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I Wish I Had Known This at Twenty-Five
“Where we think we need more self-discipline, we usually need more self-love.”
-Tara Mohr
What piece of advice would you give your 25-year-old self? Sure, she may not have listened, but like any loving parent, you do what you can to steer your children in the right direction. That head-strong seeker was only doing her best. And yet today, you have matured into the space of a bit more perspective and balance. You have a lot to offer your younger, stubborn self.
Me? I would have a spirited come-to-Jesus about how to relax into the unknown one brave and wobbly step at a time. I’d tell her that having all the answers isn’t half as important as asking honest questions.
Specifically, I’d love for her to understand what it means to have a growth mindset as opposed to a fixed one. Less either-or and more both-and.
As a recovering perfectionist, I’ve been all too familiar with what it means to have a fixed mindset. Let me explain. A fixed mindset is a way of thinking that is rigid and narrow. It’s all about pass or fail, win or lose, good or bad, black and white. It’s rooted in judgment rather than curiosity. It’s refusing to take myself on a brisk 20-minute walk because I didn’t have enough time to do my hour-plus high-intensity workout.
Here’s another example, you have your 6-month review at work. Your boss gives you high marks in several areas but points out one specific necessary improvement in your performance on a big project.
A fixed mindset self-criticizes, labeling your performance as a failure. It disregards the praise and zeros in on the area of improvement.
A growth mindset celebrates positive feedback and understands the value of constructive criticism for future success. It sees life as a slew of peaks and valleys all leading to personal evolution and expansion.
A growth mindset is the Petrie dish that breeds resilience. Whereas a fixed approach creates rigidity, closing us off from abundance and opportunity.
This isn’t about glossing over reality. It’s about softening your approach to the inevitable ebbs and flow of life.
Spend some time this week pondering this:
What area of your life could you stand to soften into?
Is it your relationship with food, your body, parenting, or work?
Is it your self-care?
Whatever it may be, I believe a great way to find out is to pay attention to our self-talk, that often nagging inner critic that rages on, involuntarily.
Write it all down.
I love what Tara Mohr says, “Where we think we need more self-discipline, we usually need more self-love.”
Love & Gratiitude,
Katie
Your Handbook for Navigating Seasonal Depression
“It is during our darkest moments that we must focus to see the light.”
-Aristotle Onassis
For some, it’s the most wonderful time of the year. We’ve been patiently waiting on the edge of our seats since Home Depot rolled out their Halloween decorations back mid-August. The anticipation of fall weather, the slew of heavy-hitting holidays, the countless excuses to consume creative forms of sugary carbs at every turn, the invasion of busyness, what have you.
For others of us, this season is painfully sad—even frightful. The days get shorter, precious sunlight is snuffed out hours earlier, physical energy is drained, and loneliness rolls in like dark, bulbous clouds before a hurricane.
I have definitely experienced more of the latter. Seasonal depression is slang for Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD…aptly). It’s not “depression light” and it shouldn’t be dumbed down to the “winter blues” either. It is a subtype or specific kind of major depression that is symptomatic with the changing seasons, especially fall and winter months.
There is so much pressure to be “merry and bright” leading up to the holidays, which can really leave those of us seasonally-challenged feeling misunderstood, if not pissed off.
In my experience, I remember years when all I could think about was surviving the weeks and months of cold and dark—Thanksgiving and Christmas were simply another reminder that I felt so alone and afraid. Afraid of what? Perhaps afraid that there was something wrong with me or it would always be this way. Or maybe I was scared of being untethered and insecure in life. Whatever the reason, I just wanted to get through it all and land safely on the other side when the days would contract even just a minute or two each day.
I’ve been pretty open about my experience with depression, so you might guess that those of us who deal with major depression also deal with SAD. This can be true but doesn’t have to be. Similar to Postpartum depression, existing depression doesn’t always set the stage. Oftentimes, they do go hand-in-hand.
It was always so helpful for me to know that I wasn’t alone in my struggle with SAD, or ongoing depression for that matter. That said, I want to open up the dialog here today and cut through all the fluffy expectations we fall prey to around this time of year as well as drop some helpful ways to readjust and navigate the season a bit differently.
