Daring to dream, what does that really mean? Taking the risk Quelling that voice that shouts, "Who do you think you are?" Pushing past well-meaning friends and family who express their fears of your likely failure and the hurt it will cause you. They think it's love, and they really do love you. But just as young parents want to shield their little ones from hurt there's a tendency to sigh and say, "Are you sure? What if..." and that "What if?" doesn't go to the brightest but rather the darkest possibilities. I know that feeling myself, wanting to shield my kids from hurt or disappointment, and cringing inside when they pushed themselves to try hard, against-the-odds, goals. I was terrified they would fail and be thrown off the mountain into the bone heap below. We all know that tendency to protect based on our own fear of failure, our own experience of giving up rather than finding ourselves in that humiliating bone heap. We are certain that is the worst possibility instead of realizing that failure (if it indeed happens) is sweetly-salved if it comes from taking a real risk. We all take tumbles, big and small, and manage to get up and right ourselves. Sometimes the fall is harder, especially if the climb has consumed our every moment. But the satisfaction of having tried is laud-worthy in itself, and we are changed by the journey. Wiser, stronger, closer to our true selves. Perhaps that's the purpose of risk, to move ever closer to our authentic self. Not the one others will accept just to keep us safe, but a brazen soul who trusts the inner voice that whispers, "Do it. It's right for you."
Published by lenleatherwood
I am a native Texan who has lived for the past 30 years in Southern California. I am a published author of both short memoir and fiction, a two-time Pushcart nominee, a nationally award-winning writing coach, an editor, as well as a Licensed Professional Counselor in the state of Texas. In addition, I am the mother of three grown daughters of whom I am extremely proud, a grandmother of four darling children and the wife of a man I still love after 44 years.
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