Something happened last night that made me realize I need to make a decision. How authentic do I intend to be?
One of the things I’ve learned from blogging is that the more honest you are, the more people seem to respond. I guess there’s something about being human that attracts other humans. Maybe it’s because so often our schools and workplaces and even our families and friends seem dead set on drumming the humanity out of us. We’re often expected to be bland, saintly, non-gender specific, politically correct, polished and spit-shined worker bees who do as we’re told so everyone can feel safe, warm, and fuzzy. And that’s nice. Real nice. It’s just not very interesting. And it’s certainly not creative.
Being mildly creative isn’t about being timid and sweet and playing it safe. It’s about slowing down enough to notice what’s going on around you and inside you, so you can find out what you like, what you don’t, and where you want to go. And it’s about taking steps in that direction even if they seem laughably tiny.
If that leads you to a love of classical music, yoga, and sixty-minute walks along pristine beaches, that’s great. But it’s equally great if it leads you to a love of death metal, slam dancing, and ten minute sets at a smoke-filled comedy club. You can learn to relax and still rock the house.
A key principle of being mildly creative is living your life; to do that, you’ll need to be yourself. After all, if you’re going to live in this world, you might as well be authentic and here are five reasons why.
1. It’s the Fair Thing to Be
In the past couple of years, I’ve had the opportunity to meet some of my heroes, and I discovered something that should have been no surprise. They’re human. They’re imperfect. They have strengths and weaknesses. They get themselves entangled in some of the same petty squabbles you and I find ourselves in from time to time. I guess I was surprised because many times our heroes have worked very hard to present themselves as heroes, as men and women who have found the answers to the mysteries of life and are thus worthy of our adoration and imitation.
And you and I can be guilty of building people up as something akin to flawless Greek gods only to later rip them to shreds when we notice the first small blemish. I think life might be a whole lot easier if we were all willing to admit how difficult it can be. It would certainly be the fair and honest thing to do.
With that in mind, I have a couple of confessions I need to make. One is that despite the fact that I’ve used my mildly creative principles to make a lot of positive changes in my life, I’m still struggling with an addiction to nicotine. That’s right; I’m a smoker. I’m not proud of it. In fact, I hate it, but I haven’t found a way to kick it yet. I’ve been afraid to admit that on my blogs, but it’s the truth. Maybe admitting it will enable me to talk and write about it more openly and finally put an end to it, but I haven’t done it yet and you need to know that, because you need to know that it’s okay to struggle. Just don’t give up.
The second thing I feel the need to tell you is that I’m not a religious person. I used to be, but I no longer am. I think I’m a spiritual person, but that’s a funky word that can mean a lot of things. Basically, I don’t believe in anything that can’t be questioned. Too many people, in my opinion, walk around pounding their chests with a great deal of unearned certainty. The world is full of unknowns and I’ve made my peace with that. I’m also at peace with the fact that people are going to disagree with me, and you don’t have to believe that everything I think, say, and do is gold in order to be my friend. I hope you can return the favor. I think that would be fair.
2. Once You Get the Hang of It, It’s a Whole Lot Easier than the Alternative
In my first attempts at blogging, I tried to present an image. That’s not a bad thing, but the image I was trying to present was a borrowed one. In fact, I was borrowing several, which is what happens when you’re not being yourself. And, if you’re forgetful like me, you forget which of the borrowed masks you’re supposed to be wearing on any given day.
It takes a lot of energy to decide which mask you’re going to wear, what costume you’re going to don, what parts of yourself you’re going to bury and hide. And it’s painful and unhealthy to walk around all day wearing spiritual clothing that doesn’t fit.
You might find it scary at first to be yourself if you’re not used to it, and especially if the people around you aren’t used to it. But the more you do it, the easier it becomes. You don’t have to lie. You don’t have to hide. You learn to say, “This is who I am. I hope you like it, but even if you don’t, at least you know who you’re dealing with.”
There had been a strain in my marriage for a long, long time. I think both Carol and I were trying to be what we thought the other person wanted, and when that didn’t match who we really were, it built resentment. But somewhere along this mildly creative journey of mine, I realized I had to tell her who I was, and I did.
I came home, sat her down, and told her all the things that really mattered to me and all the things that didn’t. I told her about the things I really believed and the things I never did and never would. I told her about the things I was going to try to do and the things I was never going to try again. I told her that I loved her and that I preferred her to all others, but that if being myself meant she had to reject me, I would survive.
The change was almost immediate. Today, we accept, respect, and enjoy each other a great deal more. And things are just a whole lot easier.
3. You’ll Attract People You Actually Enjoy Being Around
Some people are never going to get you. They’re not going to get why you would paint portraits of musicians on vinyl records or why you’re so joyful about being jobless or why you find something like this so effing funny. And that’s okay. If you want to be who you are, you have to let others do the same.
