âWe are constantly invited to be who we are.â ~Henry David Thoreau
When your circumstances invite you to present your true self to others, do you accept the invitation?
I think of authentic communication as sharing the unfiltered essence of ourselves with others, including our identities, feelings, needs, boundaries, and desires.
Itâs taken me many years to learn how to communicate this way. Iâve written in prior posts that speaking my truth once felt like an insurmountable challenge, like rolling an elephant up a hill or finding another living being who actually likes Nickelback. (Anyone? No?)
I was plagued by inauthenticity.
I would leave conflicts wishing Iâd spoken up for myself; leave social settings feeling totally drained; over-commit to obligations and under-commit to activities that brought me joy; agree to be intimate with people, only to later regret my decision; and give more than I received in the majority of my relationships.
Somewhere beneath the layers of people-pleasing, white lies, and insecurity, I knew there was a bold, confident, self-actualized woman. I wanted, more than anything, to become her.
On the journey to becoming that woman, I have learned that authentic communication is like working a muscle: hard at first, but ever easier with exercise.
As with all exercises, you donât run the 400 meter dash right out the of gates. You stretch; you jog a lap; you warm up.
Here are nine easy ways you can warm up your authenticity muscle today to prepare for a lifetime of authentic communication.
1. Name how you feel, right now, as you read this.
âThere is something wonderfully bold and liberating about saying yes to our entire imperfect and messy life.â ~Tara Brach
Letâs start off on the right foot. Take thirty seconds to reflect on how you feel right now. Notice whatâs going on in your heart; notice what type of tension you might be carrying in your neck and shoulders; notice how it feels to let a deep breath land in your chest.
Perhaps youâve been operating on autopilot since the moment you woke up and reached for your phone. Perhaps youâve stumbled down an Internet wormhole, and this is the first time in hours youâve remembered you have a body. In order to communicate your feelings authentically, you first must know how you feel.
2. When a friend/family member/barista asks how you are, tell them the truth.
âThe speaking will get easier and easier. And you will find you have fallen in love with your own vision, which you may never had realized you had⊠And at last youâll know with surpassing certainty that only one thing is more frightening than speaking your truth. And that is not speaking.â ~Audre Lorde
Social convention tells us that there are only two acceptable answers to the question âHow are you?â âGoodâ and âFine.â This is a microcosmic example of our cultural disdain for sharing our authentic feelings. Nonetheless, the habit persists.
Remember: Inauthenticity breeds inauthenticity. Authenticity breeds authenticity. Give yourself permission to say âIâm a little sad today, but Iâm hanging in thereâ or âIâm fantastic; todayâs been an inspiring dayâ or âIâm so stressed I canât even feel my face.â
Whateverâs going on for you, give yourself permission to share it. These small moments of authenticity replace the loneliness of emotional isolation with the belonging of vulnerability, and allow you to receive othersâ gifts in the form of compassion and empathy.
3. If you have nothing to say, embrace the silence.
âTo become authentic, we require a thirst for freedom.â ~Don Mateo Sol
As a recovering people-pleaser, I spent much of my life believing it was my responsibility to facilitate, or ease the tension in, conversations. For many years, I feared âawkward silencesâ the way someone else might fear spiders or clowns.
First dates, group gatherings, work parties, and girlsâ nights found me paving endless roads of conversation. For every answer, I had a follow-up question, and in every second-long pause, I rushed to find a story to tell.
Eventually, I realized that my silence-avoidance only led to 1) complete emotional exhaustion, and 2) many moments where I looked back and wondered, âWhy did I even say that? I donât think cybernetics are interesting at allâŠâ
Free yourself from the pressure to perform. Embrace the silence. Sometimes, the most authentic response is to say nothing at all.
4. When someone makes reference to a show, movie, or news story you havenât seen, tell them you havenât seen it.
âI have the right to say âI donât know.ââ ~Edmund Bourne
I warn every new friend that I am pop-culture illiterate. If you name a TV series, movie, actor, actress, or rising pop star, the odds are I have no idea who she/he/they are. (Iâm pleased to report that last week, I watched The Godfather, and on my list for next week is Breaking Bad. Iâm making progress in this department.)
Anyhow, in the past, when friends made reference to such icons in conversation, I often feigned familiarity to help the conversation flow more easily. These were totally inconsequential white lies, right?
Iâm not so sure. White lies add up, like small bricks laying the foundation for a falsified persona. I hyperbolized my knowledge because I wanted to feel a sense of belonging. (Nothing malicious about that: we all want to belong!) But presenting a false self in order to feel a sense of belonging doesnât generate a real sense of belonging. It simply makes our authentic selves feel less acceptable.
Tell your friends you havenât seen the most recent episode of Game of Thrones. Liberate yourself from the impossible responsibility of being all-knowing.
