On Being True to Yourself
I had a profound thought to myself this past weekend while watching the new Avengers movie. There were a series of scenes in which the superheroes were shown what they were most afraid of. In the middle of watching this, I had an nasty thought that came back, one that shouldāve been settled years ago. It was the thought of living to the fullest and being able to express myself fully, something I struggle with on a consistent basis and it came back to haunt me sitting there in the theater.
After the movie ended, walking down the long corridor of the movie theater, I was lost in thought. I tried to brush it off. I hate confronting this issue in me. My usual reaction is to let it subside and move on with my life. But it followed me over the next few days.
I was listening to the Design Matters podcast where Debbie Millman interviewed Elle Luna. Elle wrote this piece on Medium called āThe Crossroads of Should and Mustā, which summarizes a portion of the interview when sheās describing the dream she had. In her recurring dream, Elle is standing in front of a white room with a concrete floor and high windows. She decided to go out and look for it in real life. After searching for days or weeks on Craigslist, she found it.
Dusk was falling as I arrived at the white room from my dreams. It was stark, absolute, white, and a symbol of something new, of beginnings. As I looked around, I thought, āWhat on earth have I done? Why am I here?ā And as clear as day, I heard a voice say, āItās time to paint.ā
ā Elle Luna, āThe Crossroads of Should and Mustā
Elle calls this her calling, and a decision she must do. She quit her job and started painting for the first time in ten years. She was able to express herself, or be true to herself, in a way she wasnāt able to do before as a designer.
The story shook me. I know there are some fears I pretend to not be ready to face. Thinking about the fear in the theater, I asked myself the question, āAm I lying to myself? Am I living the way I want to, being true to myself?ā
In my career, I havenāt made the best decisions, and Iām not totally committed in the job Iām currently in. The crossroads of should and must are blurred, and I canāt think if Iām working in the industry Iām in because I should do it or I must do it.
In the process of thinking about this, I broke down my worries to some actionable steps. The first is to recognize myself. In the middle of Elleās article, she asks the reader to make a list of top ten things Iām most afraid of. This is what I came up with in an allotted ten minutes:
Iām afraidā¦
- Of being able to dance in front of strangers in public transportation. One stupid question that I ask myself is, is it illegal to do street performance on a moving train?
- Of eavesdropping and joining in on the conversation.
- Of starting a conversation with a complete stranger on the train. Especially of the opposite gender. My brain goes into overdrive and analyzes angles of how I would end up being a creeper or realize I may not have good social skills. I donāt think I have bad social skills in other settings.
- I donāt have what it takes to take a leap of faith without sliding back into old routines right after. Elle Luna talks about choosing āMustā isnāt a one time decision. Itās a continual decision you have to keep on making daily to yourself.
- Of the guy in the head. The one that tells you how much of a piece of shit you are. I used to have severe imposter syndrome, and still beat myself up for making bad choices and decisions.
- Of being penniless and broke. That I have no solid financial plan. Of talking financials with others.
- Of having no one to talk to and that Iām cooped up in my room or brain too long. Iām doing better at this, now that I rotate between different friends during different times of the week or month.
- I will be alone. Like the last one, but in terms of a personal relationship. I felt bad when I abandoned all hope while working late nights because it felt impossible to put myself out there.
- I will make the people around me feel bad. I donāt like being the bearer of bad news, and I hate shaking up the pot. Iāve been relatively non-confrontational my whole life, but Iām working on this.
- Of dying and having an obituary I wouldnāt want to read.
What are you afraid of? Are there things in your life that are blocking you from doing what you want to do? Take 10 minutes and write your own list.
On top of reading Elleās article this week, I finished listening to a recent episode of Triangulation with Luria Petrucci, AKA Cali Lewis, who opened up about her past failures and being able to be true to yourself and to the rest of the world. It hit more emotional strings to the same tune of taking the reins of your life and live it to the full extent.
Iāve made my list, and now I can slowly tackle them, one day at a time. And Iām more aware that I have the choice to work on it or not, of asking āshould I do itā to taking action and saying āI must do itā.
And that the battle is never won; the crossroads of should and must are always there, continuously testing us. Figuring out how to stay strong and fighting for what you believe in is the harder part. Updates later once Iāve figured that out. Thereās work to be done.
Side Note:
Elle Luna wrote a book after her Medium article went viral. I bought her book and am in the middle of devouring its contents. Iāll give a short update later of what I think about it.
Written by Jeremy Wong and published on .
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