letting go of striving.

IMG_8743 I'm participating in a 31-day blogging challenge called reverb10, responding to writing prompts that are designed to elicit reflections on 2010, and hopes for 2011. You can find out more about it here. I am challenging myself to respond to each prompt in 15 minutes or less.

Today's challenge: Let Go. What (or whom) did you let go of this year? Why?

 

Letting go.

I let go of striving this year.

Of listening to other people tell me how to build a business, create a personal brand, drive readers to my blog, get more followers, attract more friends on Facebook, get rich, be a thought leader, be a wealthy thought leader, be a platinum wealthy thought leader, get to the top of Amazon page rankings, rise to the front page of Google, be an A-lister whatever that is, be on Oprah, get noticed, make a million dollar book deal, get rid of the heartbreak of psoriasis.

I let go of all that striving. It was exhausting me. It was making me itchy. It was taking me off course and into a world of upward mobility for the sake of upward mobility. It felt false and cheap and breathless. So much advice about how. I don't care about how. I want to know why. I want to be wealthy in a very different way.

I unsubscribed, de-followed, blocked all that striving and upward mobility. I responded to people who asked me questions about writing a successful blog and book with one question: "What do you long to say with your life? Let that be your guide, not the audience, the purchaser, the SEO." I responded to advertisers who wanted to advertise on my blog with a single word: "No." I responded to invitations to be an affiliate to sell other people's materials with a single word: "No." If I love what you're doing, I want to tell about it because I love it, not because I'll make money from the sale.

I let go of readers who berated me for writing as an advocate for my fellow lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex human beings. I stopped defending my beliefs around human rights, stopped making it okay for people to denounce whole groups of human beings, stopped being polite about it.

I decided to listen to my own voice instead.

And here's what my voice said:

Here, now, this is enough.

Loving what and whom I love is enough.

Living life on a human scale is enough.

Writing what I love and question and care about is enough.

Here, now, this is enough.

I let go of expectations, mine and yours. Of any need to be clever, rich, thin, quieter, hot, even happy.

I let go of people who made me feel less than. I let go of people who are addicted to misery. I let go of any need to be clever or sophisticated or hip.

I picked up my ordinary.

I decided to just be.

 

[rock by kim mailhot, the rock fairy, and sets are available here]

 

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

43 comments to " letting go of striving. "
  • Cathi Eifert

    Thank you Patti. You are often thought provoking, but this is one I am saving. We all need to do this. I’m giving up striving and concentrating on being me.

  • Patti, I had this very thought just yesterday and will be posting about it as well.

    So much of having a business is about seeking…seeking clients, connections, ideas, whatever. It’s hard to reconcile that with enjoying what you have and are already in this moment.

    The conclusion I’ve come to so far is that it’s related to doing what you love without the added concern about what will make your business “successful.” I do believe that if we be who we are and offer things we love to do, and would do anyway, something worthwhile will come of it. And probably financial rewards as well. :)

    Looks like it has worked for you! Thanks for modeling this.

  • So heartfelt. Thanks for sharing

  • This is beautiful. I wish more people could reach a sense of acceptance along their path.

    I love your “deciding just to be,” wonderful!

  • KimG

    Patti, thank you for elegantly stating what has been my philosophy for many years. In this culture of get more, do more, be more, I’ve chosen to be content with what God has given me and am teaching my family to do the same. Doing what is meaningful, rather than what is “expected” (by whom, I don’t know!) allows me to have an inner peace that I once thought was not achievable. You (and Kim’s rocks) rock!

  • As I usually do Patti I love what you’ve said here. With a new year approaching it is so easy to get wrapped up in lists of things to strive for. I think this year I’ll simply focus on not trying too hard to change myself and instead simply allow myself to be myself

  • Goosebumps. Just goosebumps.

    I wrote something along the same vein here:

    http://stillbreathing.ca/2010/10/welcome-to-the-land-of-good-enough/

    All this personal brand stuff is exhausting. When I started my blog, I’d read that one should have a brand.
    “Be an expert in something!”

    I felt like my site had an identity crisis (and me by extension). Reading your post, now I feel that’s not the case. It’s not an identity crisis. It’s a life.

  • How fantastic Patti, that you spoke my mind as this is exactly what I’ve been blogging about the past few weeks!

    Here, now, this is enough.

    Loving what and whom I love is enough.

    Living life on a human scale is enough.

    Writing what I love and question and care about is enough.

    AMEN! Letting go of expectations was the subject of my last post :) EVERYTHING you wrote has been my experience and that is why this December, I am living purely from intuition, letting spirit guide me.

    Here’s to us all living our lives OUR way.

    Tia #reverb10

  • You go, Patti and I’m following behind you!!

  • Wow! Some of these same thoughts were dancing in my head only moments before I read this. Thanks for making me feel that I am not alone in these thoughts! :)

  • i like the things you let go of. though not enough to claim and recycle them, mind you. but i tell you what: we all benefited when you relaxed your grip on striving.

  • Fantastic! Thank you for writing this. It’s beautiful and perfect and absolutely what I wanted to hear. Thank you.