5. When someone asks your preference on a simple matter, tell them the truth.
âYou denying your heartâs desires is not noble. Itâs a waste of some damn good desires.â ~Jen Sincero
If you really pay attention, youâll find that your daily life is chock full oâ simple, tiny choices, like:
Where do you want to go for dinner?
What do you want to watch on Netflix?
Where should we meet?
What are you in the mood for?
In the past, my de facto response was: âI donât care.â (Can you relate?) But by âI donât care,â what I really meant was: âI really want a burrito, but what matters more to me is that youâre happy with where we get dinner. I would rather sacrifice that burrito and deal with less-than-satisfying pizza than bear the burden of your disappointment. So can you pick?â
The truth is, I did have a preference. It was just buried under layers of people-pleasing.
Get in the habit of honoring your preferences, even if theyâre seemingly inconsequential. After all, today itâs what to watch on Netflix, but a year from now, it might be what city to move to, or whether or not to have a second kid, or what to do with your lottery winnings.
6. Tell someone you care for that you care for them.
âCourage is like a muscle. We strengthen it by use.â ~Ruth Gordon
A lot of literature around authenticity and truth-telling centralizes around saying no, boundary-setting, and self-care. Thatâs all well and good, but true authentic communication addresses both sides of the vulnerability coin: speaking truths that are hard, painful, or have the potential to distance others, and speaking truths that are intimate, loving, and have the potential to bring people closer. Such truths are equally courageous.
When we communicate care for others, we expose the soft underbelly of our hearts. We acquiesce omnipotence over our own emotional state and give another person the power to affect us, sometimes deeply.
Today, take a moment to tell someone you care for them. It could be your mom, your coworker, or your mailman. Let that sweet heart of yours peek out from its shell.
7. Acknowledge one thing you really want.
âA lot of people are afraid to say what they want. Thatâs why they donât get what they want.â ~Madonna
There are a lot of things I want. I want a new blender. I want to enjoy my own company more. I want more friends. I want to make six figures. I want to spend less time workingâon my business and on myselfâand more time having fun.
Our desires are a critical part of who we are. They reflect our values and our identities. When weâre not in touch with our own desires, weâre susceptible to putting othersâ needs before our own.
If youâve been out of touch with your own desires for a long time, saying even one thing you wantâsomething as life-altering as a new job or as contrived as a new blenderâcan be scary and revolutionary. For now, give yourself permission not to worry about how you might get it. Just notice how it feels, to really want this thing you want.
8. For fifteen minutes, be without technology. Bonus points if youâre in nature.
âIf you want more time, freedom, and energy, start saying no.â ~Unknown
At our core, we humans are intrinsically creative and innovative. However, itâs challenging to summon our deepest, truest, most authentic selves when weâre bombarded with stimuli from every direction. Many of us spend hours every day merely skimming the surface of life, hopping from app to screen to notification.
In such a state, weâre not thinking deeply. Weâre hardly here at all. If weâre constantly in response-mode, how can our inner selves emerge?
For fifteen minutes, sequester yourself. No phone, no screen, no TV. You can drink your coffee while staring out the window. You can sit on the carpet and stretch your legs. You can go sniff your flowers, or dive nose-first into the green, green grass. Give your mind the space to explore uncharted territory, and watch with curiosity what arises.
9. If you feel uncomfortable, scared, resentful, sad, angry, or guilty, name it.
âDonât light yourself on fire trying to brighten someone elseâs existence.â ~Charlotte Erickson
Make your way to any water cooler or happy hour and youâll find plenty of folks complaining, comparing, and airing their grievances. But genuine expressions of hurt, discomfort, and sadness are far rarer.
Growing up, I made it my mission to brighten my loved onesâ days and hold space for their unhappiness. With time (and therapy), I realized that âThe bubbly oneâ was a role I had assigned myselfânot my God-given duty.
After so many years of tampering down my sadnesses as if they were pests, I needed to retrain my brain and body to notice my own discomfort.
Today, give yourself permission to acknowledge when you feel off. You can write how youâre feeling on a post-it note or simply whisper the words âI feel sad.â
The inner liberation that comes as a result of this simple acknowledgement can feel enormous. It removes the conflict between what you feel and what you portray to the world around you, which is what authentic communication is all about.
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Authentic communication has made my life simpler. No longer do I spend precious moments juggling my false personas and my little white lies. Working this muscle has been worth every growing pain because itâs enabled me to live in alignment with my inner truth and find freedom, self-respect, and confidence along the way.
About Hailey Magee
Hailey Magee is a Codependency Recovery Coach who helps individuals conquer people-pleasing, set empowered boundaries, and master the art of speaking their truth. She has worked with over 100 clients from the US, Canada, Ireland, France, South Africa, and more. Sign up for a complimentary consultation to learn how coaching can help you live from a place of authenticity and inner freedom. You can follow Hailey on Facebook and Instagram, or visit www.haileymagee.com.
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