Read this if you've ever felt like a fraud
I want to talk about something today that we don’t really like to talk about, or admit. We all feel like frauds. Who am I to be doing this? Why should someone pay me attention/money to do this? What if they find out that I feel like a mess and discover I’m a massive fraud? […]
I want to talk about something today that we don’t really like to talk about, or admit. We all feel like frauds.
Who am I to be doing this?
Why should someone pay me attention/money to do this?
What if they find out that I feel like a mess and discover I’m a massive fraud?
Who do you think you are to do this? What makes you qualify to have a voice on this?
How long is it going to be until someone finds out, and then I’m done. I’m going to lose it all.
What if my boss/friend/client going to find out they chose the wrong person?
I’m not an expert!
I’ve had these thoughts, you’ve had these thoughts, and even John Green feels like a fraud and like he doesn’t know how to write a novel.
Sometimes it feels like a ‘guess what celebrity I am’ post it note stuck on your forehead that you’re desperately trying to hide.
(You can breathe a huge sigh of relief that you’re not alone now!)
And I think there’s a good reason many of us feel like frauds.
It comes from a place of good intention.
We’re mission driven, we want to help people, and our inner perfectionists want us to do the The Best Job Ever.
We’re given so many reasons to listen to the voice inside us that tells us we’re not good enough, that when we put something in the world, when we try something, our imposter voice comes out to keep us in check.
Because for so many of us, we don’t want to let people down, we don’t want to be seen as conceited, we don’t want to wave our expertise or our own strengths around like a bra at a Macklemore gig.
Instead, we worry like hell.
We worry that we’re not doing a good job, counter to what anyone else is telling us. We convince ourselves that the people who support us and encourage us don’t know our secret; the full story - the one where we’re a MASSIVE IMPOSTER.
(And sometimes, when things get really shitty, we can convince ourselves that people don’t mean their compliments, they’re doing it just to make us feel good, or because they pity us. Hello, crippling self-doubt!)
We all have our own fraud stories. Every single one of us. We’ve all had those thoughts, and we’ve all unintentionally and sometimes intentionally kept ourselves back because we feel like a massive fraud.
My own fraud story
When I started That Hummingbird Life, it was primarily about recovering from burnout and self care. And I used to beat myself up so much about getting burnt out. Fucking hell did I give myself a hard time when I myself got burnt out.
When I first started, I’d just recovered from a couple of serious burnout episodes and had found things that helped me.
For the first time in my life, I saw the value in taking time for myself, the value in putting myself on my priority list, and I started to say no to things, do things that made my heart sing and generally remember that I am valued and I actually matter.
And I learned SO much from that process. It was a complicated, messy, human process and I shared a lot of it. I wanted to share my journey, share things I found invaluable, and share my struggle.
But it turns out it takes longer than a couple of years to un-do learned behaviours we’ve been repeating over and over again our entire lives (help everyone, say yes, just keep going, practice makes perfect).
So I would still burnout. But there was a difference. It wasn’t so hard, and it didn’t take me as long to bounce back. Each time was getting quicker, because I’d built resilience and tools that I know worked for me to help me deal with it.
But at the time, I wasn’t focusing on how I was doing. All I could feel when I did burnout was how much of a fraud I was, and I felt guilty. I thought it made me a hypocrite.
I thought I was an absolute fraud. And a failure.
The thought that kept going round in my head was who am I to think that I could help other people, if I still get trapped in the burnout cycle and struggle with self care.
And it really chipped at my confidence. I found it harder to blog and share things that had helped me because I felt like I wasn’t doing it 100% right myself.
I found it harder to blog and stopped offering coaching completely, even though I know I helped many people because of my experience and because I was good at what I did.
With The Couragemakers Podcast, the same familiar thoughts came back to me.
But something changed.
At some point down the line, I figured that everyone has these feelings, and they’re a safety mechanism to keep us in our comfort zones, and to keep us from thinking we’ve got ‘too big for our boots’.
That doesn’t mean to say I never feel like a fraud anymore. Far from it!
