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July 10, 2012

The difference between fear and aversion

“Just do it” ought to be the motto, not of a shoe company, but of our culture.We’re supposed to get over it, push ourselves outside our comfort zone, challenge ourselves, take no prisoners. We’re supposed to listen to our guts, be brave, take chances.

At the same time, we’re supposed to get in touch with our feelings, honor our boundaries, be true to ourselves.

It’s enough to make a girl crazy.

But what if…

This particular back and forth always led me into a back and forth.

When was I supposed to believe my gut and my feelings, and when was I supposed to recognize that I was holding myself back out of anxiety? When was I supposed to push and when was I supposed to accede?

Was I conflict averse, or was this not important to me? Did I really not want to do this or was I just afraid of possibly failing?

Invariably, I’d end up pushing myself because the “what ifs” were so much more regretful on the “not pushing” side. What if it turned out I was just scared and I didn’t pursue my dream?

Often enough, I found myself on the other side of something I really wish I hadn’t done, something that, in retrospect, was so obviously wrong for me. The journey was still worth it, but oh, what I could have saved myself.

Back to you, dear reader

I bring this up because it’s something I see all the time in my clients. They’re procrastinating writing that job application, or they’re not sure whether to try the academic job search one more time or bag it altogether, or they can’t decide if this possible career they’re considering is a good idea or a very, very bad one.

This is totally normal. Whenever we’re faced with a decision, especially a big decision, these brains we’ve trained to look at all sides … look at all sides and find them all valid.

That’s great in academic research, and not so great when you’re trying to decide where to leap next on your grand life adventure.

How to get out of the paralysis

When you’re in that kind of back-and-forth, pay attention to the difference between fear and aversion.

In a situation that isn’t actually life-threatening, fear is a sign of beliefs we’re believing — and that might not be true. (If the situation is actually dangerous to your existence, you won’t be thinking. You’ll be acting.)

What if I don’t prepare well enough and I embarrass myself? What if I’m so unqualified that they laugh at my application? What if I decide to leave academia and the job market turns around and I could have stayed if I had just waited a little longer?

Each of those anxieties is based on some deeper belief. Embarrassing myself is the end of the world. Not doing it perfectly will cause shame. I should be able to predict the future.

Given our cultural and academic backgrounds, it makes total sense that we’d have these beliefs and the attendant anxieties. It’s just that they aren’t based in reality. And if they aren’t based in reality, then they’re things we’d do well to work with and untangle and trace back to their origins and disprove.

I still don’t think “just do it” is all that effective, because what we do straightjacketed by fear is unlikely to be our best work. But it makes sense to gently work on dislodging the fear so you can move forward.

Aversion, on the other hand, needs to be respected.

Have you ever had really bad food poisoning or a really bad case of the flu, and suddenly you can’t eat whatever it was you ate right before your guts turned inside out? When you encounter that food again, you probably have a bodily sense of near-nausea, a complete lack of desire for it, even though your rational mind knows that this food is perfectly fine this time.

That’s aversion. When you experience that about a choice you’re considering, it’s your being’s way of saying NO. It’s your essential you-ness trying to say this is a bad idea, no matter how good it looks on paper.

We often override the no with those logical brains, because we don’t trust our bodies, because we can’t figure out how to explain WHY we don’t want to do whatever it is, because we’re afraid of getting judged for it. (Notice all of those are fears that can be untangled.)

But we generally regret it when we push on through aversion.

You have to get quiet to tell the difference

In the moment, it can be hard to tell fear from aversion. Our minds are a tangle of thoughts, our bodies are tense with anxiety, and we don’t really know up from down.

When you’re in that situation, you’ve got to stop. Just stop trying to make the decision. Get in touch with your insides however you best do that. Meditate and quiet your mind, go for a run, write in your journal — whatever will get you connected to yourself.

Then notice what’s coming up. Is it a whole set of stories about you and this decision? Is it a feeling you can’t shake but can’t explain? If it’s the former, start untangling them. If it’s the latter, pay attention.

When we’re surrounded by other people’s judgments and expectations, it’s even more important to get quiet, because they make an added layer of fear and anxiety. But they don’t tell you what you should do, only what someone else thinks you should do.

You know, better than anyone else ever could, what the right answer is in this moment. You know, better than anyone else, whether what you’re feeling is fear or aversion.

Trust yourself. I do.

Filed Under: Grief and Leaving, Turning Your Calling Into a Job, What do you want? Leave a Comment

June 14, 2012

On not being able to predict the future

When you decided to go to graduate school, you probably thought that, at the end of it, you’d be a professor. Even if you thought you might do something else with that degree, the assumptions within academia are that you finish the degree and become a professor.

Only it didn’t work out that way.

Maybe you found out that academia wasn’t what you thought it was.

Maybe you discovered that you and academia weren’t the match made in heaven your undergraduate professors said you were based on how smart and insightful you are. (You’re still smart and insightful, even if the rest of academia isn’t your cup of tea.)

