The Honesty-Dignity Equation

If you were around here in the summer you may remember that I put myself out there on video and managed to land an opportunity to speak at a Bloggy Boot Camp in Dallas in September 2012. Well today I’m not here – not because we’re moving in to our new house (woo hoo!) but because I’m over visiting my SITStas. (Is that a word? It is now.)

I’m guest posting on SITS today about how to blog honestly without losing your dignity. (What? I only posted about my underwear once.)

Everyone has a line. Even me. I know where my line is and what I’m not willing (or able) to post about, but I might be willing to post more personal stuff than a lot of people. Doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter where your line is, I just think sometimes it’s a good idea to push it a little bit. And doing so is less scary than you might think.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned in the last 11 months it’s that, no matter what the struggle, we’re never as alone as we think we are.

What do you think – are you ready to step into the light?

Come and read my guest post and let me know what you think.

bridge sunrise

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If you’re here from SITS (hi & welcome!) and you’re looking for the juicy stuff, here’s where you’ll find some of it:

Read “Loud” if you’ve ever yelled at your baby.

Ditto if you’ve ever wanted to throw your baby out the window.

On being a “bad” mom.

A post about how I got onto anti-depressants.

My scariest moment.

Not a good day.

The first of a two-part post about rage (which was also linked from the post on SITS).

Or maybe it’s easier to get it all in one video of my TEDx talk.

And if you’re looking for tips on getting freelance writing gigs, come back later in the week. I’m going to post some freelance tips for newbies based on my recent experience.

How to Blog

On the Road to Wisdom

Wisdom ceases to be wisdom when it becomes too proud to weep, too grave to laugh, and too selfish to seek other than itself.
~ Khalil Gibran

At the beginning of this year I did two things: I started this blog and I joined a One Little Word class. I thought I’d write here a bit and see where it went, and here I am almost a year later, fully immersed. I thought I’d dive right into the One Little Word class and do all the exercises, and almost a year later I haven’t done many of them but my word is fully immersed in my life.

I had a tough time choosing the word, and was skeptical about the common “the word will choose you” reassurance. Initially I thought I’d choose “improve” as my word because that’s what I wanted to do in many areas of my life. But thinking that was a good word was really a symptom of my problem, and luckily I came to my senses and realized that was too self-critically negative.

And then my word chose me.

I don’t remember how it happened. It just came to me one day, I think, and that was that. I didn’t know what it meant at the time, but I do now.

Seek.

verb, sought, seek·ing.

–verb (used with object)

1. to go in search or quest of: to seek the truth.

2. to try to find or discover by searching or questioning: to seek the solution to a problem.

3. to try to obtain: to seek fame.

4. to try or attempt (usually fol. by an infinitive): to seek to convince a person.

5. to go to: to seek a place to rest.

6. to ask for; request: to seek advice.

7. Archaic: to search or explore.

For too long I was too proud to weep (figuratively, anyway, or at least in public) and too grave to laugh. I lost sight of what was important.

Actually, I don’t think I knew what was important.

I do now. In part, at least. I was seeking something I didn’t know was lost, and now I’ve started to find my way back to it.

I was seeking myself.

This search (journey? quest?) has led me places I would not have anticipated a year ago, and now a new stage is beginning.

A new home.

A new place.

A new start.

I look forward to where seeking wisdom will take me, and what part of myself I will find on the way there.

Seek wisdom
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The Just.Be.Enough team is so thankful to have been partnering with Striiv on our Striiv 2 Be Enough month-long challenge. Now it is our turn to give back to one of you! Enter to win a chance to own your very own Striiv fitness device just by linking up an “I am striving for” post on Just.Be.Enough this week.

A winner will be chosen among the linked posts (remember that the linky closes on Wednesday 11/30 at 11:59 pm EST) using random.org on Thursday (12/1) morning. The winner will be notified by email and will have 24 hours to reply with a mailing address and telephone number or another winner will be selected.

To be entered:

  • Link an “I am Striving for” Be Enough Me post in the linky, AND
  • Comment on the JBE post to let us know that you would like to win your OWN Striiv.

—–

And don’t forget about our first EVER Twitter party!

We are so excited to host a “Striiv to Be Enough” event where we’ll be discussing getting moving and putting ourselves first as we strive to live healthy lives full of movement.

Plus, we’re offering amazing prizes that you will NOT want to miss! You must RSVP and be present during most of the event to be eligible to win prizes.

When: Tuesday, November 29th, 8-9 pm EST/5-6 pm PST
Where: On Twitter!
Follow: @JustBeEnough and hashtag #Striiv2BEnough

RSVP here

Searching for Life’s Purpose

You may have noticed (because I plaster it everywhere) that I’m sort of fond of my tagline. Live the life you’re meant to. I thought I knew what I wanted to do, but my experience in the last few years has made me think differently about what I think I’m meant to do.

I think we’re all meant to do something. That doesn’t mean it has to be huge or Earth-shattering, but I think there is something for each of us that has meaning and that contributes something. I also think sometimes it’s the hard things that make us see what that something is (though that doesn’t necessarily have to be the case).