I even thought who am I to be writing about fraud? Several times through writing this.
If you’ve got passionate bones in your body, if you genuinely want to help people and put good shit in the world, you’re going to feel like a fraud at some point.
Not necessarily all the time, maybe it’s just fleeting. But we all feel it.
No matter what your work, your passion project - whatever it is you’re putting in the world - is, feeling like a fraud is a part of it.
But being human is even more a fundamental part of it.
If you’re doing something because you experienced it and found something that works for you and want to share it, then that is a completely valid way of helping people. (And it’s also worth remembering that we write what we most need to hear; we work on the things that heal us.)
Experience is a completely valid place to create from.
And experiences are never simple. There’s never a point A or a point B. There’s a couple of salsa steps forward then sliding backwards on your arse.
The fraud is the person who stands there and says they no have zero problems.
The fraud is the confidence coach who tells you they are now 110% completely happy in themselves, that they can establish effective boundaries for every single relationship they have and no longer struggle with self doubt, whatesoever anymore.
The fraud is the person who stands up with the fairy godmother transformation and preaches that they’ve completely figured it out and they don’t struggle anymore.
The fraud is the person that promises you unrealistic fantasies that they pass off as real life.
The fraud is the person that tells you their life used to be awful but now it’s the most amazing fucking thing they could ever fucking imagine.
The fraud is NOT YOU.
You feel like a fraud because we all do.
Because you care.
Because you know deep down you have something of immense value to add to the world, but your first instinct is to keep you safe (in the comfort zone).
You are anything, but alone.
You’re not Brené Brown, but you’ve still got a story
I just want to start by saying that I love Brené Brown. I’ve watched the TED talks, bought the books, didn’t buy the t-shirt because it was too expensive. And I love the ‘others’ too – you know who I mean. The big name people talking about big ideas and concepts in profound way. I find […]
I just want to start by saying that I love Brené Brown. I’ve watched the TED talks, bought the books, didn’t buy the t-shirt because it was too expensive.And I love the ‘others’ too - you know who I mean. The big name people talking about big ideas and concepts in profound way.
I find them inspiring, their work definitely influences my work, and I love travelling or sitting in a coffee shop with Audible on, listening to their latest books.
But I think there’s been a shift.
There’s been a shift, in that if you’re thinking about, writing about or wanting a quote about vulnerability or shame, you google Brené Brown. If you want inspiration about creativity - you turn to Elizabeth Gilbert.
The great part is that vulnerability, creativity, shame and fear have become part of normal conversations.
The not so great part? It’s like we’ve stopped turning to our own stories, and our own narratives.
I get that there are experts in any industry and there are always people leading the field, but I think experts have been put on a pedestal so much that we’re forgetting ourselves and the contribution we have to make.
Sometimes I can’t help but wonder how helpful it is, that when we’re talking about huge, subjective, personal topics, we immediately turn to the 'experts' instead of turning to ourselves, and the people in our own lives.
The way I see it, if you’re reading this right now, if you’re a human, you’re just as much an expert on vulnerability, shame, creativity, fear as anyone who might have a New York Times Bestseller.
All of our human experiences guarantee that.
And we’ve all found our own unique strategies and tools, our own memories, and experiences where they’ve come into play. And we all have our own stories, our own ah-ha moments, and our own ways we can help ourselves and others.
And my fear that we're not turning to ourselves only increased when I started The Couragemakers Podcast. I started my podcast because I wanted to talk to everyday couragemakers about everyday courage. To have honest conversations with mission driven doers, makers and world shakers that might not necessarily be featured on Huffington Post, have written their own book or given a TED Talk.
I wanted to hear the stories of women all around the world who are using their own experiences, and their own strengths and values to put good shit into the world and make the world a brighter place than how we found it.
And believe me, I have. And the episodes are AMAZING. And the women? They are fucking phenomenal.
