Photo by Elizabeth Halt
Photo by Elizabeth Halt

the dawning of the light, volume 19

June 2, 2012

{a photo project honoring radiance, one of my words for 2012 :: 52 photos that represent radiance, 52 photos that represent luminosity.}

i read a book a few weeks ago about finding and hiring talent. it was called the rare find. (true, i’m neither a recruiter nor a hiring manager, but i am a sucker for non-fiction that includes case studies.)

i copied this from the book into my journal.

The key question stops being: “Are you good enough?” Instead, it becomes: “Is there a chance you could become spectacular?”

if you want to know what i think – what i really think – i think that there is a chance that i could become a spectacular artist. the form might surprise and delight me – for instance, it could be in the artistry of my business itself – but i do think there is a chance.

it is going to be hard for me to publish this post, but i am going to do so anyway, because it allows me to talk about one of my biggest stumbling blocks with radiance.

the trouble with radiance, at least for me, is that it feels like the act of recognizing or acknowledging or honoring my own light somehow diminishes other people.

it’s as if i believe that there is only so much light to go around so the only way i can shine is by dimming other people’s lights or by comparing myself to someone or someones and saying that i am shining because i am shining brighter than them. it’s as if i believe that we are all in competition with each other.

it seems rather telling that the situations where shining your own light is encouraged and accepted are in situations that do feel like competitions: from job interviews to annual reviews to college applications.

it makes perfect sense that i would want to avoid this. i don’t want to hurt other people or make them feel small. i don’t like competition. i am afraid of rejection and judgment. i don’t want other people to dislike me. i have been taught implicitly and explicitly that saying (thinking, also, but definitely saying) something good about myself makes me a bad person.

at the same time, when i see something good in myself, it has nothing to do with anyone else. i am not comparing or contrasting or in competition.

when i like my own work, for example, i don’t like it because i think it’s better than anyone else’s work. i like it because i like it.

when i have an idea that i think is genius, i don’t think it’s genius because it’s better than someone else’s idea. i think it’s genius because it’s mine and i am really really excited about it.

when i say that there is a chance i could become spectacular, i don’t mean spectacular in comparison to others; i mean spectacular in terms of fulfilling my potential and following my mission and sharing my vision.

i believe that we are all extraordinary – that we can all burn brighter than we can even imagine.

i also know that if i cannot see the good in myself, it doesn’t really matter whether other people can see it.

i want to be my biggest supporter and cheerleader. i want to see my own goodness and potential. i want to show up in the world, to not shrink, to be as fully myself as i can stand to be, and to be a force for beauty and light.

i am not afraid of my shadow. i am willing to go into my darkness and take things out and turn them over and look at them closely under the harsh light of day.

for too long, i have been afraid of my light.

from now on, i very much want to be brave enough to face it.

7 comments... (add a comment)

  1. Oh gorgeous.
    So many things I want to say and to echo in what you have to say here, in encouragement and in resonance, line by line agreement and comment.
    Simple version though, and I always love the simple version, is
    gorgeous xx

  2. Kris

    Thanks for posting this even tho it was hard.

  3. I love this post, Elizabeth. I recognize myself in a lot of it.

    When it comes to light/radiance/spectacularness, I think it’s partially a problem of language. Those things are generally defined in contrast to their opposites. No wonder it feels like comparisons will be assumed.

    And for me, in the other direction, the idea of too much light makes me think of supernovas. Not ideal. Too literal, I realize, but part of my nature.

    In the end though, we are our own people. Why not believe the best of ourselves?

    Best wishes to you on your journey!

  4. julie m.

    yes! so glad you shared. i share some of the same struggles in my inner world. i want to reach my full potential *for me* (and God who has created gifts in me) yet something holds me back. yeah. we need to work on that. :)

  5. tammy j

    oh elizabeth.
    you should be in the curriculum of every single school in this country.
    maybe all countries!
    this country’s people and its children know nothing but competition.
    cut throat or otherwise.
    it’s always compete and compete.
    we only think or are taught to think of
    winning. we must always win. at any cost.
    i guess it has its place.
    but i think it makes for very small people.
    small unhappy unfulfilled people.

    for someone to win someone else has to lose.
    and feel lessened and sidelined.
    i’m for love and light. just simple shining and enjoying that shine. yours and others.
    and you have just spread the word!
    if you give more and love your own light… it’s unending and there is more where that came from! it’s wonderful! it’s radiant!
    you are so eloquently simple about all this.
    i think you might have said all that’s wrong with this world in a nutshell on this blog.
    lol! now let’s send it to washington and the u.n.!!! let’s put it in the news!
    elizabethology!
    love and hugs to you and atlas,
    tammy j

  6. As ever, you have a way of expressing what so many of us feel. I can relate to much of what you are saying too, and especially in that I once worried that shining my own light would diminish the light of others, or that I somehow not see the light of others enough. Once I began believing in my own light and gifts, I started to see that there is SOOO MUCH LIGHT to go around for all. That we are meant to shine and share it all. This liberated a lot of feelings of struggle and anxiety. Once we have the courage to believe in and share our own light, we can support and encourage the light of those so much more. :o) LOVE how brave you are being my friend! We’re just back from our trip the US. Lovely to catch up here with you, Elizabeth :o) ((HUGS))

  7. Casey

    Yes. This. Beautifully written and resonates with my own struggles to show up for my own life.
    Much love,
    -case

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *