’re scared for their safety and their livelihoods. They’re afraid for elderly parents and small children. These are not small things and they should not be diminished. Do not diminish others’ fears. Or your own.

Fear is pain. Unfortunately, we live in a pain-avoidant culture. Many people are afraid of pain- their own, their children’s, the world’s. They ignore it, numb it, try to out-drink or our out-run it.

Fear is good, actually.

Fear reminds us that we’re alive. That there’s something left to lose and something still to live for.

Fear is normal. Avoiding it is not.

It really stinks that this virus isn’t the hardest the thing that I’ve ever done. I’m not happy about that. I’m pissed, actually. Yet, I’m oddly calm, too. There is, for us, a sense of: “yes, we’ve been here before. We got through that, we will get through this.”

We were completely quarantined for months and practiced social distancing for over a year. And yet, even then, there were others forced to do even more work than us. Bone marrow transplant patients are often hospitalized for years. Some of my friends fought for years and still lost their children.

Shepherding my son through cancer treatment was hard. Getting “over it” was harder. This is not my default setting. I’m an east-coaster raised on grades, achievements, and busy. If you weren’t productive, you weren’t worth much.

I don’t “get over” stuff. I am a hanger-on-er. I love to revisit old wounds and dissect how I’ve been wronged. I tried that for years. It only brought more pain and more fear.

After years of denial, I realized that: The only way out is through.

I had to work through my fear, anger, grief, disappointment, rage, frustration. It was brutal. I hated it. I resented most of it.

And I am grateful for it.

The choice is the point. Especially now when it feels as if we have no choice. It’s normal to feel helpless and hopeless. Just don’t stay there.

Name your fears. Write them in a journal. Shout them into the wind. The more we name things, the less power they have to control us.

Go cry in your closet or bathroom. Throw stuff or punch a pillow. Then, wash your face, brush your teeth, and go for a walk.

The more we name our hope, the more inspired we are to act, too

You got this and I’m rooting for you.

Mantra #3: Go Where You’re Respected

Do you love yourself enough to go where you’re celebrated and not just tolerated? ๐Ÿ’œ

As a small business owner an N of 1, being sick can be terrifying. Not only do you not feel well physically, but you worry about your business. It feels as if there are literal dollars flowing down the drain.

Yet, I know (in my old age ๐Ÿ™‚ that resting is important and really, the only way to get better fast.

When I am sick, I have to cancel appointments, calling or texting clients at odd hours to apologize and change plans, hopefully giving them enough notice not to cause too much disruption.

Fortunately, a๐™ก๐™ก of my clients have been gracious and understanding. Some of them aren’t even clients yet! They have sent me quick emails wishing me quick recovery and have already rescheduled. Thank you!

This is a far cry from my last job where I was scolded for not calling in sick before 8am every day. No one called or emailed me to see how I was doing. And when I was finally well enough to return, I was met with a “letter in my file” for violating a (non-existent) “attendance policy.”๐Ÿ™„

I am finally in a professional place where I am loved and celebrated. It took years to build my business and I’m grateful for it every day. I truly love what I do and I’m honored to work with amazing people.

I was barely tolerated in my last job.

I stayed for all kinds of reasons. Most of them bad. And all of them false, because they were rooted in fear, not love.

You are allowed to be loved- at home, with family and friends, in school, and yes, at work.

If you aren’t. I’m so sorry. I know how painful that is. It makes you doubt yourself. It makes you think you’re going crazy.

You’re not crazy and you’re not wrong.

You’re allowed to be celebrated.

You’re allowed to want more.

You’re allowed to love yourself.

Mantra #2: Great People do Things before They’re Ready

Leslie Knope, from Parks & Recreation, is a modern day shero: smart, ambitious, funny, and fiercely loyal.

We have Amy Poehler to thank for Leslie. Iโ€™m a huge Amy Poehler fan. She works hard, uses her quick wit to make others laugh without resorting to snark, and is unabashedly feminist and intersectional in uplifting other women, especially young girls (see: Amy Poehlerโ€™s Smart Girls).

In my work as a career coach and resume writer, I help women and men across industries, generations, life experiences, and skill levels. Iโ€™ve noticed that men are more willing to see coaching and resume writing as an investment and decide more quickly to hire me.

The women I speak with tend to hem and haw. They are less likely to see themselves as ready or worthy of the time and money they will spend in coaching. They (almost always) consult with someone else about their decision before they circle back to me.

In her book, ๐˜ ๐˜ฆ๐˜ด, ๐˜—๐˜ญ๐˜ฆ๐˜ข๐˜ด๐˜ฆ Amy writes:

“Great people do things before theyโ€™re ready. They do things before they know they can do it. Doing what youโ€™re afraid of, getting out of your comfort zone, taking risks like that- thatโ€™s what life is. You might be really good. You might find out something about yourself thatโ€™s really special and if youโ€™re not good, who cares? You tried something. Now you know something about yourself.”

I know what self-doubt feels like. I was NOT ready to quit my full-time job and take my company full-time. Iโ€™m glad I took the leap, though!

I help people find and promote their best selves. I am the coach that I needed when I wasnโ€™t ready. Iโ€™m no Leslie Knope, but I am a compassionate listener and strong encourage-r. I helpย people see their unique gifts and talents, so they can find and then tell their career story.

Ladies, itโ€™s time for us to stop waiting until weโ€™re ready. Until we have every single box checked before we apply for that job, run for office, have a baby, choose a partner.

There is no ready. You are already ready. You can do this.

Like Leslie, find a squad of gals, love em fiercely, and let them love you fiercely in return.

I can help, too. Contact me-ย youโ€™re โ€œready.โ€