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Introduction
My flight was booked for 10:30 p.m. I arrived at Charlotte Douglas International Airport at 8:15 and noticed the earlier flight was delayed until 9:00. I ran to the gate, arriving there at 8:30. I asked the agent if I could have a seat on the plane.
No. Its closed.
I politely asked, Why havent they closed the doors?
She explained, Theres an international flight that just landed, and fifty people are on their way. Theyll be here any minute.
If one of them doesnt make it, is there any chance I can have their seat?
No, theyre all coming.
Right, but if one doesnt make ityou never knowcan I have the seat?
They will all be there.
Can I just stand here, and if one doesnt make it, can I have the seat?
I cant add you to the list. Its too late.
I understand, but could you make an exception? Id love to see my kids before bedtime. I smiled.
I stopped talking. I knew I had reached that point. I was going to be okay with whatever happened next. I surrendered to the universe.
A few seconds passed. She raised her head. She looked me in the eyes.
With a half-smile, she said, What do you do for a living? Are you a lawyer?
I replied, No. Im an expert on rejection.
She burst out laughing. I started laughing too. The woman standing in line listening behind me joined in the laughter.
The agent and I chatted for about ten minutes. I explained that I help people go after what they want, most of the time without being annoying. She said, Oh, well, youve been annoying. We laughed again.
Fast-forward thirty minutes, and Im on the plane, sitting in a window seat with an empty seat next to me. Twenty people never made it to the plane due to a computer glitch in U.S. Customs. I got home in time for bedtime.
That time, I got what I wanted. Sometimes, I dont.
Success wasnt about getting a seat on the plane. It was about committing to a process. I didnt require the universe to respond one way or another. I offered what I wanted without conditions. It was a risk-free risk. I would either win or learn. There was no failing. Rejection, shame, and fear werent options. I was free.
The process you will learn in this book will make life profoundly better and more fulfilling. You will learn how to give yourself permission to dream big. You will no longer fear failure and rejection. You will become an expert at filtering through lifes uncomfortable truths. You will tell your story as if it has already happened and love yourself along the way no matter what happens. You will trust and believe that no matter what happens, you will be okay. Adversity, change, and challenges will fuel your curiosity. Rejection will teach you, inform you, and help you get wherever you want to go (or someplace even better). You will be guaranteed success, because success isnt measured by the outcome. Its measured by committing to a process. In the words of Nelson Mandela, I never lose. I either win or learn.
The best part? Life will become even more interesting. And really, shouldnt life be interesting?
1. What Do You Want?
Without dreams and goals, there is no living, only merely existing, and that is not why we are here.
Mark Twain
Want Something
Ive spent most of my early life not feeling smart enough, attractive enough, skinny enough, successful enough, or good enough. I can be extremely funny at times. I know how to make people laugh and feel good. Humor has been my armor to cover up the pain underneath the surface. At times, Ive struggled with insecurity, social anxiety, jealousy, and change. I dont like it when people feel pain. I know how that feels.
I was a fat teenager. I absolutely hate the word fat , but thats what people called me. I cried when I had to run the mile in middle school. I had to work incredibly hard to be included. I never had a big group of close friends.
Whenever I faced rejection, Id make people laugh. It made it seem like I didnt care. But inside, I was hurting. Id eat to cover up the pain. Food was my addiction. It was legal, and there was plenty. Friday nights in high school included a sixteen-ounce bag of Doritos, a can of nacho cheese sauce, a jar of jalapeno peppers, and a one-pound bag of M&Ms, eating as much as I could. Freshman year in high school, I was 192 pounds and five feet not a lot of inches tall. I remember lying on the ground trying to zip my pants. They were crazy tight. My brothers friend asked him if I had to jump from a building to get into my pants. I pretended not to hear him.
Whats crazy about it all is that I have a loving, supportive family. My parents have been married for more than fifty years. I had and have so much love around me. I just didnt have it inside me. I know if youre someone who is a survivor of abuse, a recovering addict, a foster child, an orphan, a minority, an immigrant, sick, immobile, impaired, or physically limited, your eyes might roll as you think, Big deal. He was fat. If only he knew real problems. I agree. My problems may have been small, may still be small. But to me, they felt so big. I knew I had so many advantages, yet I was so terribly flawed, so unhappy. This made me feel even more defective and fueled my shame. I didnt want to feel this way. I hated it. And Ive dedicated my life to changing it.
This book is a life manualfor anyone at any stage of life who struggles with the sting of rejection and fears taking risks to seek happiness. The process is something youll need to practice every day. This isnt an overnight fix. Its a shift in mindset. Its forming new habits. Over time, you will get comfortable with the uncomfortable. Youll be free to say what you think and express how you feel. With each risk you take, you will appreciate that you are worthy and capable, no matter the results. This is the formula Ive used to transform my body, write bestselling books, train educators, empower leaders, build multiple businesses, find love, get married, stay married, navigate parenting, and eliminate the shame that used to take up too much of my time and energy. Shame is boring. You dont need it anymore.