By SERAPHINE RULIGIRWA-KAMARA
I’m not sure exactly when I came to this realisation but I am grateful that I did several years back.
The realisation is that I am not the lucky type. I don’t
remember winning a single t-shirt, torch or hat back in the day when I
entered my name in numerous FMCG promotions.
Such promotional merchandise freebies were the
in-thing when I was growing up — perhaps this is why I got into the
advertising business but that’s a subject for a whole different article.
I quickly learned that shortcuts in life and later
in business are not for me. Like most people, I’m not gifted with a
super human ability to see yonder.
So in the course of my life, I’ve consistently made
a series of painful and costly mistakes on anything from self-care,
fashion, dating, college, work, business, marriage, parenting and
everything in-between.
There really should be a mistakes quota per person
because I seem to have grossly exceeded mine. For a long while I was
convinced that I was intrinsically inclined to make a mess of my life
and then walk right through it over and over again.
It was frustrating but with it came the liberating
realisation that I am wired to live through periods of monumental
stupidity causing enormous confusion as the stepping stones to get me to
the other side with crystal clarity.
Didn’t I think to get some help? Well, as Buddha
put it; “When the student is ready, the teacher will come”. I wasn’t
ready for help. Even if help had hit me with a sledge hammer right
between my eyes, I would not have recognised it for what it was.
I wouldn’t have appreciated it because I was
looking for clear, plain and simple quick-fix answers to anything and
everything — I wanted magic to my challenges. In short, I wasn’t
teachable. I wasn’t ready.
In spite of myself, I got loads of help from others
who didn’t necessarily package themselves as “help”. I identified them
quite un-knowingly, actually.
Their lives resonated with me in one way or
another. I studied what they did, I paid attention to what they said
even though most of them didn’t know and still do not know of my
existence.
I followed their lives along like a fly on the wall
— a silent observer. I spent most of my days wanting to think, speak,
act and live exactly like them.
I learned without setting out to. I grew to the point at which I realised that they did not hold the key to my answers.
Their lives, however enviable were based on THEIR
answers. I was and still am selfish. All of us are. We are created that
way and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that until we let our
selfishness infringe upon the rights of others.
So I realised that what I really needed and wanted
was MY answers. Everyone else like me is selfish. So they had done the
work required on themselves and created their answers for themselves.
No one had answers specifically designed for me. This was as profound a realisation as it was hard to take.
Be kind as I share this with you and spare me the indignity
of having to disclose how long it took me to accept full responsibility
for finding my own answers.
It is a long story that goes over the numerous
hills and valleys of more mistakes than I want printed here. I
eventually did find my answers and in many ways I am still finding them.
This is not because I’m exceptionally smart. I was just fed up of looking in all the wrong people, things and places.
I wish age-old wisdom was a little bit more direct.
It simply told me that “my answers lay within”. Boy! All those years
I’d spent looking without were such a waste!
Rejection and heartbreak
I could have saved myself so much hurt, relationships, shame, anger, bitterness, failure, rejection and heartbreak.
My biggest hurdle was my training all through life.
I was trained to do things as those in authority around me did and
accepted as normal and good for me.
I was very well-trained to look for answers outside
of myself; what subjects to take in school, how to dress, what to
aspire to and be.
When most aspects of your life are pre-determined
for you, you live your life following other people’s answers. It
indulges the lazy in you because you do not have to do the heavy-lifting
work required to find your own answers.
For as long as you’re following other people’s paths, you’re going to be lost for a really long time.
Here’s what I’ve learned; you don’t exactly find answers. You discover them by consistently being true to yourself.
This may not be the usual, normal, comfortable and acceptable way to be but it is your authentic self.
I learned that to be true to myself, I’ve had to
break a lot of norms, re-align mine and others’ expectations of me and
in some cases develop the thick skin to completely go against long-held
norms. It is the price one must be prepared to pay… and it is more than
worth it.
My whole life can be summed up as a collection of
valuable experiences. I now turn around and weave it into structured
tools to enrich those in a quest to finding their own answers.
Ruligirwa-Kamara is an expert on Attitude & Human Potential. Sera@iuponline.com
Ruligirwa-Kamara is an expert on Attitude & Human Potential. Sera@iuponline.com
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