But some people are going to know precisely why you’re the way you are or will at least be interested in learning. They might even love you for it and you just might love them back and build some of the deepest, most rewarding relationships of your life.
In order to do that, however, you’ll have to let them see the deepest, truest parts of yourself. You’ll have to put yourself on a platter and let people have a sample. Some will take a whiff, turn up their noses, and walk away. But others will find you delightful and ask for more.
4. You’ll Find Energy You Never Knew You Had
I used to be a speech therapist. And I hated it. To make matters even worse, I felt guilty for hating it because I loved the people I served.
But loving people wasn’t enough. I discovered you had to love the way in which you loved them too.
I was trying to deny who I was in some weird attempt at martyrdom. If I’m a good person, I told myself, I’ll help these people even if I don’t enjoy it.
But every single day I woke up with ten pounds of dread on my chest. Speech therapy is repetitive work. You have to lead people through exercises where they practice saying the same thing, making the same sound, or completing the same task over and over and over and over again. You also have to keep track of their success, making little tally marks of their hits and misses. And much of the work is performed in small, quiet rooms where you sit for hours at a time.
If you could have stepped inside my brain, you would have seen and heard a trillion screaming neurons begging for mercy. I simply wasn’t engineered with this kind of work in mind. I have two modes in which I operate: crowd mode and loner mode. When I’m in crowd mode, I want to be moving about, talking with anyone and everyone, flailing my arms about, cracking corny jokes, and having a high old time. When I’m in loner mode, I want to be alone with my books and my music and my writing. I want to think and think deep. Speech therapy allowed for neither of these, and I constantly felt drained.
Today I do two things; I wait tables and I do this. Crowd mode. Loner mode. I’ve never felt so alive. If I ever stop waiting tables, I know I’ll have to replace it with something where I can go into crowd mode. Don’t worry. I’ve got lots of ideas.
The point of all this is that being authentic and doing the kinds of things that match your personality, utilize your greatest strengths, and tap into your inner genius will provide you with an energy that will pull you out of bed in the morning and even sustain you through the tough times. But go against your grain and you will feel zapped and, on many days, you will struggle with simply getting out of bed.
With the energy that comes from being authentic you’ll be far more capable of helping others than you’d be dragging yourself across the floor to each new appointment.
5. Overtime, You’ll Get Better at Being You
With your new found energy and endurance, you’ll be more apt to stay the course. If you stay the course, keep your focus, and do your work you’ll find yourself getting better. Your writing will improve. Your drawings will be more imaginative. Your business will grow. There’ll be more of you in your work than there’s ever been and you will be somehow bigger, bolder, smarter, happier.
And in case you don’t know it, that’s attractive. People like to be around people who are comfortable in their own skin. As Carol likes to tell me, “Confidence is sexy.” And I really want her to think I’m sexy, so I’m constantly working on it. And the only way I’ve found to build my confidence is to practice being myself each and every day.
I Might as Well Summarize
Okay, so there you have it. Being authentic is the fair thing to be, it’s easier than the alternative once you get the hang of it, it attracts people you’ll actually like spending time with, it will provide you with sustainable energy, and it can lead to a bigger, better you.
And besides, if you’re not willing to be you, no one will, so you might as well be the one.
Why not get some Quiet Inspiration?
You can also join me on Facebook and Twitter I’d love to meet you.




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Ken, I’m on this same wavelength today. I’ve been keeping my facets isolated. I have multiple blogs and websites, one for each facet. These past few days, I’ve been thinking about combining them into one place to form a complete me.
I’ve also been feeling guilty about wanting to give up a job which I’m not loving right now, despite everyone else’s insistence that it’s good for me.
I’m not making a decision about anything just yet, but you’ve given me much to think about. Thanks!
Hi, Kerrie.
I think the one-vs-multiple blog question is a matter of individual tastes. I’m getting ready to create some stuff about the benefits of temporary blogs, or at least evolving blogs that might address some of those issues for you.
Regarding the job, I’d never recommend anyone be as quick to leave a job as I have been in the past, because if you read much more of my writing, you’ll discover I’ve been a bit of a job hopper. But the crime wasn’t in leaving jobs that weren’t a good fit; it was in repeatedly taking them on. That’s one of the things I told Carol I was never going to try again.
Best of luck to you.
I like the real you, Ken.
You’re interesting and engaging, and so is this. Authentic people make the best friends, warts and all.
I’m glad we’re getting to know each other again.
Hey Barb.
Can’t wait til you get to Missouri. I need to pick your brain about Cafe Press and Zazzle too, by the way. Want to set up a little somethin-somethin here.
