To the truth, beauty, and wisdom in each of us, And in particular to Dawna Markova, who taught me how to support the cultivation of these qualities.
Trust yourself, then you will know how to live.
The Power of Self-Trust
How many cares one loses when one decides not to be something, but to be someone.
Coco Chanel
Everywhere I turn, I hear people are overwhelmed. Married or single, with kids or not, working or not, people are struggling to keep their heads above the water of their lives. Were overwhelmed by our to-do lists, were overwhelmed by all the information coming at us, were overwhelmed by how fast everything is moving and how fast we must run to keep up. We try to simplify, we try to get more organized, we try not to sweat the small stuff, we try to meditate or do yoga, but nothing seems to help very much.
There are good reasons for feeling this waydaily life is more demanding and less spacious than it once was. We are flooded with information and choices. We are all doing too much and have fewer options than we might like.
When I ask people about feeling overwhelmed, the words I most often hear are inadequate and helpless. Thats because when we have trouble keeping up, were sure it is our fault. Thinking this way only adds to our sense of overwhelm because on top of all that we have to do, we are now carrying the belief that there is something about us that makes us unable to cope.
Ive been contemplating this problem for a while now, and the more I look at it, the more it seems to me that the reason we cant seem to get a handle on things is that we havent gotten to the heart of the problem: that on top of all we have to deal with, we fundamentally dont trust ourselves.
We dont trust in our capacity to deal with life as it comes at us, so we are in a perpetual state of fear and worry. Or we try to control life through perfectionism and freak out when we (or others) make a mistake. We take on too much because we dont trust our judgment of what we should be doing, or we dont trust that we will be acceptable to others if we say no. We dont trust ourselves to make the right choices, so we spend tremendous energy deciding and then second-guess ourselves after the fact. We consult friend after friend and expert after expert. Or surf the Net endlessly, looking for more information. We dont trust our parenting instincts (I just read an article in Child saying that never have parents done so much right and felt so anxious about making mistakes), so in our self-doubt we overwhelm our children with too much, which overwhelms us managing and paying for it all. We dont trust our feelings, so we stay as busy as possible to avoid them.
We seem to have lost the sense of ourselves as reliable sources of the wisdom we need to navigate through our lives. Instead, we see only our problems. Each and every one of us can catalog in detail the whats and whys of the ways we are screwed-up, flawed, broken. I have low self-esteem, so I cant say no. Im a procrastinator... an introvert... a control freak. Of course we dont trust ourselves why should we when all we recognize about ourselves is whats wrong with us?
Its no wonder we feel this way. We are flooded every day with messages about whats wrong with uswhat kind of disorder, syndrome, or problem we have. And what we should be doing or buying to fix ourselves. Our teeth arent white enough, we arent good enough parents, were eating too much, we have ADHD. There are precious few messages out there that we are fine just the way we are (thats why so many people are attracted to Buddhism these days, I believe: because this is one of its main messages) or that we have what we need to deal with life. No wonder we feel overwhelmedall the messages we hear reinforce that we cant manage as we are.
For instance:
Several years ago, Ann Landers was asked what question she was most frequently asked. Whats wrong with me? she replied.
From birth, were now examined for any deviation from what some expert considers normal. Fully one-third of schoolchildren are now on some kind of prescribed drug for a disorder.
My local newspapers Lifestyle section is ten pages. Recently I counted how many pages were taken up with advice columnshalf, excluding ads. Two general advice columns, plus one each on sex, money, parenting, manners, relationships, and romance.
A recent Psychology Today article examined the explosion of self-help advice on TV, radio, Web sites, books, and magazines, detailing how there is now even niche advice for gays, for African Americans, for twenty-somethings, for intellectuals, for right-wingers. Heres how they put it: People are keen to outsource a wide array of their needs, from personal finance to parenting.
Apparently weve even lost the capacity to dress ourselves and decorate our homes, so we have What Not to Wear , Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, Trading Spaces, and WhileYou Were Out, to name just the most successful shows in this genre, so that the whole country can laugh at our poor taste.
There is nothing wrong in and of itself with needing help. But much of the advice were bombarded with reinforces the message that we are screwed-up and that the answer to our problem lies in following this particular experts idea of whats right. Rather than being helped to understand how we best function, how to find the solutions that work best for us , we have become a people who look to others to define who we should be, how we should feel, and how we should live. This has led to an increased incapacity to deal with life.
You Are a One-of-a-Kind Miracle
I am larger and better than I thought. I did not know I held so much goodness.
Walt Whitman
The other day, I was driving down a country road in upstate New York when a giant billboard for a car dealership caught my eye. It had a picture of a smiling infant with the legend You Were Born... Preapproved. Tears sprang to my eyes. How would the world be different if I, if you, could claim this basic trust as our birthright? How much pain would we have avoided, how much feeling odd and different, how much loneliness and fear? How less overwhelmed and more joyful would we be? How much more successful?
As I work with clients, as I hear from readers, as I go about my day as a mother, a friend, a partner, I am constantly in awe at the unique magnificence of each and every one of the human beings who cross my path, what incredible resources of mind, body, and spirit each of us possesses. And I feel great sadness at how unaware so many of us are about the riches we hold or how to use them to be happy and contribute our gifts to the world. It is to begin to address this terrible blindness that Im writing this book.
You and I were preapproved at birth. Each and every one of us is a miracle of creation. Your particular mind/body/spirit has never been replicated in the more than seventy billion human beings who have lived on this planet. From the possible combination of genes of your parents, three hundred thousand billion different humans could have been created. But you were. Your brain is the most sophisticated structure ever created, with thirteen billion nerve cells, more than three times as many cells as there are people on the planet, as Og Mandino writes in