If you experience a noticeable shift in mood, physical activity, patience for people, energy level, sleep, and desire to participate...keep reading. If you are a human being with a heartbeat...keep reading. I have a hunch someone in your life needs your grace and support because they suffer from SAD.
There are obvious and not so obvious reasons for SAD. The ones we all agree on are simple though: with less exposure to sunlight during the fall and winter months, our biological clock can often get pummeled, leaving depleted levels of serotonin (a brain chemical that helps govern and boost our mood) and melatonin...that gorgeous stuff of sleep.
I’m hugely light-sensitive. Visualize that bratty kid who screams at the top of her lungs when she stubs her big toe. Yep, that’s about my pain tolerance to diminishing light. Even walking into a dark house at the end of the day can viscerally affect my mood. Windows are also my best friend. I’m a total extrovert when it comes to windows—the more the merrier.
So, when the world goes dark around 4:30 pm, you better believe I’ve learned to emotionally rearrange my experience after 41 years.
Here are some helpful tools I’ve come to rely on in the dim days ahead.
Routine
Structure is the sensitive soul’s best friend. Oh, how I’ve come to love structure. For me, this looks like intentionally planning out my days from week to week. In the fall and winter months, it looks like starting a bit earlier so I can enjoy more sunlight, even just 30 minutes.
When emotions whip us around, taking their throne in the driver seat of life, it can be so easy to slip into the victim mentality, feeling powerless. Having a set structure, or routine for our days helps us reclaim the steering wheel.
My morning ritual is everything to me. It allows me time and space to practice the things that ground me like meditation, writing and reading. In the coming days and months, experiment by putting some new structures into place to facilitate a more ordered interior landscape.
Exercise
Exercise has officially become my antidepressant of choice throughout my lifetime. Hear me out, antidepressants can be a very helpful piece in the emotional puzzle when necessary, they most definitely have for me in dark places along the way. However, exercise is one of the most effective and proven ways there is of improving overall mood and stress levels. Getting a good sweat also helps us sleep more soundly.
It’s tempting to let workouts trail off around the holidays, but I say we fight for them. Make it a daily routine, like brushing your teeth. We owe it to ourselves. Procrastinate that leftover apple crumb cake, it will still be there on the other side.
Avoid Numbing
I get it. When depression sneaks in, we often lose a desire for the things we typically love to do. We want to isolate, sleep, numb. It’s so much easier, right?
Couple this with the fact that these coming months are like an open invitation to indulge whether that be with food, booze, online shopping, social media, you name it. There may be a temporary relief to our pain, however, we're also numbing positive emotions as well. Happiness, excitement, and gratitude are harder to come by and we get thrown right back into the tangled thicket of depression once again.
Support
So rather than numb, reach out. This time of year can indeed be a wonderful time of year when we reach out for the support we need. Identify “safe people” who know and accept you where you are. Make a list of two or three and reach out to them and let them know your struggle with SAD.
If you don’t have said 2-3 people, a good place to start is therapy. I can count several times I relied heavily on my therapist for support during these crucial months when all of the “stuff” listed above seemed impossible. There is absolutely no shame in seeking professional help. It is a courageous act of self-compassion.
I’m here for you on this journey. Again, you’re not alone. This is all part of learning to trust the process, even when hope feels distant and the light grows dim. There is a bold light within you, this may be the perfect opportunity to find its glow.
Love & Grace,
Katie
Your Brain on the Enneagram: A Chat with Dr. Jerome Lubbe
“Neuroplasticity tells us that we are capable of change. If we understand the function of the brain, we can improve our way of life.”
-Dr. Jerome Lubbe
Last week, I had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Jerome Lubbe, an innovative thinker, functional neurologist, and author of The Brain-Based Enneagram: you are not A number, to talk Enneagram and the brain. It was truly fascinating.
The Enneagram stole my heart 14 years ago, but neuroscience and specifically, neuroplasticity came in hot on my radar in 2015. It was around then that I started studying trauma and its effect on our brains and bodies.
