Are Not Mutually Exclusive
Like many of you I have tried
many things in my life. A long time ago I noticed that whenever people said
they were trying to do something, they failed to successfully reach their
stated goal. I always told my children “do
not try”, “do!” It was something I learned from my father a long time ago.
He would present what seemed to be impossible task and if I complained, he’d
tell me, “Butch find a way and get it done.” I’ve told that story every time
someone asks me how I did something that appeared to be beyond my capacity. My
daughters probably were sick of hearing this story by the time they left home
but it fostered their success.
I have not done this with
everything in my life and there are some moments I wish I could do over. My
academic performance in college did not meet my expectations or any one that
knew me. I was not interested in my own
success and did spend enough time on me. I seem to always give it my all
when it involves people I care about but frequently find ways to sabotage
myself. In order to be able to do what I am doing now, I knew I needed to exam
a simple question. Do you care about you
as much as you care about others and if not why not?
Challenging question isn't it?
Can I answer it? Yes! Do I want to answer it? No! First let me tell you why I
think I need to publicly answer it. When my first opportunity to lead in a
professional setting presented itself I was a little reluctant. I was reluctant
because it was my experience that people will follow until it becomes difficult
and at different times in my life, quite dangerous. As a reference, while
attending college as a freshman, I was named in a Wheeling, W. VA newspaper as
the “Leader of the Blacks.” This was in 1975 and it brought a great deal of
unwanted attention to an introverted by outspoken 17 year old African American
male.
My experience in college really
marked me and I consciously avoided any leadership roles. I did not want to
experience what I perceived as betrayals and cowardice from the very same
people I protected. Who would protect me? I stepped out on blind faith
realizing that the people you expected to protect you were usually not the ones
that did it when you needed it. However the phenomenon continued to be a
concern. Would I be left holding the bag again when I challenged authority as
this project required?
While discussing this troubling
concern, a friend said to me, “You appear
to not be afraid of anything.” I was surprised to hear this from a friend
who knew me pretty well. She went on to
say that, “this perception of you by others is why they will not follow you
when it gets hard.” I requested more information and they went on to say “most
people are afraid and if they think you are not, than you are different. They
do not equate what you do with what they believe to be their capacity and it is
because you do not share your fear. If
they are afraid and think you are moving forward without the same fears they
know they have why would they follow you?
This was a very revealing moment
and it is the reason I am sharing this personal story with you today. So my reluctance to take on a leadership
role again was not warranted. I stepped up and did it well for about 13 years
resulting in many people still being served by entities like the EPIC
Stakeholders, the Truancy Courts and Girls TRACK. I expressed my fears and concerns
openly and they followed me into the fire. I was successful as one of the
leaders and we were successful.
But again this was for someone
else other than me. I believe I was a great father again motivated by the
desire to care for someone else. When I really think about it ever fight I ever
was in was me protecting someone. In fact the seriousness of the weight
training had/has a lot to do with my desire to protect those around me.
Selfish is a word that when I
hear it, like many of you, I think oh no, not me. If you were raised in
Catholic School you heard the evils of being selfish all the time. It was
defined for me as uncaring, lacking empathy etc… and I believe it was for many
of you as well. In fact in the thesaurus in MS Word they use the terms, self
centered, self seeking, and the antonym is altruistic. Wow, who would want to
be that? None of us do, right! Well there are some things you may accomplish in
life without being selfish but some will require some selfishness on your part.
Being perceived as selfish is a fear and barrier for me. When I wrote
in an earlier blog titled, “I Quit,” about needing to change the way I think in
order to succeed at smoking cessation, this is the change required. So let’s
re examine the word selfish. Doesn’t it really mean to take care of oneself?
What is wrong with that? We are told it all the time particularly as we
interact with those that care about us. Don’t
you hear “take care” frequently from loved ones? Don’t you hear constantly, “be
careful?” Can’t be all bad if it is constantly being recommended to us by
loved ones, strangers, and those charged with caring for us.
So why aren't we able to do it? Why
can’t we set aside a minute, or tens of minutes each day or week to take care
of ourselves? Maybe it is because it is erroneously associated in the
foundations of our learning and unconscious memory with the word selfish. I
offer to you that Webster and others have done a piss poor job of defining this
word in its entirety. The definition
needs to be expanded to include a benign statement of “caring for oneself.”
Being selfish and caring for others are
not “Mutually exclusive.”
I have tried to stop smoking many
times and for many reasons including wanting to share this planet with my
daughters for as long as possible. I was never successful before because for me
it requires being selfish to succeed at something that is so hard to do. In
past attempts I struggled mightily each moment of each day. In fact if I did well
I would award myself with a cigarette or 2 or 3. Whoa, here comes self sabotage
served with a good measure of self delusion.
It was not until I decided that I
was as important as all the people I have cared for, protected and risked my
life on occasion that stopping smoking became possible. It requires me to
provide care for myself in the same way I do for my daughters and wife. I am on
track and succeeding because I was able to focus on me. It started with
expanding the definition of the word selfish to include positives rather than
being perceived as exclusively negative. I realized I deserve the same care
that I provided for others and it would be okay. I am not smoking for the first time in almost 40 years as I am caring
for me.
I tell this story to encourage
you in whatever endeavor you may be trying to do right now. Despite how it may
look everyone has fears even when they will not express them. Whether it is
better health or a better life, it is okay to care for yourself while you still
care for others. I am inspired as my thought process has changed and now I am
rewarding myself for success with another moment of non smoking. It has also
inspired me to move forward with my business and succeed there as well. My hesitation is the amount of self time
and commitment to self it will take to succeed.
So take it from me it is okay to
spend some time each day being selfish. Turn the world off and figure out what
you need and want for yourself. Some may turn their back; bad mouth you and
even sabotage you and hopefully you understand it is okay to care for oneself. Get Up Get Moving, Get Selfish and know
that it is very difficult to be Healthy without being Happy. Fill your cup as
high as you wish and then share its contents.
“CHIT CHAT WON’T BURN FAT”