Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Do You Deserve Your Great Success - Kathy Caprino
Do You Deserve Your Great Success As a career and life coach for women, itâs not often these days that Iâm surprised by womenâs behavior. I know women â" especially midlife ones â" quite well, or so I thought. But I must say, Iâve been rocked recently by a potential finding thatâs emerging as I conduct my research study on Women Succeeding Abundantly. About the study, Iâm conducting a qualitative research study with over 100 working women across the country, ages 25 to 75, who are experiencing abundant success on their terms, and are thriving and living joyfully. Hereâs the official description of the study: This qualitative, in-depth study focuses on women who consider themselves highly successful in life and work, and have advice and lessons to share with other women about achieving success, fulfillment, and well-being and living with a sense of passion, power, and purpose. The target audience resonates with the statement: âI know what I want in life and work, and I am achieving it on my terms and with great success.â The results of the study will be dedicated to expanding our understanding of the specific choices, actions, behaviors and thinking that help women across all generations achieve abundant success. A trade book and a variety of education and coaching programs will be among the offerings. (If youre interested in learning more or participating, please let me know!) So heres the thing Iâm getting the inkling as I move forward that women are MUCH more comfortable talking about how things are not what they want in their lives, than they are sharing about their successes. They just dont want to come forward and admit, Hey, Im really successful! A great new colleague of mine â" Viviana Sutton of Work Her Way â" shared with me that when Shirley MacLaine won her Oscar in 1984 for her role in âTerms of Endearment,â in her acceptance speech she was certainly grateful, but also said âThanks, I deserved this!â I checked it out on YouTube, and loved it! (here it is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqSEH_bVRz8) Nuggets of Shirleyâs speech⦠âI donât believe there are such things as accidents. I think that we all manifest what we want and what we need. I donât think thereâs a difference really between what you feel you have to do in your heart, and success â" theyâre inseparableâ¦Films and life are like clay waiting for us to mold it, and when you trust your own insides and that becomes achievement, itâs a kind of principle it seems to me is at work with everyoneâ¦God bless that potential that we all have for making anything possible if we think we deserve it. I deserve this. Thank you!â From that sentiment of her feeling of deservedness (which I think she offered a bit tongue in cheek), there was great backlash â" in other words, people thought âHow dare she say she deserves to win!â Wowâ¦I guess we better not even whisper that weâve earned our great success and that itâs deserved â" thatâs simply not acceptable, particularly for women. What I do know is that hundreds of women contacted me when I was researching my first book Breakdown, Breakthrough about their professional crisis and breakdown. They longed to share their stories of challenge and turmoil. It was healing for most to come clean about how things werenât working, and talk about how they overcame or handled their crisis. And Im thrilled that they did I know from direct experience that telling our stories of challenge can heal our lives (turning our mess into a message is a cathartic experience). But what about talking about our successes? Canât this be strengthening and empowering as well? Canât we access important parts of ourselves and be inspirational to others in the telling of our success stories, just in the same way as telling our tales of woe? Iâm thinking â" but Iâd love your help here that this reluctance in women to talk about their success may have a number of contributing factors, including perhaps that women: 1) Donât recognize or âfeel itâ when they are successful 2) Donât want to sound as if theyâre bragging 3) Have as a top priority their sense of connection and relationship to others, and donât want to alienate anyone who isnât feeling successful 4) Donât want others to envy them 5) Donât want to jinx their success by speaking openly of it 6) Donât want to sound like they are âmore deservingâ than anyone else 7) Arenât sure they really measure up to some outside standard of âgreat successâ (âWait a minute, am I really that successful?â) The women who have come forward to tell their stories of great success in my research study so far are courageous indeed Iâm so grateful to them! Their stories have been anything but conventional â" theyâve been about vulnerability, surprise, risk, heartbreak, practicality, ingenuity, and being a âfinisherâ â" going the distance through the challenges and fear. So help me solve this mystery, would you? Hereâs my informal poll below â" Iâd LOVE your comments: Kathyâs âAbundant Successâ Poll: 1. Are you: Male Female 2. How successful do you feel in your life overall: ( ) Very ( ) Somewhat ( ) Not at All Why?__________________________ 3. If you feel âveryâ successful, how likely would be to talk about that to: Your family Very Somewhat Not At All Your friends Very Somewhat Not at All Your colleagues Very Somewhat Not At All A researcher (like me) Very Somewhat Not At All 4. What might hold you back from discussing your abundant success? Thanks for sharing!! My mission in my work has just shifted this very minute while writing this â" itâs now about helping women claim out loud their great success â" to help them get over their reluctance to speak about it openly and enthusiastically, and to teach other women how to openly embrace the beauty, joy and fulfillment of abundant success. In the words of Shirley MacLaine â" you deserve it!
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