You may be wondering what the heck the brain has to do with the Enneagram. And that would be fair. That’s why I’m excited to unpack it a bit here today.
According to Dr. Jerome:
“Neuroscience tells us that our brains are plastic. They can and do change. Brain anatomy reveals that our operating system is composed of three primary components which mirror the structure of the Enneagram:
Brain-stem (instinct triad),
Right hemisphere (intuition triad), and
Left hemisphere (intellect triad).
Functional Neurology shows us how to target areas of the brain in order to physically improve the efficiency of the distinct natures of our identity.
The Enneagram integrates seamlessly. It provides language and definition for the process of development. It opens channels for growth by connecting values and expressions to brain function. It offers a guide for increasing physical, mental, and emotional efficiencies by practically implementing effective methods at effective times in effective ways. The Brain-Based EnneagramTM empowers every human being on the planet to engage with the brain, heal and rebuild after trauma, encourage and strengthen efficiencies, and nourish the relational, integrated nature of our whole identity.”
Simply stated, understanding how our brains work and develop habits of attention, thought, and emotion over time directly affects our behaviors and the arc of our wellbeing and experienced reality. When you integrate this knowledge of the brain with the effective self-understanding tool of the Enneagram, you are able to understand how you got where you are and can begin putting into practice a new, empowered way forward.
Sure, knowledge is power. However, once we are able to implement tools (the Enneagram) with this knowledge, power translates to growth and transformation.
Something I appreciate about Dr. Jerome’s approach to the Enneagram is his advocacy in our capacity for all nine types. He provides in his extensive research and testing that we can’t be reduced to one number. Instead, we have fluid elements of all nine that ebb and flow with life’s unfolding. This allows for the complexity of the human identity and is a sigh of relief to the boxy, stereotypical reign of type.
As I like to say, we have a dominant type (in my case, a four), yet also have strains of each of the other eight in my Whole Identity Profile, as he has pioneered.
The best part of all of this is that Dr. Jerome’s book The Brain-Based Enneagram: you are not A number, releases today! His personal journey, breadth of work, and available resources for us is simply stunning. I hope you’ll check out his book, especially if you’ve experienced frustration around knowing your type!
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
P.S. Tune in for my upcoming Instagram Live chat with singer/songwriter/podcaster, Seth Abram this Thursday at 11 am CT!
Shifting Shadows: Doing the Work of the Enneagram
“What you resist, persists.”
-Carl Jung
I grew up in the crown jewel of the deep south, Mobile, AL. We did many strange things like take ballroom dancing in fifth grade. It was hands down the most awkward thing I’d experienced until then, and I’ve always felt at home on a dance floor.
This was different though. Kids from a couple of neighboring schools would gather on a Thursday night at 5 o’clock in a big gymnasium at St. Ignatius Catholic church and learn all the old-school couples dances like the fox trot, waltz, and others I’ve purposely erased from my memory. The most unbearable part of it wasn’t learning the dances, it was learning the dances with the boys. They were hyper, smelly, and had no rhythm. They also thought they were beyond cool.
My favorite part of the night was when I spotted my mom’s minivan headlights in the carpool line. She’d swoop in and pick me up and we’d proceed to Checkers for the long-awaited chocolate milkshake(s). I had to take the edge off somehow.
Learning to dance with our shadow, or shameful parts can feel just as unpleasant. They are those parts of us that we’d rather not talk about. Early on, we learned to hide them from the world around us for acceptance—for survival. They are the parts of you that if someone saw, they might ultimately reject. You may be found out…and deemed unloveable.
What are the shadow parts you’d rather forget about? Is it depression, body shame, singleness, financial troubles, or even sexual trauma as a child? Whatever they are, much like the smelly boys at ballroom, we’ve got to learn to lean in, let go, and learn to dance with them.
The Enneagram is all about integration. The less compartmentalized, or fragmented we are, the more integrated and whole we will become. Just as we are made up of hundreds of different body parts, muscles, and organs, we also have so many different parts of our emotional, relational, and creative beings.