  • Status Anxiety. It never ends. We look around and we see everyone working so hard – constantly hustling.

    When I was younger I remember thinking that someday, when I had it all together, I’d be able to finally get through my entire to-do list. If I worked harder, if I just kept striving – one day I would finally arrive. The problem is – I wasn’t sure of the destination.

    Because it wasn’t my destination or my path. I was just following conventions. I was doing what everyone said I should do, what they thought was best. And then I woke up one day and said – this is nonsense. And I gave away everything I owned to a family that had lost everything in a fire. I gave up my apartment. I started traveling…

    I’ve been home free for over a year now. My parents think I’m crazy. Some of my friends think I’m crazy. But for the first time in my life – I’m doing exactly what I want to do…and suddenly trying to keep up doesn’t seem to matter anymore.

    It’s a relief isn’t it?

  • What a peace comes over you when you say “I am enough”, don’t you think ? I am enough in this moment…ah…

    Another wonderful thing is that when you let go of all of those things and just BE, you give others who love and respect you the courage to just BE, and maybe, just maybe, we can all just get back to BEing human Beings…

    I love ordinary you, Patti. And I love those rocks of mine and how you rocke ’em.
    Rock on !

  • Thank you for this!! Thank you for not hopping on the self improvement band wagon and reminding as that we are perfectly wonderful just being who we are.
    My favourite line: ‘So much advice about how. I don’t care about how. I want to know why.’
    Thank you again.

  • Ironically, all of the things you stand for are the exact reasons I read you. I’m so glad you were able to release those feelings of needing to strive.

  • Hello Patti, I found your post via a RT on Twitter, thank you so much for sharing your determination and the whole background of your blog.
    Enjoy the space, clarity and momentum this coming week : )

  • Thanks for this. That’s manifesto for peace if I ever saw one.

  • Damn, but you are one of the most beautiful souls I have ever encountered. I rarely read your words without feeling more in some ways. More true, more expansive, more peaceful….more me.

    You are a true gift. Without the least bit of striving to be anything more. Just you.

    J.

    PS: this: “What do you long to say with your life? Let that be your guide” That’s the kind of game changing question I needed. Thank you.

  • Laurie Higgins

    Keep it up, Patti! You made me cry with relief of the thought that I too can just give up the things that aren’t working in my life.

  • Thank you for posting this!!! I can so relaet to it!! Am just in the middle of a proccess to find my balance between letting go and accepting what is…! And you just but it in the right words…;-))

  • wow. great post. loving where these prompts are taking you…

  • Yes! Oh, HELL YES!!!! What I want to say. Said better than I can say it. Oh, HELL YES!!!!

  • Thank you for this wonderful post and for celebrating the overlooked ‘ordinary’ qualities within ourselves.

  • brooklynchick

    amazing. THANK YOU. Especially for not being polite about hurting fellow citizens for whom they love.

  • What a great post for new bloggers to read, too. I think it can be way too easy to get caught up in things and losing your authentic vision along the way if one is not careful. Bravo to you for listening to your inner voice and heart!

  • Letting go of not being enough for anybody and everybody and knowing that you are enough for you. Beautiful. Funny. Authentic. Wise. Love. It.

  • Sharon

    Indeed – it does feel like a “manifesto for peace”. All of the things you spoke of have so deeply affected me this past year and I have definitely stopped chasing the “all knowing guru’s” who were helping me to silence my own special unique voice.
    Thank you for sharing this piece. I will return to it often.

  • i believe this may be your best manifesto yet. (not that i’m ranking them!) ;) beautifully said. xo

  • Oh My God. How is it that I’ve just now stumbled upon this place? I’ll be back.

  • well another wow here, in heart mind and soul I love this kindred walk we are all on.

    I wrote an affirmation for myself this year, “I am all that I need to be, as I am, I am whole” Then I decided to try and live it, as a practice like my yoga. In becoming all I need to be I let go of so much, and with each day I find I am being blessed with so much more.

    Love and Thanks

  • Some commenter on my blog personally sent me here to read this specific post. Thanks. I’m glad she did.

  • “I picked up my ordinary.” <=Love it. Fyi, as a speaker at two "Wealthy Thought Leader" events, I was alerted to this post through the magic of Google Alerts. Of course I've admired, read, and recommended your work for a few years now, but so glad to be inspired to send you my best wishes and to take away some good nourishment as I think ahead to 2011.

  • I picked up my ordinary.
    Yes. Me, too. And that is exactly why I chose to call my blog (myself?) mrs. mediocrity.

  • A good title for the article is Human skin.

  • Reverb10 is allowing me to discover wonderful blogs. I loved this post, truly. I’m caught up in this “I must” trolley that just pulls and tugs and it seems it never arrives anywhere. I just finished an MA and I’m going up the walls thinking that I have to get my ROI. Unbelievable. When I should just be happy that I learned all that I learned. Thank you.

  • Kerstin

    Just wanted to say:
    THANK YOU!

  • T

    “…get rid of the heartbreak of psoriasis……Bargains galore…..the large print giveth and the small print taketh away~”

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