A friend of mine has a blog called Quest for Purpose, where she’s on a journey to explore what she’s meant to be doing with her life. I find the things she posts and the peek into her thought process fascinating.

In any case, she is doing a series of interviews to talk to others about life’s purpose, and I was flattered that she asked me to be part of it. Come and watch, and please share your thoughts. I’d love to hear what you think (as would Erin, I’m sure).

video frame

 

Hope Chest Identity

I came home from work one day many months ago to find that my husband had cleared all the junk out of our guest room and made it into a space for me. The stuff we had piled in the closet was gone. The discarded items that had been placed on the floor and then forgotten had disappeared. The bed was covered not with books and boxes but bedding. And in one corner sat my desk, brought up from downstairs, emptied of the detritus of its time in a child’s playroom, and ready for writing.

It was, in every sense of the term, a room of one’s own.

It was meant to be a sanctuary – a place to retreat from clutter and to hide from the crashing about of a small but rambunctious boy. And that’s what it turned out to be, though not in the way he’d first intended.

I spent a lot of time in that room when I was on leave earlier this year. Almost two months straight, I think. I slept there, I read there, I wrote there. I lay awake late at night there and wondered what was going to happen to me. I drank endless cups of tea there. And I found my sanity there.

I was in there again over the weekend. That’s my room to pack as we prepare to move, so I dove in. The desk was easy – it was reasonably well organized and all the stuff it contains is current. No sorting required.

The hope chest was a different story, though.

Another wish-come-true, my hope chest was made by my husband early in our relationship. He sawed and cut and hammered, building the whole thing lovingly by hand. It appeared one Christmas, a complete surprise since he had managed to hide it in the woodworking shop of the apartment building we lived in at the time. When we moved to this house it came with me. It sits there still, housing — until this past weekend, anyway — the same stuff that has hidden within it all this time. Stuff I haven’t really looked at for years, until this weekend.

Opening the lid, I saw the same bits and bobs I remember from all the other times I peeked. My teenage diary, the key long since lost. A small wooden box — painted purple and adorned with a heart flanked by two Rs — that contains a few years’ worth of birthday, anniversary, and Valentine’s cards from my husband and I to each other. (I’ve kept every single one — 13 years’ worth — and that original purple box got full long ago.)

There are several shoe boxes in the collection as well, an informal filing system for things I wanted to keep. One contained old notes — handwritten — from my boyfriends in university. I read a few, laughed and shook my head, and tossed them. I’m not that girl anymore.

Another was full of university-era letters and cards, this time from my mom in the days before email. At the bottom of that box were some letters from my Grandma, who passed away in 2001. That shoe box got put into a moving box, as did the one containing print-outs of all the emails my husband and I sent to each other in the long-distance days of our relationship. I remember the girl who got those letters and emails, and I want to take her with me.

old letters

Image credit: Madhya on Flickr

I dug further, through old photos and souvenirs and keepsakes from trips travelled and relationships ended. And then, at the very bottom of the hope chest, tucked in one corner, were journals. Stacks of them. I had forgotten about them entirely. I packed all of it, but now I wonder if I should have.

Everything in that hope chest is at least 10 years old. After this last year, a lot of these hope chest treasures don’t feel like me anymore. The things I cherish I will bring with me, and I feel no regret over relegating the embarrassing ones to the trash. But what about the rest? The journals and photos and mementos that represent a part of my life? In my head that part is long behind me, so much so that looking at those words I can hardly remember the girl who wrote them. She looks like me in pictures, sort of, but not the me I see in the mirror each day.

I think I’m ready to leave some of it behind, but I wonder who I am without it. Will I remember that girl? Is she still in there? Does it matter?

For now I’ve packed it all. I will load it on to a truck and take it with me across the mountains to the other side. And maybe when I get there I’ll be able to answer those questions.

 

This post loosely inspired by this week’s Be Enough Me prompt: What image or symbol reminds you to Just.Be.Enough?

Every Monday join us…
Write, post, link up, share your story and your voice.
Be part of carrying the weight of confidence and share our mission
to empower, inspire, and remind women, parents and children
that the time has come to celebrate ourselves!

Next week’s prompt: I am feeling… (inspired by a Soleil Moon Frye tweet)

(Remember you can also write on a topic of your choice.)

 

The Blogger’s Manifesto

There have been a lot of posts lately about burnout. Bloggy burnout.

Alison wrote about doing less as a result of running out of fuel.

Kim wrote about finding balance in unplugging.

Jessica wrote about blogging less and breathing more.

And probably lots of others. (Have you written about it? Fire a link at me.)

We all go through that at times. Some scale back and worry it will mean they won’t be The Next Big Thing. Others scale back and find they write better and enjoy blogging more when it’s not such a big part of their day-to-day. And some, of course, quit altogether.

I haven’t found the secret or the magic balance. Lord knows I blab blog too much. After my relatively brief time here, however, I have developed a philosophy. And thus I present to you The Blogger’s Manifesto:

Blogger's manifesto

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