But when I started to reach out to women I knew, women who encourage and ispire me, I started seeing a pattern emerging their responses. Their answers started with ‘I’d absolutely love to…” and finished with:
“When I’ve done more”
“When I’m at that level”
“But I don’t think I’m very interesting”
“But I don’t think I have anything to say”
It’s like we’ve all got used to only hearing successful, well regarded people on podcasts, listening to people who have given TED Talks, and only watching the people who look like they have it all.
And in the process, we’re silencing ourselves. We’re getting trapped in the ‘I’m not good enoughs’ and ‘I’m not important enoughs.' I’m truly devastated by the fact that there are people who don’t feel important enough to think they even have a story.
Let me tell you - for every single interview I record, I am absolutely blown away. Blown away by the stories, by the courage and by the joy of sharing stories that are untold.
Most of all, I’m blown away by the fact that we all have so many different stories. For each guest, I know the interview could go a thousand different ways, depending on which part of their story or their lives we’re focusing on.
Because when it comes to vulnerability, fear, creativity, hope, wholeheartedness, bravery, anything - we've all got enough stories to stock that beautiful bookshop in You've Got Mailthree times over.
And when people are asked about their lives, their struggles and what inspires them, they come out with stories and advice that are just as share-worthy and Pinterest board worthy as Brené Brown and Elizabeth Gilbert:
Asking for help is one of the best things you could do for your life. And letting people know life is a mess and life is really messy and it’s okay becauese we all are messy and nobody has it together -- Jordan Gage
Find something new you want to try and do it. That’s a gift to yourself -- Amber Thomas
Being a courage maker is when your inner light is stronger than the light out there -- Violeta Nedkova
We've all got our own narratives.
We've all got our own stories to tell. We each have a back catalogue of real life experiences. We each have our Greatest Hits and also that obscure album that no one's really listened to.
Trust yourself and stop googling, or believing that the experts can say what you're thinking, or your ideas better than yourself.
Because they can't.
** The Couragemakers Podcast will be released on 29th February. You can keep up to date with all the episodes here.
What to do if you feel trapped in your job
In my world, January 29th isn’t any other day; it’s Meg Freedom Day. Today marks the one year anniversary of leaving my job and choosing myself. I wrote this for anyone who’s feeling like I was, to show there is hope, and there is another way. If you’re getting home and sobbing at the bottom […]
In my world, January 29th isn't any other day; it's Meg Freedom Day. Today marks the one year anniversary of leaving my job and choosing myself. I wrote this for anyone who's feeling like I was, to show there is hope, and there is another way. If you’re getting home and sobbing at the bottom of the stairs, or if you’re feeling physically sick and trapped whenever you get near the building, or if your job makes you feel like a shell of the person you once were, get out.
Or if you have a gut feeling that you shouldn’t be there, or if it’s something you thought you wanted but it turns out you now don’t, get out.
Or at least make a plan.
Let’s face it, very few people in the world are able to just to up and quit a job. I know I wasn’t. I had to sacrifice a lot to leave, and chances are, you do too.
But once you’ve got your plan, that ‘out’, everything is going to feel a lot more positive. Even if that out is in a year or two year’s time.
There’s little worse than feeling trapped in a situation that you feel you’ll never get out of. Your mind starts going to really dark places, and it feels like you’ll never see light again.
So when you’ve got a plan, the light starts to get in. You have an opportunity to imagine a different life for yourself. And a different version of yourself that uses your skills, your strengths and your gifts for something you want to do.
And while you’re opening the crack for light to get in, do other things to widen that gap. While I was making plans, I started religiously listening to podcasts (The Lively Show and Good Life Project). I listened to podcasts featuring people who had escaped and were making their own life. I listened to people who were doing life their own way and the hard journey they had to make to get there.
And something started happening.
By surrounding myself with people - even if they were only in my earphones - who had done it, and were in the process of doing it, it was starting to become the new normal. The idea of me getting out, and starting a new life and journey didn’t seem so far away. (Which is also why I started my soon-to-be Couragemakers podcast, but more details on that soon).
Once this happens, other options start opening up. For me, it was realising I don’t have to work in the charity sector, and I might be able to work for myself. And that I might even be able to pursue my dream of travelling the world. You begin to feel less trapped.
