Wednesday May 15, 2024
What Do You Want?
“It’s no wonder we claim to not know what we want,” says host Leslie Randolph on today’s episode of Why Didn’t They Tell Us. “We’ve been programmed to follow a path that isn’t for us. It’s actually for everyone else’s perception of us.” When what we truly want comes into conflict with all of the expectations placed on us by society, we experience what she calls ‘should shame.’ Women, especially, are given a rigid and narrow set of rules by which they are expected to live, and when you want to deviate from them, an emotional deficit begins to grow.
Before Leslie found her calling as a coach, she experienced a lot of the same conflict. She shares the story of discovering her passion, hiding behind a safe and respectable job option and how she finally summoned the courage to be honest about what she really wanted and never looked back.
What will you do with your one, precious life? Join Leslie to learn how to discover your purpose and passion, as well as the self-confidence to go after it.
Quotes
- “First of all, I think so many of us believe that there’s a wrong answer, like, ‘I know what I want but it’s not what I should want.’ Whenever I hear the word ‘should,’ an alarm goes off in me because I know that ‘should’ always leads to shame.” (3:20 | Leslie Randolph)
- “One of the reasons we experience ‘should shame’ is because the ‘should’ aligns with an external expectation versus an internal desire, and I believe that women are especially susceptible to societal ‘shoulds.’” (6:02 | Leslie Randolph)
- “No sooner did I hear that voice of ‘That’s what you should do, that’s what you want,’ did I hear another voice come in that said, ‘You want to do what? You want to be a coach? What’s a coach?’ I had some strong opinions about it and it was so informed by those societal ‘shoulds.’ (15:03 | Leslie Randolph)
- “At that moment, that moment when, at the height of the pandemic where we had this realization that life is so short and everything can change in a moment, and that desire became more important than the ‘shoulds.’ It’s my life. I want to do this, I want to create this impact, I want to help people. That meant more to be than the ‘You want to be a what?’ voice. I turned down the volume on that voice, on societal ‘shoulds,’ and cranked up the volume on the ‘This is what I want’ voice. And obviously you know how this story ends.” (19:21 | Leslie Randolph)
- “Don’t let ‘I don’t know’ be the compass. It will keep you stuck.” (21:51 | Leslie Randolph)
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