Posted in random thoughts

Authenticity


Photo by Leeloo The First on Pexels.com

I was asked last year to describe my blog in one word. For something that should have taken a while to come up with, it popped right into my mind: Authenticity.

There are a lot of blogs out there as well as many writers. Everyone is looking for “the way” to make it and have their voice heard. I’m embarrassed to say you will find posts on my blog which fall flat on their face. Those blog posts were written because I felt I needed to get something out to my readers. But there are also meaningful posts where I was being myself. 


Authenticity matters to me because I don’t want to be like everyone else. I don’t want to “stand out” from the crowd. I write because I want to be true to myself as well as my readers, not some cut out cookie content mill. I write because I want my words to heal not only myself, but possibly help someone else going through the same thing. I write because I believe people should be true to themselves. And before you can be true to yourself, you have to want to learn about yourself. I’ve spent a lot of time doing this, partly because I’m an introvert and partly because I’ve battled mental illness since I was in high school. Years of therapy have helped me learn the good, the bad, and the downright ugly things I didn’t want to acknowledge, but have made me a better person.


​Authenticity Matters

It’s really easy to get pulled back into the trap of not being authentic and people do it for all sorts of reasons. It’s a plain and simple truth about human nature and especially hard when you are unsure of yourself. Our own fears, insecurities, and failings pull us back from being our authentic selves because they don’t like it when we stand up and say, “This isn’t working for me.”


What the Hell is a Platform?

When I started this writing adventure a few years ago, I had no idea what I was doing. All I wanted to do was join NaNoWriMo and write a book in 30 days. And I did. I wrote a book in 30 days. I was proud of my accomplishment. Then I started reading and believing what all the writers and marketers out there were saying about making a living as a writer. They said in order to be successful, you must have a “platform” and a “blog.” I remember thinking, “What the hell is a platform?”​ and “What the hell do I want to write about?” — I’m still figuring this last one out!


Losing Yourself

I started searching and reading everything I could about building a platform. I set up my website and started blogging, continuing to read in an effort to convince myself I would become a better writer because of it. Then I started believing I “had” to do all those things to make it as a writer and gain readers. Because let’s be honest, without readers, writers wouldn’t have jobs.

I believed in many of the falsities, and in the process lost “why” I was writing. In fact, I’d given up writing altogether because I was searching for “how to” be a writer instead of just being a writer. The truth is, as writers we still have our words and no one will ever be able to take that away from us. For that right, I am thankful.

But there’s one small truth no one is acknowledging. You don’t have to do all that stuff if it’s not true to who you are and what you are doing. Let me repeat this: You don’t have to do all that stuff if it’s NOT TRUE to who you are and what you are doing.

I recognized I was not being true to myself last fall and that’s why I dialed back on the number of writing blogs I was reading and the number of podcasts I was listening to.

I’ve stopped blogging and writing altogether. I’ve fallen into the trap of believing I wouldn’t be good unless I did “X” again.  And the more I believe this, the more I can’t actually write.

I wanted to be among that group of “successful” writers. I wanted to make it as a writer so bad that I unintentionally set myself up for failure. And guess what happened? I crashed. I do not handle failure well. I’m not sure anyone does. My writer insecurity took over and I began to second guess everything I’d done. My instinct was to delete everything it all because I’d convinced myself it wasn’t making a difference and that my writing flat-out sucked.

I ignored the fact that first and foremost my writing should first be for me. And if someone else likes it, great. If they don’t, so be it. I ignored the fact that I started writing because I like to tell stories.

In my attempt to “fix” this crash, I started to read more and more about how to be a better writer and build an audience  This only left me not writing at all. I believed I was an awful writer. Any negative feedback shot me down. I started looking at my work with such a critical eye, my writing was no longer enjoyable. I believed in the false truth that I am a shitty writer.


Why It’s Okay to Make Your Own Rules

I forced myself not to listen to all the nonsense out there about how to make it as a writer. And for a while I was doing better.

​But here I sit today, back in that spot of having to do “X” to be good, to be heard. And I have a confession to make. I’m not sure blogging is for me. Most times it feels forced and fake, inauthentic. I’m realizing the more I try to fight that simple truth, the more I push myself to be something I am not and create writing that is inauthentic.

​I’m right back where I started, afraid and discouraged, stuck in the writer’s hole of hell, wondering how I will get out. It cripples me and keeps me stuck. And while I believe many writers feel this way, having chronic depression and anxiety doesn’t help me pull out of the situation or look at things logically.

Breaking the Rules

​​Today there’s something different. I’m seeing it from a different angle and I am breaking the rules of the “experts.” I am taking the pop ups off my website. And I am not offering the free incentive readers get “only if” they sign up for my email list. 