When those options start becoming clear, shit gets both exciting and scary. Which is a hell of a lot better than the present.
But the present can teach you a lot about what you don’t want in your life. For example, you can write a list of things you don’t want in a future job/career/path and use them as a non-negotiable checklist when searching out new opportunities.
You can reverse engineer what you hate to find the things you might like.
If you’re stuck in a job right now that’s draining you, that’s making you feel like a stranger in your own life, that has you dreading the morning, sit down with a friend and look at your options. And include the crazy out-of-this-world ones. Especially include those ones. When you start to get creative, that’s where the magic starts to happen.
And know that you are not alone. This is only temporary, and it will soon be a distant memory.
I’m not saying it’s an easy journey or decision. It’s hard as hell. A lot of people probably won’t understand you wanting to leave, especially if you’ve got a contract and everything looks good from the outside.
But it’s not their decision. And you don’t have to justify it to anyone other than yourself.
So, if you’re struggling right now, do these 3 things:
1. Sit down with a friend and look at your options. And I mean really explore each option
2. Make a non negotiable list of things your next journey can’t include
3. Work out your baseline - what is the minimum amount of money per month and per year that you need to survive
And then make a plan.
This doesn’t have to be your life. I’m not saying I know what your life is going to look like or you do either. But I know that right now, it’s not serving you and it’s taking away from the wonderful person you are.
And you sure as hell are worth more than that.
It’s going to take time. And it’s going to take time to re-build yourself. But you will get there.
Love yourself enough to leave and see what could be.
For me, that looked like moving in with in-laws, working for myself and saving up to travel the world. I'll be leaving in August August to spend 3 months travelling from the West to East Coast of the States, and 6 months across India, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos and Indonesia. And then, who knows?!
What could it be for you?
They're lying! On get rich/happy quick schemes and bullshit free dream chasing
The truth will set you free, right? It also has a tendency to make you pretty unpopular. But, we don’t care about popularity around here. We care about dream chasing, living for a purpose, and standing up yourself even when it’s doesn’t make you a cool kid. Sometimes, especially when it doesn’t make you a […]
The truth will set you free, right? It also has a tendency to make you pretty unpopular. But, we don't care about popularity around here. We care about dream chasing, living for a purpose, and standing up yourself even when it's doesn't make you a cool kid. Sometimes, especially when it doesn't make you a cool kid. So, I got pretty pissed off yesterday. I was checking in to Twitter like I normally do, and I'm getting pretty good at ignoring stupid hashtag trends, but this one I couldn't shake:
#solveyourproblemsin4words (or something to this extent)
Wondering what the most common answers were? Easy - 'Win the lottery now. 'A fat pay check' and so on.
I am so fucking tired of this myth
That some external miracle is going to come and solve every single issue you could ever have (spoiler alert: it won't), and that someone is going to come knocking at your door and give you all the answers.
That you can make 6 figures in 6 minutes, that you can work for an hour a day and become a millionaire, that you can basically sit on your ass, think of money, and some will fall out of the sky right onto your lap.
And I'm really sick of marketers massively exploiting dream chasers like you and me, who don't just want to make money, we want to put good shit into the world.
Because, let's face it. It's a hell of a lot harder putting yourself out there and making your own income when you give a shit about the world, you have a passion and a cause and you have ethics. (There, I said it. I used the E word.)
We're not out to make a quick buck. We're in it for the long haul, to somehow make a difference, to inspire, to change things, to shake shit up.
And chances are, we also don't have the ridiculous amount of money needed (or the desire) to outsource all the work that takes the hard work out of making money. Nor would we want to gain from cheap labour and words that aren't ours.
Let's be honest.
No magic drink is going to make me a hundred pounds lighter, the same way as a £10,000 retreat isn't going to make you successful.
What's more likely to make you successful is spending an afternoon with a bunch of coloured pens and a drawing pad, working out what success means for you.
