I recently had a conversation with a friend who had just left her high-powered career in finance after having her third child. She felt like she didn't have any choices anymore, and that she had closed the door on a meaningful career.
I disagreed with her. I said that she always had choices open to her, but that there would be trade-offs. For example, she could choose to do something completely different, like go try and make it in Hollywood. It is just that she would have to start at the bottom, fetching coffee for other people, and maybe even as an unpaid intern. She responded, "Oh, I would NEVER do that."
The lack of freedom in her life wasn't due to anything external, but entirely internal to her. It was tied to her unwillingness to take what she perceived as a step backwards.
How often in our lives are we "trapped," not by someone or something else, but rather by our own lack of flexibility, open-mindedness, and humility? We can't have it all, but we can have anything we choose, should we be willing to make the trade-offs and sacrifices necessary for them.
As Joseph Campbell so aptly put it: "The ultimate dragon is within you, it is your ego clamping you down." Once you get the courage to slay that internal dragon, the universe of possibilities opens to you.
In my friend's case, she was so focused on her previous career, lifestyle, and compensation that she couldn't imagine starting over at a lower level. She was too proud to take a step back, even if it meant moving closer to her dreams.
We all have our own dragons to slay. For some of us, it might be the fear of failure or rejection. For others, it might be the fear of giving up the creature comforts to which they have become accustomed. Whatever our dragon is, we can't let it hold us back from living the lives we are capable of.
We need to be willing to take risks, to step outside of our comfort zones, and to make mistakes. We need to be willing to learn and grow, even if, no, especially when we may look foolish doing so.
If we can do that, then we have achieved freedom in its most and perhaps only meaningful sense.
But what does this look like in practice? How do we go about combatting the internal dragon?
If our dragon is a fear of failure, start small. Set small goals that you know you can achieve, and then build on your success. Don’t fake it until you make it. Stack the deck so you can make it from the start. Achieving will have you believing.
Afraid of rejection? Inoculate yourself against it. Go out of your way to have people say no to you. The more they do, the less sting it will have. Make absurd asks. A date with someone who is completely out of your league. A meeting with your dream mentor. A job you just know you aren’t qualified for. If you go in chasing the no, not only will you be less fearful of “no’s” over time, but any “yes’s” will also be gravy.
If it’s change itself that has you scared, start by making micro changes that steer you in the direction you want. Test how badly you really do “need” those creature comforts. Once you get used to those changes, you can start making bigger ones, and will have a better idea of what works for you and doesn’t given your early experimentation.
The most important thing is to keep working at it. As Coretta Scott King famously said: “Freedom is never really won, you earn it and win it in every generation.” And so it is in our own lives. Internal freedom is there each and every day for us to earn and win for ourselves.
But first, we must pick up the sword and slay the dragon within.