Friday, January 23, 2009

Comparing

There are times when I don't feel like I'm good at anything I do. I feel like I do LOTS of things okay, but I'm not that great at any one thing. (Well, maybe I do pretty well with relationships with people...) I have this horrible habit of comparing myself with other people and I hate it! I was watching TV yesterday and saw this girl climbing a mountain. I thought, "I can't do that. What do I do?" My sister makes a comment about being past the "pony tail stage" (she has short hair) and I'm tempted to run out and cut my hair the next day. I hate it!

I've definitely spread myself way too thin, and I am working on fixing that. I am not on the running club board this year, and this is the last year I am directing the Run for the Roses. But I still feel like I don't focus much on activities that I like. I spend so much time trying to figure out what everyone else wants to do and then do that. That's a good thing sometimes. But then I feel like I haven't spent the time on ME to develop my interests. I like to read, and definitely make time for that. I like to run, and haven't really been able to do that due to injuries (I'm spinning and swimming in it's place--not quite as good). I like to cook, and I do that. But it seems like there should be more?

Maybe I'm just being an over-achiever as I've been for most of my life. I usually pack my schedule so full that I can barely breathe sometimes (and Isaac definitely suffers when this happens). And then when I don't have something big on the horizon to plan and work toward, I feel a little depressed. I want to be more content in the HERE and NOW. But how do I do that?

I feel somewhat paralyzed to change. I know that doesn't make any sense because I can accomplish a lot. But when it comes to doing things I know I should do--write more, research graduate schools, etc. I freeze. Maybe it's the fear of failure. I was graduated magna cum laude from Gordon Conwell. But then part of me says that's just because it wasn't as challenging as UNC. (Not true really, I worked really hard.) Or maybe that's because when my dad saw how many of my classmates graduated magna cum laude he said, "Oh, it must not be that big of a deal?" Can we say deflated? (Not to mention that I worked full time, paid for all the expenses myself, and commuted to Charlotte twice a month, and used vacation time to attend classes.)
Ok, that was definitely a tangent. But it felt good to get it out.

Then we had the summer of crippling anxiety when I quit my job at Wachovia to go back to UNC for their Master of Accounting program. It's an intensive 1 year program--can I repeat that again--intensive? I cried every day when I came home. I was in a constant state of panic that I was going to fail. My classmates were super-competitive and my career counselor stated that the main reason I even got into the program was because of my work experience (my GMAT score was horribly low). So I questioned myself and I eventually quit. I DO think that was a good decision. Accounting is definitely not for me. But that experience has left me a little fearful...

All this to say... I need to figure out what I want, and I need to find a way to block out the noise of the world and not compare myself to others.... and just be ME. I know that's good enough, it's just difficult to keep moving into unchartered territory...

So, need to get to work. Have a good Friday.

1 comment:

Jules said...

1. There's nothing wrong with a ponytail. Especially when your hair is as pretty and swingy as yours.
2. Of course it's an achievement when you graduate MCL. I am sure that there were so many others who did, too, because you graduated with a bunch of smarties and hard workers like yourself.
3. You are a hard working, self-motivated, disciplined person who CAN do anything she sets her mind to. The marathon is a case in point. So you weren't the fastest runner - there are millions more people (myself included) who will never even try!
4. Don't you think we're bombarded by media telling us - in essence - that we're "not good enough"? Think of all the commercials for make-up or diets or "just do it." Or all the shows with extreme atheletes or people who have powered through unbelievable odds. That's all well and good, but it's not the most important thing. We were created to glorify God. Princess Andrea, you are the daughter of the KING!
5. Finally (yes, the comment will finally be done!), I think the quiet time of reflection that you are establishing after the race is over can be a very "healing" time for you. I will be praying for peace, rest, and clarity of the path(s) God will lead you on next.