And what's more likely to make me a hundred pounds lighter is going for more walks and limiting my chocolate intake.
What's more likely to make you more money is figuring out what you love to do and how much money you really need or want.
These people who are out to solve all your problems in 5 easy steps? It's bullshit.
There are no 5 easy steps to happiness.
No 5 easy steps to make you a more positive person
There are no 5 quick things you can do to give yourself the body of Jennifer Anniston, the wealth of Bill Gates or the success of Taylor Swift.
There just aren't.
And when you stop reading the bullshit that tells you otherwise, you actually get somewhere. You start making those plans, working on your confidence, setting yourself goals and following you own intuition.
And when you start to realise that those 5 steps, those 4 quick hours, those six figure fixers are bullshit and just don't exist, you're going to feel liberated.
You'll realise that doing things your way is more than okay. That you have you own definition of success, and your own way of getting there.
That's not to say there aren't people out there who can help you.
Of course there are. But make sure they're people who are speaking your language. Who share your values. And who are totally upfront about the amount of hard work and courage it takes to chase your dreams.
You've got all the answers inside you, you've got the creativity, the determination and the passion to create your own version of success.
And you've got the common sense in your head that tells you that not all problems can be solved - but they can be halved when shared with a friend and a cup of the tea :)
Dream chasers, bold and courageous women, passionate and compassionate souls? We're being sold a lie.
And damn right we're not going to take it anymore.
What happens when you make a change from a place of hope, not fear
I talked a while ago on here about being guilty of future tripping. Getting so lost in what we want to do in the future, and not focusing on the present. I also mentioned that I had big changes which I would share when I was ready. And I’m ready. Turning my life upside down In […]
I talked a while ago on here about being guilty of future tripping. Getting so lost in what we want to do in the future, and not focusing on the present. I also mentioned that I had big changes which I would share when I was ready. And I'm ready.
Turning my life upside down
In December, I handed in my notice to my permanent job. In January, I handed in my notice on my house. And in March, I'm going to be moving to London in with my other half's family for a while, to save up to go travelling.
I have literally turned my life upside down, and it’s pretty fucking terrifying.
I have moments where I just sit here and think when the hell did I get so brave. I also have times where the more rational side of me comes out wonders what the hell I'm doing.
But you know what? I'm going to be honest - my life situation - up until the I made the decision to really shake shit up - hasn't been serving me.
I'd been thinking about a change for a long time, but I was just too scared to jump. And when I say jump, the options I saw available to me were changing my job, and moving somewhere cheaper. They weren’t both, and moving across the country, and making my dreams of travelling a reality.
All that time thinking about the need to shake things up, I was seriously scared of change. I'd rather be miserable most of the time than take a leap into the unknown.
Sobbing and decisions
One evening in December, I just came home and sobbed. I felt really trapped. The realisation that we'd got a house which was beautiful, but was putting a lot of pressure on us financially and limiting our choices was starting to dawn on me. And the situation I was in employment wise just wasn't serving me anymore, and was simply making me miserable.
The two main and concrete things I had made clear decisions on in my life - where to live and where to work, were just draining
me.
But it wasn’t as movie-like as it sounds like - as if a rock just fell on my head and I woke up to face the music.
It was a long time coming, and it was an evening of really painful desperation, clinging onto any hope of things changing I could get.
It had always been my dream to go travelling and I’d started to believe it was never going to happen. The years were creeping by and I was putting it off for security, something I thought I wanted.
And security became a great excuse for not acting on my dreams, and staying in shit situations that I knew weren’t good for me.
A lot of the motivation for change came from knowing that the only thing stopping me was me
Fear's been what's kept me in my situation longer than was good for me.
I was only able to make the active decisions from a place of real hope rather than out of fear.
Taking risks
Yeah, of course it was a risk handing in my notice on both my job and my house, but luckily we're in the situation where we've got families who are being really emotionally supportive and won't see us homeless.
And I'm completely aware that if it wasn't for that, then our options would have been much more limited, and we're really lucky to have such supportive people around us.
But thankfully, it’s all worked out.
