Vulnerability Is Strength
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16 people had breakthroughs this week. Will the next one be you?
One thing for you to think about
Vulnerability is the willingness to be hurt or judged for your thoughts and feelings. Therefore, vulnerability is not weakness, but a form of strength.
Reflect: Then consider sharing this thought with others.
Two things for you to ask yourself
What thoughts or feelings do you feel the need to hide? Why?
Recommended: Use these as journaling prompts for the week.
One thing for you to try this week
Be vulnerable with someone you trust. Share with them the part of you that you’re scared to let the world see, and let me know how that feels.
Remember: Small changes lead to lasting breakthroughs. Reply to this email and let me know how it went for you.
New This Week
Podcast: How to Fear Less, Spark More Creativity, and Choose Better Problems in Life
Fear of failure isn’t really about failure—it’s about what failure means to us. We’re not scared of messing up; we’re scared of being judged, embarrassed, or proven our worst insecurities right. But the people who actually succeed at anything are the ones willing to suck at it long enough to get good. In this latest podcast episode, we break down why failure feels so terrifying, how social comparison messes with our heads, and why the loudest critics are usually the ones who’ve never done a damn thing themselves.
We also dig into the science of why boredom can spark better ideas, why our addiction to content might be making us less creative, and whether we should all do a digital detox before our brains turn into overstimulated mush. Finally, we wrap things up with a simple but profound question: If life is just an endless series of trade-offs, what are the best problems to have? Because problems never go away—you just get to level up to better ones. Enjoy.
Last week’s breakthroughs
In last week’s newsletter, I asked you to do something that’s important to you despite the risk of being criticized for it.
This is exactly what one reader has been doing:
Just have a career in Performing Arts and critics both professionals and others, friends, family, are there. Yes critics can pull musicians up, but it can be psychologically tough.
I am someone who has learned to live on the edge, part of life in the PA world. This time last year I courageously decided after doing a comedy course to deliver my life so far into a one-woman show ‘Guilty Pleasures.’ Toughest thing I’ve done.
So glad I went ahead and performed. Yes I’m a sassy super fit fabulous 74-year-old. And shall keep creating forever. Bugger critics. I did myself proud and know most people would never put themselves out there as I did.
Another reader is not quite ready to shrug off criticism, and I have some tips for them you might also find helpful:
Why do I care so much? Or in Mark Manson words, why do I give all these fucks?
Mulling that question, I realized that not feeling good enough, a core value of mine, is a feeling. And so I can’t control it, and I can’t fix it by doing things on the outside, and it won’t get fixed by getting outside approval. It really doesn’t matter who or what in the far-away past is responsible for planting that feeling. It’s inside me, and it’s unlikely to ever go away. It can’t be fixed, and it can’t be satisfied.
So, then, what can I do? The quick answer is, ‘Nothing.’ The more productive answer is to side-step the feeling. To let it be—that ‘letting go’ thing; to not give a fuck about that feeling, stop feeding it, and ‘do life.’
And how do you stop feeding it? I have no fucking clue, but perhaps awareness is enough to get started. I dare to imagine that when I am not a prisoner of ‘not good enough,’ I can share my writing, play music loud enough that it carries outside my room, apply for that job, visit my kids, join an online community, and have sushi for lunch every so often.
Letting a feeling go is a useful temporary strategy, but unless you’re a Buddhist monk, you are unlikely to get good at letting your feelings go all the time in every situation. Here are a couple suggestions for managing a chronic, negative feeling that maybe don’t get broadcast enough.
First, once you have an awareness of the feeling, develop a non-negative feeling about the feeling. In an old article, I called these “meta-emotions”—we all have them. We feel sad (an emotion) but then we feel guilty about our sadness (a meta-emotion).
Interestingly, it’s rarely the emotion that screws us up, it’s almost always the meta-emotion. We get this idea that we shouldn’t be sad and therefore, we beat ourselves up and make ourselves feel worse and then carry over all this self-judgment into other areas of our life.
Try to develop positive meta-emotions around your feelings of inadequacy. Accept that this just seems to be a part of you, and instead of dreading it or wishing it wasn’t there, develop a playful attitude around it. “Oh, there’s my inadequacy again, always showing up just when I need it.” Sometimes you can even name it. My wife and I have a playful name for her perfectionism. We talk about it as if it’s an actual person and make jokes about it. It’s actually incredibly helpful, not only for awareness, but to make sure our meta-emotions about it are positive and non-judgmental.
Once you’re in this place where you can playfully accept a negative emotion, the next question is how to channel that emotion. Feelings of inadequacy can actually be incredibly productive, if you consciously channel them in a healthy way. When you are aware of the feeling, ask yourself, “What can I do with this feeling that will leave me better off?” Maybe that’s some extra work. Maybe that’s reaching out to a friend and saying nice things. Maybe that’s simply connecting with a partner or family member and letting them know how you feel.
What’s wild is that once you develop those two skills—playful acceptance of a negative emotion, and productive channeling of it—that negative feeling stops being negative. You’re able to sit with it in a way that no longer causes you to suffer and it leads to productive actions in the real world. It’s almost like you begin to recognize it for what it is: a silly joke your brain likes to play on you. And for years you fell for it, again and again. But now you don’t. Now you’re in on the joke. And that makes all the difference.
As always, send your breakthroughs by simply replying to this email. Let me know if you’d prefer to remain anonymous.
Until next week,
Mark Manson
#1 New York Times Bestselling Author
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