Ken, this is a great post on a huge, sad component of the human condition: the ways people continually look outside themselves and try to be what they think others want.
I love how you’ve very quietly shown how that just doesn’t work.
Thank you!
I just hope I wasn’t too quiet.
Great article with a lot of development of each point. So glad you didn’t cut it down to 100 words and 3 tips. We don’f find meaning in life, we MAKE meaning in life, and that is the success of authenticity. It’s not always easy, but everything else is so much worse.
Thanks Quinn.
I agree. You don’t wait for a purpose to fall from the sky. You build one. Thanks.
Ken! THAT WAS FANTASTIC! and most helpful to me right now on my own path…I’ve been having some similar thoughts lately and you’re filling in more of the blanks for me. So glad I met you on the joyfullyjobless.com brainstorming teleclass.
Hey, Lynn. How are you?
Thanks! Glad to have you stop by.
You said I’ve been filling in the blanks. Is that like Mad LIbs? Cool! I always loved those.
PS Thanks for being so open and honest with us. You’re right, people respect that and find that more interesting than our writing with our masks on. Wow!
It seems every time I read one of your posts, I think “is he camped inside my brain?” There are so many things on this post that I could have written… Don’t believe in anything that can’t be questioned? Check. Crowd mode and loner mode? Check.
Once again, well said!
By the way, have you read the book “Crossing the Unknown Sea – Work as a Pilgrimage of Identity”? I just started reading it and it feels like it was written with me in mind. I have a feeling you’d enjoy it too.
Thanks, Heather. I’ll put it on my list.
Ken,
I am so happy and truly inspired to hear your authentic voice, my friend and classmate in becoming a creative career coach. You still are a creative career coach even if it’s not your “job title” or site for income — in my opinion.
I’m inspired by this article and feel even more compelled to fulfill on my happiness in my career. I’m not wild about the old-fashioned term, career; it presumes bondage to a three decade job.
I feel joy not work when I support people (as coach) in designing a great life that keeps in mind unlimited change (lots of morphing or ongoing possibilities). This sometimes has to do with what they do for a living and oftentimes has to do with committing to (or authorizing) their power to create. Some even decide that one of their “create-a-great-life” projects is to write a book. I hope you keep writing Ken — your take on things is a huge contribution.
Thanks, Jennifer.
You know I love this one, Ken. Trying to be what you think people want you to be just creates a war inside yourself, which makes you all hesitate-ey, anxious, clumsy and tired, tired, TIRED. And even if other people don’t pick up on it consciously, they do pick up on in unconsciously – and you lead them to feel hestitate-ey, anxious, clumsy and tried around you. Be yourself and everyone gets to relax!
For me (and what I see in my clients too), the hardest part was making the change from trying to be something else to relaxing into myself. Because I had trained some people that I was like that and then when I stopped being like that they got a bit freaked or they didn’t really gel with the real you. I’ve had some major personal shifts again lately and found myself at a dinner party recently thinking, “I used to totally belong here, but I don’t think I do anymore…” And I always know that there’ll come a time when you’re surrounded with people who totally gel with the real you that you’ve stepped more fully into, but sometimes there’s a lag before they arrive, or before you realise who they are.
I’d love to know your thoughts on getting through this period…
Actually, I do have a story regarding this. To make it short, I had to leave a community in which I had been well received. I knew, as you stated, that I no longer belonged. But I had the luxury of moving away for a year. I used that time to begin figuring out who I really was and where I really belonged.
I guess it’s a process of quietly slipping out the door. You don’t have to make a big announcement. “Hey, I don’t belong here anymore!” You just look around the room and begin easing your way towards the exit, blessing everyone as you go.
Then you start the process of exploring and finding out where you do fit in.
I’ve been doing “authentic” forever. Have a look at FarrFeed and see if anyone you know is more open. Not bragging here, it’s just my makeup — can’t help it!
That, plus moving to Taos, where the energy simply peels you inside out.
The more honest all of us are, the more we advance human evolution. Can’t decide to do this, though. You can’t “will” it. It either comes from the heart, or it doesn’t…
I agree for the most part, but hearts make decisions too. You can reach a place where you take a good, long look at yourself and say I want no more of this and I want more of that and decide you’re going to pursue it.
Wow. Thank you for this (and to Hiro Boga for tweeting it..)
I, too, am finally learning to be authentic… starting with using my real voice on my professional blog, and now in my marriage, which is really really hard, and am still dealing with the fall-out.
I love the way you articulated these points, and will be saving this to refer back to often.
Thank you.
Thank you for your profound and wise article.
I was once an expert chameleon in my relationships. If I met someone I admired I would change my persona so I would be admired by them. It works at the beginning but eventually your true nature comes through and the person you admired loses respect for you. In a way, you’ve deceived them and yourself. This behaviour only leads to disappointment.