Often times in therapy sessions with clients, these parts come up. Take anxiety for example. Anxiety is an emotion or part of us that can be immobilizing. We often deal with it by numbing, fixing, or running from it. Anxiety is really just a shadow part of us that needs compassion and understanding just like, say, the creative part of us. When we stuff our anxiety and try to avoid it, we really just give it more power and as a result, create imbalance.
What might dancing with this anxious shadow look like? Well, first of all, we must listen to and get to know it. This allows us to cultivate empathy for that anxious part of us. After all, she has been working overtime for a while now to keep us performing, staying safe, and “on the ball.”
Shadow work is really a reckoning with parts of ourselves we’ve misjudged for a long time. The payoff is wholeness—flow. It’s realizing those parts we’ve been hiding for so long aren’t so terrible after all. In fact, they end up being the best parts because they are the most thorough teachers.
That anxious part of you desperately wants you to see her for who she really is: someone who deeply cares about your future, yet may go about it clumsily. She wants you to sit with her, commune with her, and realize the worst thing that can happen isn’t so bad in the end because you have other resilient parts of you that can step in and take over when she needs to sit the next song out.
Take a minute and visualize the part of you that you dislike, a lot. Perhaps you feel guilty about this part or constantly judge it. What does she look like? What is she doing? In the same minute, take one step towards her… then another, and another. You left her alone a long time ago and she feels abandoned, even scared. She knows you dislike her but she desperately longs to know you and play on the same team. She needs you big time.
If this feels completely terrifying, it should. Your brain is freaking out because it has no idea what it’s doing. Hang in there though, this is perhaps the most life-giving work you’ve ever done. Dancing with shadows or smelly boys is probably not on your bucket list. Oh but I bet I know what is…
Freedom.
Love & Gratitude,
Katie
Growing Beyond Your Enneagram Type
“So perhaps the best thing to do is stop writing instructions and get on with the book.”
-Winnie the Pooh
I believe the big reason people sour so quickly from the Enneagram is that it’s so misused by the rest of us. We become Bible-thumping zealots – throwing numbers and jargon around – insensitive to the fact that those around us are not interested or open to being objectified…and reduced. I mean, I get it. I was “that girl” who was an Enneagram evangelist there in the first couple of years: typing people left and right, preaching about growth and disintegration, and passing the plate of approval so everyone would “buy-in.”
And I meant well – truly. It’s been life-changing for me in my process, lending a clean lens to the distorted picture of my life I’d been living out of for so long. Yet it took me years to metabolize the fact that lasting Enneagram transformation speaks for itself. I didn’t have to. The proof is, as they say, in the pudding.
What I didn’t understand then that I do now is this: the Enneagram is not about becoming more like your type. The Enneagram is about living beyond type and into the true you. It’s about identifying your dominant type in order to fully understand it: strengths, weaknesses, motivations, values, and behaviors. But it’s not some Venus fly-trap, swallowing you up, lickety-split, right when you get up close. It’s about identifying the limiting parts of your personality in order to release and re-write the parts that no longer fit.
I’ll never forget my month-long Narrative Enneagram teacher training a few years back in Menlo Park, A. I was expecting the room to be filled with ego and a lot of it. Instead, I remember walking in the first day and much to my surprise, feeing pretty stumped. I couldn’t really figure out anyone’s type (though I couldn’t resist trying!). This group had done some deep inner work, and lot’s of it. They were living beyond their type, beyond the rough and ready edges of personality, into their authentic selves.
When we work with the Enneagram and live in that space, the edges do soften. Relationships run smoother, life’s inevitable stressors become more manageable, and the present moment – more vibrant.
Being reduced to a number is pretty lame. Understanding the truth about how you operate in the world and the story you’ve been living out of is life-changing. Why? Because that means you get to decide if it still serves you. If it doesn’t, guess what?
Yep….you can change it.
When you’re stuck in your type, you’re also stuck in the familiar past – so predictable.
You are so much more than a number, my friend. You are the writer, creator, director, and leading lady of your story, all in one!
Love & Gratitude,
Katie