Fears and Doubts, Obstacles or Incentives?
Preparing to start a new venture is like jumping off a diving board. You’re flying off into space with the trust of a graceful landing. Like a dolphin at play, you’ll burst through the water’s surface.
But some dives aren’t a cinematic success. I didn’t learn to swim until I was in fourth grade and jumping off a board was scary. But I did it, as I headed toward the light of the surface, I opened my mouth. The lifeguard pulled me out of the water before I choked to death. But, I never jumped off a diving board again.
Throughout my life, I’ve followed a cycle. I dove into learning a skill or subject I was interested in and as soon as it became uncomfortable or challenging, I dropped it. I didn’t know, until recently, that this implicit memory kept me in a holding pattern.
“Essentially implicit memory is a memory that you don’t realize you are retrieving from the past.”
Debra Burdick, in Mindfulness Skills Workbook, further explains that perceptions, emotions, bodily sensations, and behavior contribute to implicit memory. When implicit memory is tied to past trauma it can emotionally “hijack” you in the present.
My fear of drowning left me standing at the shore. The beauty and mystery of water appeals to me but I never went snorkeling as my youngest sister did. And now, as I reflect on my life, I see how this one implicit memory kept me from fulfilling my deepest dreams.
In high school I wanted to be a doctor until I took a biology class. My dislike of dissection and feeling sick from the teacher’s vivid descriptions of burns and other physical illness, led me to abandon that ambition. But forty years later, I became a nurse.
I began college with a major in dance and drama. Feeling alone and isolated, struggling with movements, and gaining weight, I dropped those classes after the first semester. Yet most of my thirties I was a performing artist and in my forties earned a degree in storytelling.
Since I was in third grade I’ve been writing. In my twenties I worked as a writer for brief periods. But when the work didn’t come easily and rejections piled up, I sought other ways of sharing my writings by performing.
A gypsy lifestyle, combined with an unconscious implicit memory, prevented me from reaching a level of stability and consistency recognized as success. Still I was fortunate to have many interesting and creative experiences even if they didn’t make for an impressive professional resume.
Often when you articulate your frustrations, your doubts and your fears people think you’re weak, struggling, confused. Until you see the obstacles blocking your way can you find a new path or remove the barriers.
Sometimes you don’t know you’re going in the right direction, you just know you have to try another route. When I began blogging in December 2011, I had no idea it would be the compass leading me straight to my life destination. I am a writer and this is my life’s work.
Yes, I wake up at three a.m. some mornings, like this one, filled with fears and doubts. But, I started writing this essay a few weeks ago and during that time my work has taken concrete shape. I have a plan, a website that launches next week, a client, and I publish my second book in November.
What forgotten traumatic experience, in your past, prevents you from doing what you know you were put on this planet to do?
Photo by travelbychance.blogspot.com
Poignant and powerful memories, Skywalker, and an eloquent, deeply moving story that highlights your determination and endurance despite fears and obstacles.
Like you, I had many fears throughout my life. Most were probably a result of moving from city-to-city and country-to-country when I was a child. After my mom died at 51, I decided that life was too short to be stopped by fear. I had spent my life saying no to many opportunities that life presented to me. After my mom’s death, I made a conscious decision to say yes to every opportunity that came my way. It was scary, but the rewards were phenomenal.
Thanks, Cynthia for reading and sharing your experience.