I want people to sign up for my email list because they want to, because maybe I have something useful to say, not because I have to offer them something, coercing them into “giving” me their email. As writers, we lie to ourselves and convince ourselves we have to have people join our email list otherwise we aren’t successful.

I want my writing to be useful, for myself and for you, my readers. If my writing isn’t useful for you, that’s great. If it is useful for you, that’s great too. But I cannot continue to ignore the nagging sensation of not being authentic. So, while I work through how I want to get my writing out there, I’m changing the rules to fit my authentic self. I cannot continue to have this war inside myself. I cannot continue being stuck inside my head. I want to write. I want to sell my work.  And I refuse to put it out there if it isn’t authentic.

What’s Next?

One of my favorite quotes is by Benjamin Mee: “All you need is 20 seconds of insane courage, and I promise something great will come of it.” Well, here’s my 20 seconds of insane courage, laying my thoughts and writing out on the line.
 
So what’s next? Well, that’s up to you. Are you willing to have 20 seconds of courage? Are you willing to look inside yourself and learn more? Are you willing to be true to yourself and not be what other people want you to be? If so, join me, and we will start this journey together.


Posted in random thoughts

Materialism


Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

When did we become a society where we’d rather shop on Thanksgiving than spend the day with our family and friends? Are we really so greedy to forego the sheer joy of one holiday in the year that is severely overlooked? Thanksgiving is about being thankful for the things you have. But somewhere along the lines, someone decided to make Thanksgiving about what you don’t have. Hurry through Thanksgiving dinner so you won’t miss the sales. Nothing is that important (even though I love deals too) to skip spending Thanksgiving and have it be about Thanksgiving. I don’t want it to be Christmas for this one day.

I’ve got one word for you “Materialism.” It’s easy to get caught up in the madness of the holiday but what about the reason for the holiday? To some the reason is Jesus’ birth. To others it may be about holiday traditions. Each person has a tradition they look forward to each year. I have a friend who loves being in ugly sweater contests. I have another who gets all of her shopping done and presents wrapped before Thanksgiving rolls around just so she can enjoy the season. Are we so busy in this time of year that we can’t stop and enjoy the holidays?

I know you are probably sitting there saying to yourself, “But I have to…” Have to what? Get gifts your kids won’t remember in a month? Go shopping on Thanksgiving so you can get a “bargain” instead of spending time with your family?

Who decided it was okay to take one of the few days everything in the country is closed on and make people work and be away from their families?

Here are 5 reasons to avoid the holiday madness: 

1. The Stress is Killing You

  • Let’s face it planning and executing a holiday meal or party can be taxing on our bodies. 

2. You’re Missing Out on the Little Things

  • It’s hard to make a conscious effort to slow down enough in our busy lives to live in the moment.
  • What are your family traditions and things you look forward to doing every year?

    • Each year my kids love to make cutout cookies and frost them. Now I have to admit it was hard at first to give my four year old reign of the frosting but as I sat back and watched something extraordinary happened. I watched as my kids took sheer joy in frosting their cookies. And every year we buy those little gingerbread houses to decorate. This year we bought Gingerbread ninjias!  

3. If It’s All About Presents…Forget It

  • It’s hard when retailers are pushing their products, forcing people to spend money they may not have or buy things they don’t need. Corporate America has this down to a fine science. But did you ever consider it’s not about the presents? As Cindy Lou Who says in How the Grinch Stole Christmas: “I’m glad he took our presents. You can’t hurt Christmas, Mr. Mayor, beacuse it isn’t about the… the gifts or the contest or the fancy lights. That’s what Cindy’s been trying to tell everyone… and me. I don’t need anything more for Christmas than this right here: my family.

4. It’s not about Keeping Up With the Jones’

  • It’s so easy for some to get trapped in this state of mind. I know I’ve been guilty of it from time to time. But consider this: Why are you trying to keep up with the Jones’ anyway? Is it to gain social status? Hide your insecurities? Show you are better than someone else? Whatever the reason may be, take a moment to stop and be thankful for the things you have.
  • HOLIDAY TRADITIONS
    • PUTTING UP THE TREE
    • DECORATING THE HOUSE
    • MAKING CUT OUT COOKIES
    • MAKING CANDY
    • WATCHING CHRISTMAS MOVIES
    • VIEWING THE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
    • GIVING TO THOSE IN NEED
    • ATTENDING A HOLIDAY PARADE
    • DRINKING HOT CHOCOLATE/CIDER/TODDIES
    • LISTENING TO CHRISTMAS MUSIC