Project Management

Authentic Success

by
Authentic Success is a blog written for professionals about redefining their definition of success and how to do that. It's based on the premise that happiness = success, not the other way around. It includes a focus on Imposter Syndrome and all of its facets, as well as strategies for moving beyond it. Authentic success is a feeling, not a title or salary. This blog aims to provide continual evidence, suggestions and inspiration for high-achieving professionals so they can feel as successful on the inside as they appear to others on the outside.

About this Blog

RSS

Recent Posts

The True Costs of Imposter Syndrome

The Problem with “Fake it ‘Till You Make it”

It’s All About You, All the Time, in Every Way

What Are You Really Afraid Of?

The Seductive Pull of Righteous Anger – And What You Can Do About It

Categories

anger, Awareness, compassion, conscious choice, Core Beliefs, EFT, empowered, fear, forgiveness, Imposter Syndrome, integrity, joy, Leadership, Mindset, Nightmare Stories, overwhelmed, Personal Power, Project Management, self-care, Self-Worth, Success, tapping

Date

Give Yourself the Gift of Self-Compassion Over the Holidays

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  

If I were to ask whether you put undue pressure on yourself as a woman and mother over the holidays, would you reply with something like, “Does a bear….?” Check.

For most of my adult life, over the holidays I would routinely pull out “the big stick” if things weren’t just so, as my mother used to say. Of course, she was my role model (part of the challenge for most of us). As a child, each year I watched her frantically run herself into the ground. She would only declare “victory” when things went off without a hitch. To me it didn’t seem like a particularly good time, for her at least!  (As an aside, I used to wonder why my parents would start Christmas morning with Bloody Mary’s… hmmm.)

When I became a parent, I tried to model my mother’s herculean efforts. It damn near killed me. After a number of years, I began to ask myself how I had fallen into the same trap. Not surprisingly, it dawned on me that I was simply doing what I had seen my own mother do, without considering the huge divide between my circumstances and hers.

As a recovering imposter, wearing a mask of outward perfection was very important to me. After a lot of inner work and soul searching, I learned that I alone was judging myself, and that I could choose to be kind to myself, and banish “competence extremism” as we call it in our work.

This holiday season, I invite you to practice a little self-compassion, as I have slowly learned to do. Here are two suggestions for you to consider as we enter the “holiday chute”:

  • Listen to your inner-dialogue. Self-criticism isn’t motivating! You were likely taught to have compassion for others. Make a pledge to yourself this year, that when you go looking for the “big stick,” you’ll try to treat yourself as a dear friend would.
  • Forgive yourself for your need for perfection. It’s just not possible. In our group program last week, my amazing partner, Deb, led us through a tapping exercise based on the ancient Hawaiian practice of reconciliation and forgiveness, called Ho’oponopono. It was moving for us all. It is both healing and powerful to forgive ourselves, and others. I’m going to share it with you here. Repeat it a few times each day. If you’re a tapper, tap on the points as you say each sentence.

I love you.

I’m so sorry.

Please forgive me.

Thank you.

Give yourself a gift this year, that will unquestionably trickle down to those you love. Show yourself some self-compassion. I’ll be doing the same, right along with you. May your holidays be filled with light and love; and leave the dazzling to Martha!

Posted on: December 15, 2016 03:40 PM | Permalink | Comments (3)
ADVERTISEMENTS

"You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you."

- Dale Carnegie

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors