I’ve never been fearless.
I’ve never felt brave.
Yet I continue to find myself in situations that my former
self (the day prior is enough “former self”) would’ve shirked away from.
The truth is:
It never gets easier. You just get stronger.
You get accustomed to the uneasiness as it takes residence
in your stomach and flutters about, threatening worse than mere nausea.
You push through the doubts that swirl around in your head,
making you dizzy with self-consciousness.
You simply act and hope that the confidence will come in the
process.
You almost get addicted to the same adrenaline that caused
you to panic and freeze the day before (dear ancestors: how did this not get
you eaten by dinosaurs?).
You adapt, because truthfully, what other choice do you
have?
Two days ago, I found myself grinning like a crazed maniac as
I was on my 88th squat with more weight on my bar than I have ever squatted. I
wasn’t even halfway through and you know what? I was enjoying myself. I was
amazed at what my body is capable of. My quads were screaming, my heart was
pounding, my sweat was pouring, but my mind was euphoric. I felt like I was
being introduced to a new person – one whom I liked and respected. Not because
of physical ability, but because of the risk to try something I initially
looked foolish doing; because I decided one day to push my inhibitions, push
through negative self-talk, and push my physical boundaries I had set up for
myself, then push myself to show up the next day and the next day and the next.
Last weekend I signed up to train to teach a yoga-fusion
class. Yes, me. Me, who a year and a half ago wobbled and tripped over her own
two feet. Me whose flexibility was that of a dung beetle. Me whose fear of
public speaking is only trumped by my fear of having to perform choreographed
moves in front of a crowd. THAT me.
It was just as scary and stretching and growing and shaky as I thought it would
be. But FAAARRRR more rewarding than I ever imagined. Someone believed that I
could do something that I didn’t believe I could do. Now, I get to be that
voice of encouragement for someone else. I get to coach and believe and breathe
and help others bring flexibility, strength, courage, balance, and rejuvenation
into their lives.
A month ago, I strapped on weights (yes, to weigh me down to
the BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN) and stepped off a perfectly good boat into the middle
of the deep blue OCEAN. Now, I say “ocean” instead of “sea” because sea
connotes something peaceful and tranquil. Au contraire! It is the friggin’ endless expanse of water
that is boundless and untamable and just…BIG. No land in sight, just “water,
water everywhere and not a drop to drink” (but plenty to drown in) – get it?
Good. Oh, and we won’t mention the plethora of sea critters that have teeth or
spines or poison or all three. But I stood there “shakin’ like a leaf” on the
edge of that boat and stepped into the abyss (melodramatic much?). Granted, I
panicked a bit during many aspects of my misadventure, but I saddled up anyway
(Thanks, John Wayne). There is a certain glory in experiencing a world in which
your body was never meant to survive. No, I didn’t feel like a graceful
mermaid; more like an awkward astronaut who’s trying not to pass gas in her
suit (what if gas bubbles get trapped in my stomach and can’t decompress?! Will
I get the bends?!). But do you know what? As all these fears were running laps
inside my cranium, I was hit by the miracle of what I was experiencing. It was
beautiful! AAAANNNNDDD I started crying. UNDERWATER. THROUGH MY REGULATOR.
...only
you, Courtney...only you...
I’ve been changed and challenged by torrents, by furies, by whirlwinds.
My roots are deep. I’m still standing.
I’m not the same fear-stricken girl I was a year ago.
(At least, I
wouldn’t use the word “stricken” per se)
Oh yes, I fear many things:
heights and depths;
the expanse and the enclosed;
being in the spotlight and being forgotten;
being in a crowd and being alone.
But I’m going to keep showing up afraid and messy because I
don’t want to come to the sunset of my life still wondering: “What am I capable
of?”
May I not cross the threshold knowing that there is still life left to be
wrung out and shaken from this bag of bones and coat of flesh! I want to stand
before my Maker with my hands empty, my feet dirty, and a spark in my eye.
I want to know that I let love lead me instead of fear. Because
at the end of the day, that’s what it comes down to, isn’t it?
Love or fear.
Do scary things, my friends. Push yourself.
Travel. Write. Go on blind lunch dates. Adopt. Join an art
class. Learn to salsa dance. Explore the crevices of your own soul.
Live abundantly the life that has been given in abundance.
But you’ll have to excuse me while I pack a bottle of Imodium
and my rescue inhaler.
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