Can you Handle the Arena?
Hey Party People,
2020, what a year
ammi right? I truly don’t even know if there are words to describe the
emotional upheaval and challenge of this year to date. As always though I
refuse to let 2020 win. I refuse to let naysayers get to me. I refuse to let
anyone or anything keep me down. I have too much to be grateful for to wallow
in the gutters.
What I’ve noticed
lately though peeps is that my highs and lows are drastic. The peaks and
valleys of my mood are extreme. Like I’m not talking the Rockies and the
Foothills lately guys, I’m talking the Himalayans and the Shivaliks (the Indian
equivalent for the foothills). What I mean by this is that my highs have me
feeling elated and fulfilled, but my lows have me strugggggglin’ deep in the
gutters of self doubt and overwhelm.
It’s been hard for me
to juggle and balance these swings of emotion because that’s not what I
qualify as normal for myself. Either I’ve been incredibly good at managing my
emotions in the past or I’ve never been challenged like this before. For
example, I was just talking to my mama this week and told her I have never felt
the level of overwhelm or anxiety I felt in the first two weeks of September
this year – I think I cried 3x. What’s got me shook is that when I look back at 2019 it would seem I had even
more going on and I never reached the point I had earlier this month. Why?
Well, some pieces are
obvious – we’re living in a global pandemic with ALL kinds of
challenges, uncertainty, and changes to our daily lives. After 6 months of this
I think sometimes I forget how this virus continues to impact my life and challenge me in big and
small ways. Second, the ugly inequalities of our world are around every
corner, and since my Unveiling, I am constantly upset at the world and myself
for not seeing it before. Finally, I’ve come to realize that I’ve entered a
different arena. For those of you not familiar with Brene Brown’s work, she talks about "the arena" as a place where we confront our vulnerabilities and fears. She refers to it in many many of her books and it revolves around this famous quote.
“ It is not the critic who counts: not the man who
points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have
done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose
face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and
comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or
shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who
spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the
triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he
fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those
cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.” – Theodore Roosevelt
What both this quote
and Brene Brown encourages us to do is lean into our discomfort, fight our
demons, be vulnerable and confront our greatest fears, otherwise, we will remain
those cold and timid souls described above. When we choose to enter the
arena we will be faced with some of our greatest fears, but also some of our
greatest triumphs. We will have to battle our own demons of self-doubt and
overwhelm because we don’t have all the answers, and it takes work. The arena
is a battlefield littered with the unknown but also with soft whispers of potential
victory.
Picture the movie the
Gladiator when Russell Crowe's character, Maximus. He is in the middle of the arena
surrounded by thunderous and deafening crowds, standing alone with his armour
and a single sword, encircled by locked gates at every turn hiding a ferocious beast
or warrior itching to be released. It’s terrifying to be in the arena like
Maximus, so why in this analogy would we choose to enter the arena? (Maximus didn’t
have a choice, but he was still a victor beyond all odds).
We choose to enter
the arena when we are ready to choose ourselves. When we are ready to live into
our purpose and to challenge the things in our world and our life that we don’t
like. When we do this we are working towards the existence of an extraordinary
life. We step into the arena willingly because we know it's worth it.
So are you playing small and playing it safe in your
life? Are you pulling the wool over your eyes because you don’t like what you
see, or want to ignore what’s going on around you? Or are you ready to enter
the arena with me? Will you challenge your greatest doubts about yourself and
dream into the greatest possibilities? Join me, or not. But in the words of
Brene Brown herself,
“ If you’re not in the arena also getting
your ass kicked. I’m not interested in your feedback.”
And because music is
my jam! Here is a fun Caribbean vibe for you! My fav artist, Machel Montano the
king of Soca!
Party jam for the week!
You Tube >> Like Ah a Boss – Machel Montan
Spotify >> Like Ah Boss – Machel Montano
Love y’all! Subscribe
party people and you’ll get this great inspo
in your inbox every Monday!
With so much gratitude,
-S
Great read once again❤️
ReplyDeleteDo you think it’s all the uncertainties & negative emotions that You find everywhere you go. People are living in fear, you see it in their faces! You feel the tension and it spills over. I feel it more than I have ever before. It has been a journey for me this year & feel I have been in the arena more than I am out 😉. I have faced many of my demons but some days feel helpless to move forward. We are need to know kinda creatures and when we can’t find our answers we feel the anxiety & overwhelm. I have practiced my surrender & detachment more than ever lately. Some days works better than others. I will keep going into my arena as I believe there is love & light somewhere out there❤️❤️
Continue to lean on my support system & use the tools in my box. I have learned to never have fear about reaching out for support when you require it. It’s a sign of strength, not weakness!