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A Celebration Of Not Knowing

Pauline Campos's picture

I hate not knowing.

My birthday and Christmas were great growing up. The part that has always sucked, though, has been the waiting to open the gifts wrapped prettily with my name on them. The Not Knowing while I had to wait to discover what was in that pretty wrapping paper was more agonizing than the thrill of finally getting my chance.

Maybe it's why I became a newspaper reporter. Every assignment was a directive to Find Out What I Didn't Know. It didn't matter if it was something as simple as how this year's Best Garden winner felt about the recognition or if I was sitting in a court room listening to a suspected murderer's lawyer try to argue his client free because I was always learning more, discovering more, and Not Knowing less.

Please don't start a sentence and then stop mid-stream after deciding you really don't want to share what you had planned. Don't hint at what you are thinking of buying me for my next December birthday in June. And for the love of all things holy, don't even dare to play an April Fool's joke on me if you value your life and our friendship.

I just need to know. Always. The more I know, the less I don't. The more I know, the less I can't control and the more that I can. The more that I know... the more I can obsess about the things I can't just because it's what I'm used to doing.

The Scale

I used to weigh myself once a week, first thing in the morning after peeing and stripping down to nothing because every ounce counts. My ritual -- because you're damned right there was a ritual -- also included the holding of breath and closing of eyes and a silent prayer before opening my eyes and looking down. What I saw each time I got on that scale determined my mood, actions, and self-worth until the next time I held my breath. If it was good, I rewarded myself with love. I ate right, exercised more, and shouted from the rooftops how important it is to focus on how I felt instead of what I weighed. If it was bad I dove headfirst into the nearest source of chocolate and cursed the DNA gods for cursing me with the shallow end of my familial gene pool because what I weighed determined how I felt.

My mother had given birth to five girls. I haven't been able to share clothes with her since I was in the third grade.

So when I was brainstorming book ideas with my agent and the discussion spilled over into dinner conversation with The Husband, he pounced on an idea that my agent and I had tossed out because it's too similar to Something Else I've Written. I like the not weighing yourself for a year idea, he said. You need that, he said, because you take care of yourself until the scale tells you that you aren't working hard enough.

I had no response because it's true. I called my BFF and told her to keep the scale she had borrowed.

And so began my Celebration of Not Knowing.

I've never felt so in control.

Pauline is the founder of Girl Body Pride & blogs at Aspiring Mama. Find her at about.me/paulinecampos

Comments

Lissa Rankin's picture

LOL, Sue

No, it's okay, really!

My achievement junkie still loves the validation. The trick is to find it within myself so that my internal wisdom knows I'm enough without the affirmation externally, and then the external kudos are just icing.

So THANK YOU!

Much love and gratitude
Lissa

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Lissa Rankin's picture

Thank you Sue

I feel a little sheepish saying "Thank you for the approval!" But really, thank you :)
Much love
Lissa

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Sue Bock's picture

I take it back

I can take it back Lissa : ) Seriously you deserve to step into your knowing and shouting about it!

Lissa Rankin's picture

The beauty of knowing from the inside, not out

Pauline,
You'll really get this.

I just delivered my book Mind Over Medicine to my Hay House editor on March 1. I saw her at the Hay House conference and she said nothing about whether it was worth anything, whether I had earned my six figure advance.

And it was okay.

Then I got up on stage in front of 2000 people and bared my soul and exposed my heart and got down on my knees (literally) to deliver my speech, knowing the people who controlled my Hay House fate were there watching, that in some ways, I was auditioning to be the next Deepak Chopra or Wayne Dyer or Christiane Northrup.

And even though I was sitting right next to them, nobody told me whether I did a good job.

As a recovering achievement junkie, this was not easy. I craved approval. I wanted someone to pat me on the back and sing my praises, ideally from the stage with a microphone. But that's not what happened.

But you know what?

I just KNEW I did a good job, that I wrote a great book, that I let myself channel the Divine on stage- and I didn't need anyone else to affirm it.

Fuck the scale.

You are enough. I am enough. We are enough- just because we are sparks of Divine perfection in human bodies and that is enough.

I love you. I love your blog posts. And I can't WAIT to read your book.

So much love
Lissa

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Pauline's picture

I do get it.

Lissa, I do. I understand. And a lot of that understanding comes from my experience writing for Owning Pink.

You are an amazing example of inner light, strength, and love. You earned that advance. I just know you did.

And I? I earned a vacation from self-defeating thoughts.

Sue Bock's picture

Here Here

Lissa, I hear you when you talk about needing that approval. I have struggled with that myself. I love how you listened to your "knowing" and you didn't need anyone to affirm it. That took a woman who know who she is and I admire that. Congratulations.

Sue Bock's picture

Courageous Living!

At first you'll find the not knowing as totally scary. Then you'll fall into a period of adjustment. Then of a knowing that you'll be ok and the freedom that comes with that is pure joy. Know that you can experiment with your experience and then at the end of year if you don't like it you can always go back. That's really where the freedom comes, choice.

Sue Bock
http://bestlifeafterbreastcancer.com
http://couragetoadventure.com

http://couragetoadventurecoaching.wordpress.com

Pauline Lupercio's picture

Well said

I love that. Choice IS the key to personal freedom. Thank you for reading and commenting.

V Demetros's picture

You are brave!

You are so brave. I don't think I could do that. I have a love/hate relationship with my scale, but I am too attached. I'm curious to find out how you are after a month of not knowing.

Pauline Lupercio's picture

I love not knowing

Well, mostly. I feel better and not as heavy. Literally. It could be I am losing a bit of weight or that I just needed to shed the emotional baggage that comes with obsessing over the scale. Either way, it's already been about a month. So far, so good.

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