Maybe the market changed under you from bad-but-people-got-jobs to oh-holy-hell.

Maybe you ended up not fitting your department. Maybe you ran into problems with your adviser.

Maybe you finished the degree and got a job and looked around and said, wait a minute, I don’t want to be here.

For whatever reason, you’ve gone from “I’m gonna be a professor!” to some version of “something is not right and I might want outta here.”

Here’s what usually comes next

Once you admit that something is not right, then the self-flagellation starts, and it usually starts with I should have known.

I should have known that there wouldn’t be any jobs. I should have known I was a bad fit. I should have known that adviser wasn’t going to work for me.

Usually, it goes even farther.

I should have known I wouldn’t be able to do this. I should have known I would fail.

What you’re really saying is, I should have been able to predict this precise future.

Say what?

Of course, you can’t predict the future. (If you can, please leave academia and head straight for the stock market. Seriously.) None of us can.

It doesn’t matter how smart you are, how prepared you are, how much you’ve planned — life happens. And you have absolutely no control over it.

You have no control over the expectations and mental illnesses of the people around you. You have no control over the global economy or the reduction in state spending on higher ed. You have no control over the overall culture of academia or its job requirements.

Yes, there are variables you can plan for, just like you plan for a certain amount of traffic at certain times of day. But even then, there could be a crazy accident or a big construction project or both, and suddenly even your reasonable plan is shot to hell.

What’s really going on

It’s acceptable in our culture to beat ourselves up. It’s acceptable to claim responsibility and blame.

You know what’s not so acceptable? Acknowledging disappointment and sadness. We’d rather find someone to blame.

But it’s totally legitimate for you to be sad and disappointed and frustrated, even if it’s your choice and not circumstances making the choice for you. You had a vision, and that’s not how it worked out, and that’s disappointing and sad.

You are entitled to feel disappointed and sad and however else you feel. It sucks that this vision you had didn’t work out in reality, and it is totally okay to just be sad about that — without assigning blame to anyone, including yourself.

Beating yourself up won’t help you get to the other side. It’ll just make you that more tentative and anxious the next time you have a vision, and it’ll prevent you from believing you can do awesome things.

Feeling your real feelings, on the other hand, is like a lovely summer rainstorm that leaves the air feeling crisp and clean. Feeling your feelings allows your feelings to do the work they’re there to do — which in the case of sadness and disappointment is to let go.

So please. Admit that you’re sad. Admit that you’re disappointed. Cry for a week solid if you need to. I promise that, once fully felt, the hard pointy feelings will go away, and you’ll feel better.

And that self you were, back when you embarked on this vision — feeling your real feelings of sadness and disappointment honors that self, and that vision.

Leaving is hard. Leaving is sad. It’s okay for it to be that way. It still doesn’t mean it’s the wrong choice for you.

Filed Under: Grief and Leaving 2 Comments

May 30, 2012

You are not a bad squirrel

A friend of mine told me a story the other day about an epiphany she once had.

She was looking out her window, watching a squirrel in the yard. He would dig one place, no nut. Dig another, no nut. Dig another, no nut. Dig another, no nut. Dig another, nut! And he’d scamper off to do whatever squirrels do when they find the nuts they’d buried.

She realized that, when the squirrel dug and didn’t find a nut, he didn’t think to himself what a bad squirrel he was. He didn’t stop looking and wring his little paws and say, oh, but I can’t really do this!

We are all looking for nuts and not finding them

Stuff doesn’t work in our lives all the time.

Sometimes it’s a car that decides to stall while you’re driving it. (Ahem. My day yesterday.) Sometimes it’s a partner who doesn’t actually mesh with who you are and who you’re becoming. Sometimes it’s a job or a career or a degree that turns out not to be what you want now, or that isn’t working for some reason.

That’s our equivalent of digging for a nut and not finding it. It happens every day.

And every day we beat ourselves up about it

The definition of what makes humans different from animals keeps moving. Language? Nope. Tools? Nope.

But I suspect that we might be the only creatures who castigate ourselves when things don’t work out as planned or as hoped.

That squirrel wasn’t beating himself up about not finding a nut on the first or even fourth dig. When my dog was having frequent tummy upsets because we hadn’t figured out she was allergic to gluten, she was often physically unhappy, but she didn’t project out into the future how often she was going to feel terrible and wasn’t this a tragedy.

What would it be like if we pretended we were squirrels?

Or dogs, or oak trees, or pick your living being here.

What would it be like if we could engage our unfound nuts without worrying that it means we’re bad squirrels?

What if we could engage a difficult dissertation or a bad adviser or a terrible job market or a problematic department without believing that it says anything about who we are as a person?

What if we could engage them as something that didn’t work, and move on to the next attempt?

You are not a bad squirrel. Go find your nut.

Filed Under: Grief and Leaving 3 Comments

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