Life begins at the edge of your comfort zone. That was written by one Neale Donald Walsch in his seminal spiritual work Conversations with God. It’s true. Being scared and uncomfortable leads to growth and development in your life. Yes, it can be painful, that’s actually a good thing , it is almost certainly uncomfortable, but it is also the juice of life. How come? Because it’s exciting, it’s challenging, it stretches you to strive for a place or an experience that you may not have attempted, let alone attained EVER before. And oh yes, what does that mean? IT’S FUN. I know I’m not the only one of you that likes a rollercoaster. They make me quake in my boots as I think about them, and when I’m in a line at an amusement park for a coaster, I frequently think WHAT ARE YOU DOING? But then I find myself at the front of the line, and with trepidation, I strap myself in. Five minutes later, having thrown myself upside down and round about a few times in my seat, at great velocity, I am walking away from the coaster as high as a kite. Because yes, I am thrilled that I had a go and expanded myself to take that risk.
Take a look at the resources you have available to you. Do what I have been taught to call an inventory of resources. What is available to you? What support do you have? Who is behind you? Who can you count on? When you really engage in these questions, you will start to notice that actually, while you have family and friends that are very important to you, and it is critical that you recognize them and that; the reality is that YOU are the one you can count on most, you are the most support you have available to you, and you are your own greatest resource. This does not mean to say that you are the most important person in the world. You are part of a much bigger picture, and you are just an aspect of that picture (a mere brushstroke if you will). BUT (and it is a big but) that does not give you permission to diminish yourself either. That is what I mean when I say you are your own greatest resource.
Do you trust yourself? Do you really believe that anything is possible? This is what I mean when I say that you are your own best friend and that you are your greatest resource. You are going to take another minute now to assess the way you think and speak about yourself. I know, you feel like I keep asking you to do that. And you are right. I do. Repetition is the mother of skill. Practice, practice, practice–remember that? Go on then.
Have you started journaling yet? I’m asking you to do that now. If you have ever read The Artist’s Way or heard of an author called Julia Cameron (who was married to the very well-known film director, Martin Scorcese) you will be familiar with the process called Morning Pages. I’m not saying write three pages of your full-size journal (unless you want to). It’s up to you how much you write in your journal. I am saying cultivate a new habit, daily, of writing in your journal. Journaling is a mysterious phenomenon. It seems like a really easy thing to do, and yet when you sit down to write, it can seem incredibly daunting. I have known many days of journaling where all I have written for three pages is “I don’t know what to write. And yet there are some days where three pages are just not enough, and I have to stop myself over-indulging my writing habit. The point is this, I write. Daily. It gives me access to how I think and feel about myself and what is going on in the world and in my life.
This is an adapted extract from Discipline: A Secret Code for Women in the Bedroom, Boardroom and Beyond (12.99, Panoma Press)