There Is Not Enough

One of the top stressful thoughts of the whole year that people have shared with me has been “I am not good enough.”

There may be slight variations, like just “I am not enough” or “I don’t have enough” of something.

Or the big dramatic way to put it “I WILL NEVER, NEVER, EVER BE ENOUGH!”

Enough is an interesting word. I’ve used it a lot myself.

Not being or having enough of something can be so, so stressful. And usually, the stress comes right alongside the thought…practically instantly. Without the thought being questioned.

There I am, living my life, and someone I care about sees me, or hears me say something, or watches me, or encounters me, and something happens, and it seems like they are not pleased.

Something went wrong! Things naturally are supposed to be easy, sweet and kind…right?

Or I myself have images in my head of how grand life would be if only I got it together, stopped doing “x”, started doing “y”, changed some things about myself. In other words, some improvements could definitely be made in the department of ME.

Or I notice that I want something, or someone close to me wants something, and the thing that is wanted is in short supply (money, time, attention, love, connection).

With all these things, there is something MISSING. Not enough of something.

It is good to spend some time in inquiry, asking yourself, when you have these “not enough” thoughts just what exactly you believe is absent. Like what are the qualities, the feelings, you think aren’t here?

What would you have, if you had enough of that thing, or that person, or that substance?

If I really had “enough” money, I would relax, kick back, read more than I already do, watch more good movies, not get up quite as early, travel more, go to more workshops and lectures, fix parts of my house, do more no-fee work with the community, take a writing break to finish my book, contribute to the scholarship fund.

And what would I have, if I had THAT? Awareness, knowledge, fun, connection, security, meaning, rest.

If you were good enough, what would you actually be? How would you feel?

I love when Byron Katie responded to a woman who said “I’m not good enough”. She asked “Good enough for what?!”

Excellent question.

It’s like there are our own images floating around showing us pictures of what it COULD be like, how things COULD be better, how it COULD have gone much more smoothly, how we COULD have not made that mistake or blunder.

Images of better versions of life, of me, of the people I know, of the world.

And a big chasm between the two. Oh that gap! So annoying! Why can’t we just get over THERE in that beautiful better scene? JEEZ!

“Let’s suppose that rain washes out a picnic. Who is feeling negative? The rain? Or YOU? What’s causing the negative feeling? The rain, or your reaction? When you bump your knee against a table, the table’s fine. It’s busy being what it was made to be–a table. The pain is in your knee, not the table. The mystics keep trying to tell us that reality is all right. Reality is not problematic. Problems exist only in the human mind.” ~Anthony De Mello. 

When I bump up against the image of a more perfect, better version of myself that would be “enough”, or I bump up against the idea that this reality, with this much money, is not adequate…when I bump up against some vision of what I want and I believe I can’t have it, or I can’t feel peaceful without it…whenever I think there is not enough of something…Good News.

It’s in my own fearful thinking. I am only believing that without this thing or essence or person that I want, I am not happy. Without some improvement, I am not happy.

So, my mind is doing this: I am not quite good enough….I need more goodness or skill or awareness, I need to be better at “x” than I already am, I need to fix myself or there will be a long drawn-out life of suffering and unhappiness and never becoming enough.

Is that true? Are you sure?

 “True personal growth is about transcending the part of you that is not okay and needs protection. This is done by constantly remembering that you are the one inside that notices the voice talking. That is the way out.”~ Michael Singer in The Untethered Soul

That voice that considers everything and comments on it not being enough, including YOU…it is only a voice. We all have it.

But we can also all take a look at it. It’s such a drama queen, have you noticed? So serious!

Who would I be without the thought that there’s not enough? This is REALLY imagining that it’s not possible to not have enough, if you couldn’t even have that idea.

I would feel so excited, aware, relaxed. I would feel secure, joyful, peaceful. Open to whatever is next. Silent. Pleased. Waiting. WOW.

Who knows what could happen with this state of mind.

Love, Grace

Being Who You Are Is Enough

A few days ago in our teleclass “Money, Work and Business” we questioned the belief “I have to do what they say”. 

I pretty much believed this since about age five. With school, parents, authority. It is not an uncommon belief.

Even if it’s not that stressful, like you are clearly not being FORCED to do something, one participant still found the thought present as she believed she had to do what the experts say in order to become successful online.

Think about what you think you HAVE to do today in order to get what you want.

  • I have to pick up the repaired television
  • I have to write out my marketing plan
  • I have to work on my curriculum for the new workshop
  • I have to spend more time on Facebook
  • I have to schedule time for training/learning new things about business
  • I have to get more money
  • I have to call the dishwasher repair shop
  • I have to weed the dandelions out of my yard
  • I have to call that person back

I remember writing down the belief “I have to PUSH to be successful”. This could apply in so many areas: training for an athletic event, running your own business, talking to your kids about cleaning their rooms, talking to your kids about their homework, planning a wedding, getting a good deal, meditating every day to reach enlightenment, going to therapy, getting a degree, reading spiritual books, enrolling in programs to change your behavior.

The fourth question in The Work is “who would you be without the thought?” So who would I be without the thought that I HAVE to do it? Anything troubling you’d like to go over first?

Oh no! I might lie down on the grass outside in the sun, like a cat, and do NOTHING!! NADA!!  EVER!!!

I need to push myself because otherwise, I’m a no-good, lazy, do-nothing, rude, selfish, unorganized, unsuccessful bump on a log. Achieving nothing. A failure. And I’ll never get anywhere.

Are you sure?

If you were walking along a beautiful pathway, and you saw a person or an animal ahead lying on the ground with a broken leg….would you do nothing?

If you lay down on the couch and decided to stay there until you felt like getting up without the thought that you SHOULD get up….would you stay there forever?

If you noticed that you wanted something, like food, heat, rest, conversation, touch, laughter, money….are you sure that you have to push yourself to receive these things? Could you be OK with the wanting? Could you still be happy?

Maybe being yourself, your own amazing, unique, wonderful self, is all you need to do. No extra pushing required. Just noticing that you do things for the joy of it or because you naturally do it, without thinking.

As Katie says, “drop the maybe“.

Just the other day I received an email from a woman who has been a client for one-on-one sessions and also a participant in one of my teleclasses a year ago. She has been amazingly courageous and continued to question her beliefs about money and her business, and other difficulties in her life in the past.

This kind woman said in her email that she had now joined a group where she was giving 10% of her income to organizations or people who fed her spiritually.

She sent me a donation to continue my writings.

Tears welled up in me in gratitude. Once again, this is an example of the turnaround from when I first started that inquiry five years ago. “I do NOT need to push myself, I need to be easy and gentle with myself.”

“I had no idea that being your authentic self could make me as rich as I’ve become. If I had, I’d have done it a lot earlier.” ~ Oprah Winfrey

With love, Grace