Monday, December 30, 2013

An Open Letter To My 20-Something Self

Dear Self,
I bet you still have the commencement speech from our 1999 college graduation still ringing in your ears.  Thought leaders, educators and innovators sat behind the dais and bestowed promises of joy, hope and eternal happiness to us and our fellow classmates as we began our journey to adulthood.  Images of the perfect career, perfect spouse, perfect family, perfect friends and perfect home – yes, the perfect life manifested in our mind as quickly as we walked on stage to accept our diploma.
Well, that was then. Life in your early 20s has quickly transitioned into a dilemma.  A time where you have to use a small check to pay for rent, food, clothes while working a high-stress, low-pay and sometimes thankless job.  Friendships are now debatable.  Lack of parental financial help makes you feel isolated. As a result, you are not familiar to your own self.  And what you once believed seems confusing or not as achievable any more. 
Take a breath.  I’m writing this letter to you because the words these experts behind the dais should have said to us were, “Get Real.  Welcome Failure.  Embrace Crisis. Take Time.”  These words will equip you to own your life’s journey instead of cowering in the corner every time you hit a bump in the road.  I’m telling you this because I’m now 10 years older and I’ve lived it.  Here’s a gift, from me to you – tools to help you navigate through and beyond this next chapter of your life and get you to where you most want to go.  You and I both know, the only thing more important than who you are today… is who you are becoming. 
-       First, GET REAL!  It doesn’t pay to pretend to be something you’re not to get what you want out of life.  To base who you are on what others think you should be is dismissing your journey of who you have come to be.  Believe that you are enough when you walk in to an experience – professional or personal.  For example, when you said “Yes” to every request from your boss without fully understanding what she was asking for so that you wouldn’t be perceived as dumb – this was not being real!  If you don’t speak from truth and admit what you don’t know, you will over compensate in every aspect trying to prove your worth. Understand that you arrived where you are because of all the work that you have done.  Accept what you CAN and CAN NOT do – then understand that what you CAN NOT DO does not equate to worthlessness.

-       Next, WELCOME FAILURE! One sure way to get better, tap more into your passion and gain a clearer sense of self – is to welcome failure.  Remember when you failed at securing a win for your client, and you were fired.  If that hadn’t happened, you wouldn’t have been forced to really answer the question, “What is it that I really want to do in life?”  Challenge yourself to see failure as an aspiration so that you can get closer to where you are meant to be with much more clarity. I’ve stopped pursuing opportunities saying, “What do I have to LOSE?” Instead I ask, “What do I have to GAIN?”  Then I’m able to step back and be encouraged by my courage.  Failure may yield a longer journey to success, but you’ll gain life-long lessons every step of the way.

-       Plus, EMBRACE CRISIS!  There will be moments when it seems your life has fallen apart.  Yes, you tend to be a bit on the dramatic side, but let’s not play your experiences down.  You will claim loss, loneliness, confusion and be shouting to anyone who will listen, “Why Me?”  What I learned is that in crisis you can decide to do one of two things: Live in a lie and deny that the crisis exists OR show the crisis who you really are and move forward in truth.  Throughout your early twenties, your struggle whether or not to come out of the closet caused you to live in constant limbo.  However, you finally saw coming out as an answer to you moving towards the truest expression of yourself.  Spiritual teacher and author Gary Zukav says, “If you do not bring forth the truth of your heart, how can you give the gifts that you were born to give? Potential that cannot break through encrusted fear becomes frustration, resentment, hopelessness, anger and rage. Self-hatred is self-destruction.”  Understand that a crisis does not end you; it leads you to a breakthrough where a more meaningful life truly begins.

-       Finally, TAKE TIME!  Dwelling in the process is the most important key to navigating through your 20s.  First lady Michelle Obama said this in a recent talk to a crowd of young adults, “The only thing that happens in an instant is destruction. Build something…earthquake, it’s gone. But everything else requires time: raising children, building a family, having a career. All of it takes time.”  Make the decision to slow down and define what you, and only you, can give back in your personal or professional life. Realize that the slowness is not a reason to stop and be impatient.  After several years in the same position, you were consistent at doing good work that also reflected your true passion and was constantly open to feedback for improvement.  This alone helped you move into a new position that is your true calling – leading the learning and development of your fellow employees.  Taking your time will give you the energy and focus to keep you moving forward in your own time, and at your own pace.

No one will tell you being in your 20s is going to be easy, but most people won’t tell you it’s going to be hard.  It’s up to you to roll with the punches while celebrating the times when you get back up, dust yourself off and keep moving forward.  Take these words to heart and instead of living in the midst of a 20-something dilemma, I promise you will start living 20-something solutions.

Wishing you the best today and always,

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