Do I really belong here? Will I be found out as a fraud?
Will my gifts be recognized and welcomed?
In the middle of this networking
event, I was feeling drained and discouraged.
At that moment, a community artist who inspires me happened to walk up
to me to ask about the network mapping activity I was working on. In our
conversation, this artist surprised me by telling me about the self-doubts he
had about how he fit in this large group of leaders. As he vulnerably and openly
told me about this, I felt a wave of grace wash through us.
I've spent much of my life asking
myself why I was so shy, and why I had such trouble connecting naturally with
people around me. The morning after the event, I woke up early with a desire to
reframe this history of self-doubt and insecurity. I saw in a new way the value
of the path I've been on from intense shyness to choosing a career as a group
facilitator that stretched my natural tendencies. My own experiences have
increased my attention to and compassion for these insecurities. That morning, I felt called to a new way of
facilitating connections and collaboration--a way that acknowledges and integrates
our insecurities about belonging. I felt
the opportunity for healing of my habit of believing that I can't deeply and
naturally connect with others. I felt a desire to continue my facilitation
work, but from a place of compassion for those hidden insecurities about
belonging that are in me and many others I work with.
If we see leadership as something
that a small number of powerful individuals do, the hidden doubts we have as leaders
will probably always feel lonely and alienating. If we see leadership as an
activity that anyone can do, as a way of taking responsibility and initiative
for what we care about--then our weaknesses and doubts can point us to the ways
we need each other. If leadership is something we do together, my limitations
can open up space for connection and opportunity for others.