Panic number one has been handled regarding what’s going to happen to my beautiful bunnies. Thankfully they’ll be going to live with my Mum and Dad who love them more than me (I’m kidding, I think!) and who really need some bunny love in their lives.
As for the rest, and future panics, I’m prepared.
I handed in my notice early to have all of February to sort things out without stressing, and it’s working. I’ve got a long list of things to do, but they’re not all house related. I’ve got time to read books I’ve been wanting to read, as well as having time to bubble wrap things and sort through junk.
February is seriously busy for me, and I’ve also got a lot of illness in my family right now, and things are really hard.
But I know if I don’t do this now, I don’t know if I will.
And it’s exciting. But also sad (I’ll go more into that in future posts).
So that's why I've been a bit quiet lately. I've really missed blogging. It hasn't been because I haven't wanted to, but because things in my life are changing in such a big way.
I’m looking forward to keeping you guys updated, and living what I write about.
[Tweet "Sometimes we just need to get out of our own way and take another look at our dreams and really believe in them."]
How to deal with dreamshitters (or when to tell people to fuck off)
Some people are just dreamshitters, soul crushers and downright mean.* I think you know who I’m talking about. That friend who patronises your ideas and points out all the flaws in any plan before you’ve even finished your sentence. The teachers, the older relatives who want you to just be realistic. Or the people who […]
Some people are just dreamshitters, soul crushers and downright mean.* I think you know who I’m talking about.
That friend who patronises your ideas and points out all the flaws in any plan before you’ve even finished your sentence. The teachers, the older relatives who want you to just be realistic. Or the people who like to shout you down and give their opinions for no reason.
Whether you’re starting out, trying something new or just going about your daily life, people just love to criticise.
This post isn’t about becoming sympathetic to where their issues are coming from. It’s not about enhancing empathy skills or practicing loving kindness.
It’s a gentle reminder of when to tell people to fuck right off.
So let’s take a look at the three main groups of dreamshitters and possible solutions.
1. The Helpers
These are people who might genuinely have our best interests at heart and may even have no awareness as to what they’re doing. This is an important group, because it’s often this group that are closer to us, and often the people we turn to support for when we’re in our hour of need or feel like giving up. Now, there is a certain level of understanding there, but something much stronger and important needs to be in place as well. Boundaries. It’s perfectly ok to change conversation, refuse to talk about any plans you may have, and brush off comments. But if they continue to belittle and undermine your dreams, it’s ok to tell them to fuck off.
2. The Know-It-All
These are the people who have seen and done everything that life has to offer (hell, they’ve even got the matching pants). These are the not-quite-acquaintances who seem to have experience on a myriad of life pursuits and feel the need to make judgements on every aspect of your lifestyle. You know the ones - ("I remember the time when I…." or "Really? You’re thinking of doing that? I remember when…"). Those. Cutting them off short and leaving the conversation is a good idea. Alternatively, it’s ok to tell them to fuck off.
3. The Shitters
Oh these people just love to spoil your fun. They’re quite happy to make a comment, carry on with the rest of their day and not give you a second thought. A shout out goes to the online trolls and the people in the street who feel you need to hear a running commentary of how you look today. (A particular shout out to the man on the bike today who felt the need to make his opinion of my breasts known to me while I was sitting on a bench by the river. He may or may not have inspired this post.) These are the sad people who get their kicks from humiliating people in public. Depending on the situation, it’s ok to tell them to fuck off - it may help or exasperate the situation. Flipping the bird is also an option.
Many people don’t chase after their dreams. There are billions of reasons why.
But for many people, it comes down to one main thing.
Chasing your dreams is fucking scary. The fact that you’re even considering it puts you lightyears in front of the general population.
Let alone if you act on them.
So, stand tall, hold your head up and be proud.
Whoever you are, whatever you’re doing, no matter you dream, don’t let the shitters get you down, not matter how much they are just trying to help.
*I do not take credit for ‘dream shitters’. This gem comes from Jo Tucker of http://jo-tucker.com