Now, I’m myself and loved for who I am. It’s a nice way to be and it is truely a path to happiness.
I hope lots of people read your article. Well done.
I’d rather be rejected for who I am than be falsely accepted for who I pretend to be. But the irony is that once YOU accept who you are, others have a tendency to follow suit.
Ken,
I really enjoy your writing and I love the way you think.
I’ve just recently started a blog and have some things I want to share but I’ll admit it’s a bit scary. I mean, really putting yourself “out there” but I totally agree with you that I am finding the more “me” I am, the more I attract the people I want to be with and the more I can relax and just be myself, flaws and all.
Thanks for sharing this!
Hiding is such hard work, isn’t it?
Hi Ken,
I really enjoyed reading this, as well as all the comments! I can’t tell you how this resonates with me at this point in my life! In fact, I just sat down with my (very supportive!) husband and had the same kind of talk with him that you had with your wife. I’ve been doing this “morph” thing for some time and it has been disconcerting at times, but I am finding my true, authentic self.
Great article! I look forward to reading more of your writing.
Have an awesome day!
Donna
And I look forward to hearing more about your morphing.
Ken….
One word: CHANTIX!
As honest and as real as I would like to be….after more years smoking than not smoking…..This is what has helped me….That is as REAL as I finally allowed myself to be….This was one habit I could not do on my own….
BEST OF LUCK!
Artfully Yours,
Patricia
Oh, I tried that. Made me sick. And I still smoked. Bear with me. I’m BECOMING a nonsmoker.
Ken, I’ve been walking around chewing on this one for days. I get it. I see the value. The topic keeps coming up since I read this post, so I know it’s a theme to which I need to pay attention. And yet, I have to ask, how do you do this with your family? Because my family, well, they are not such big fans of authentic me. They think I need to get a job and get married and do various other things that they want me to do that mostly depend on me not being myself. Mostly at this point I just avoid them, but that solution misses the point, because then I’m not being authentic, either. Authentic me wants to have her family in her life, just not at the expense of having the life she wants. Got any thoughts on this one? I’m all ears.
I do have some thoughts on this, but I think it would be best if I shared them in a post. I’ll do that in the upcoming week. Thanks for the great questions, Darx.
I’ve found the best way to be yourself is to perform acts of courage every day. Take baby steps toward being authentic. Namely, doing what you want to do despite what others think, say, or do in response to you being you.
Whatever makes you different is God expressing himself through you. In fact, our uniqueness is God differentiating himself.
As you go about finding yourself this may run many people the wrong way. I experienced this with a few members of my family. I kept going. It’s better to live on purpose, to live your own life, than to live your life according to other’s viewpoints.
Thanks for sharing your insight Ken.
What a great article and all of it is so true. If people would only surrender the images they hold in their own minds of what they “should” be (which is influenced by others), real freedom rises. Mental weights drop.
Being authentic, and being yourself in today’s world seems to be getting more and more difficult with all the demands from social media.
It’s amazing what happens when we surrender to life, let go of ego, let go of mental images of what we should be, and simply…be present. Be original. Be what our natural being wants to be, act how we want to act, say what we want to say…be just who we were made to be.
Thanks again for the great post!
Well said, Dayne.
good lord this is genius.
LOL. Good lord, my head won’t fit through the door!
This is good stuff. I’m kind of aspiring towards living such a life myself.
Regarding your smoking problem – ongoing research says that some people are genetically predisposed towards being able to easily quit smoking; and some aren’t. I’d say it’s all in the head. One can stop whenever one wants to. I’ve done that. I know people who’ve done that.
Thanks, Naresh.
I’ve been lurking your articles for a little while now, but this I think this one’s going to stick with me pretty well.
These ideals of simply being yourself are something I’ve struggled with for a long time, but reading this puts things into perspective a little more.
And I got to learn more about you too, that’s always good, eh?
Thanks, Ken.
Ken, one more kindred spirit has found your site (me)! I found you through Inspired at Home that you will be participating in the interview tomorrow evening. I’ll be listening (and will have my turn at being interviewed on Sept. 13). Your articles are truly inspiring; this one, in particular, outlines the decisions I had to make while I was getting back to my own authentic self. The toughest one was: “Will they still love me when they find out who I truly am?” The answer: the people who really mattered to me – yes. The not-so-critical ones – no. Being authentic is the only way to go; trying to be the “right” person is draining and serves no one. I use a similar approach in my writing workshops.
Thanks again, Ken. I look forward to more (BTW, you could collect all of your articles into a book…)
Hi Tina. I love kindred spirits. I once wrote on Facebook that there’s no fuel like a kindred spirit. Thanks for filling up the tank.