In a culture full of reasons to say ``no,'' it takes a lot of courage to find ways to say ``yes.''
We're
taught to say ``no'' from a very young age, after all. For most of us,
our first word was ``no'', and it quickly became our favorite word. As
toddlers and teenagers, we used ``no'' to
differentiate ourselves
from our parents, peers, and surroundings. It's how we began to control
what was happening around us, or at least, how we tried to
control that. It helped us over those early developmental hurdles, and
gave us our earliest sense of our personal boundaries -- and that's a
lot of significance bound up in such a tiny word!
The problem
isn't that ``no'' in and of itself is somehow bad; indeed, giving
yourself permission to say "no" as an adult can keep you out of an awful
lot of trouble.
The problem is that ``No'' begins to take on a life of its own. Too often, that life is yours.
Life
is change, and ``no'' becomes a way of slowing down that change, or
trying to stop it altogether. It is a shield we use to protect ourselves
from having to experience anything new or different. Rather than riding
the wave of change into a life full of exhilarating possibilities, we
use ``no'' as a tether to keep us safely confined to the kiddie pool.
Using
``no'' to protect ourselves from change is like a kitten poking its
head under covers, assuming it's completely hidden. Change is going to
happen, whether you say "no" to it or not. And, just like that kitten,
assuming that "no" protects you from change is one sure way to have it
pounce on you and bite your tail.
Let's be honest here: We usually say ``no'' out of fear, and some fears
are entirely reasonable. It's sensible to say ``no'' to jumping off a
bridge or ``no'' to cake if you are diabetic. These ``no's'' aren't the
ones that keep us from living lives of incredible satisfaction and
happiness. It's those silly, neurotic fears like fearing rejection, or
of looking stupid, or being wrong. It's the fear of commitment, the fear
of speaking out, and the fear of facing our truest, deepest desires.
The list is nauseatingly long, and we've all bought into some of these
at least once. These fears have shaped our lives, often to our
detriment and sometimes to the detriment of those around us.
So
the next time you're faced with something new and exciting and all those
little neurotic fears start rioting inside you, what does it take to
fight down a ``no'' and say ``yes'' instead?
In a word: Courage.
Like
the Cowardly Lion (an archetype for the fear-ridden) we need to find
our courage. Unlike him, we know that we have to face our fears, and
find our courage within. Inside each of us beats a brave, fiercely
courageous heart, willing to take on a challenge if it means that life
afterward will be more authentic, happier, and freer. What better
challenges to tackle than the fears that keep us chained to our tiny,
boring, closeted little lives?
Do yourself a favor: Right now,
identify and tackle at least one of those inner fears. Find a reason to
say "yes" today, and every day. You've only your inner coward to lose!
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