
“Sometimes, life will kick you around, but sooner or later, you realize you’re not just a survivor. You’re a warrior, and you’re stronger than anything life throws your way.” ~Brooke Davis
No matter how positive we are, how healthily we live, or how much kindness, generosity, or fairness we practice, shit happens. To all of us. And suddenly, we find ourselves juggling more balls than it seems humanly possible to juggle.
I’ve had my share of this…
When my father died suddenly when I was in my twenties. When I was lost in a bottomless depression for two years in my thirties. When I had to undergo neurosurgery to remove a brain tumor in my forties.
It seems that I got one ‘biggie’ like that in every decade of my adult life!
They knocked the wind out of me, plunged me into unspeakable darkness and despair, and brought me face to face with my worst fears.
I know what not knowing how to go on feels like.
Yet somehow, I went on and came through.
I used to see myself as a survivor—able to bear great pain and live through the suffering until things got better. That’s a quality and a strength, for sure. It’s an acceptance of what’s happening to you. An inner, maybe quiet, determination to still want to live, despite it all. That’s one way of not giving up and making it through.
But more recently, I’ve been inspired to cultivate another quality I’ve discovered in myself, in addition to that: my fighting spirit.
It was a revelation to me that, instead of bearing what life throws at me, I can consciously choose not to let it beat me. That I can be a warrior, as well as a survivor!
Fighting is a way of standing up to your inner voice of discouragement and resignation: a decision to show up and do what you can even when it’s tough and you want to give up.
And I’m finding that…
My fighting spirit is a great resource to have in my life toolbox.
I can call upon it when I need it. It adds to my resilience and self-reliance when life gets tough. And I also find that it comes in handy when I want to make changes for the better in my life, but struggle with the unforeseen complexities of, or resistance to, what I want to do.
Now, don’t get me wrong: Fight is not always called for when life gets tough.
Sometimes we need to let ourselves be sad, down, or angry before we can find an appropriate response to what happened to us.
When we’ve pushed ourselves too hard, we might need to give ourselves the space to rest or even be ill for a while, before finding our way to heal.
Sometimes all we can do is indeed hang in there and survive as best we can.
And sometimes we need to let go of the fight, allowing things to happen as they will and going with the flow.
But fighting is called for when something important is at stake.
When you need to speak up for yourself (or someone or something that really matters to you). When you want to save a significant relationship that you’re on the verge of losing. When you’re facing a critical illness. Or when you need to stand up to the voices inside you that make you want to shrink away and disappear when it’s important to stay and be seen or heard.
Recently, I’ve fought more than ever before—and consciously so.
I’ve fought for living the creative and passionate life I am called to live. For my professional practice to continue to evolve. For my writing to find a place in the world. For my mother, who got diagnosed with Motoneuron Disease in her eighties, to have a dignified last phase of her life. For keeping my gallbladder when I developed a gallstone. The examples are many.
So, if you’d like some inspiration to discover and cultivate your own fighting spirit, I offer you…
6 Ways to Find the Fight in Yourself
These strategies help me when I don’t want to give in to the temptation to throw in the towel too soon. When I need to keep going even though it’s tough. When I need to stand up for what really matters to me. I hope you’ll find them helpful too!
1. You can do this!
Make “You can do this!” your mantra, repeating it to yourself, even aloud, when you feel discouraged. Strengthen yourself in every way possible—by exercising, meditating, or arming yourself with knowledge and support—to help you believe you really can handle whatever is coming.
I remember the time when it became clear that I wasn’t going to be able to avoid brain surgery. This is a radical operation, and I was terrified of its risks and what it might do to me. The fact that the surgeons were going to cut into my brain—the center of my consciousness, my thoughts and my reasoning, my story and my memories—made my fears a thousand times worse!
Yet my fighting spirit kicked in: I got physically fit and strong. I learned what I could about my tumor and my surgery. I did the inner psychological work to oust the demons that had perhaps contributed to bring the tumor on. And I got alternative health support from hypnotherapy, homeopathy, Ayurveda, and even angelic healing!
As I responded to my challenge in this way, I discovered a voice within me that spoke “I can do this!” into the storm of my fears, growing increasingly loud, strong, and determined.
2. Don’t let it beat you.
When adversity strikes, we are faced with a stark choice: We can either let it beat us or not.
My mother always says to herself, when facing a difficulty, “Who’s the boss here—me or this challenge?” She’s experienced hiding under her desk as a schoolgirl when the bombs fell during the war. She suffered frostbite on her feet in the winter because she didn’t own sturdy shoes. She lived through leaving her homeland to start a new life in a foreign country. Yet none of this destroyed her.
Perhaps it is true that hardship builds character. If you never have it tough and you never need to fight, you never learn how. You never build that fighting muscle.
We all have to face fear, pain, and harshness in life. But we can make a conscious choice to respond in ways that affirm our spirit. We can choose not to be discouraged, not to give in, not to despair—at least not for too long. We can call upon our inner strength, fight back, and rebuild ourselves.
My mother found her way back to her happy nature after the heaviest blows—the early death of her husband and facing Motoneuron Disease in her eighties. She knows that adversity can only really beat her if she lets it. And I watch in awe as, time after time, she makes a conscious inner decision that she won’t. ‘Cause she’s the boss.
3. Why do we fall?
This is from the film Batman Begins. It’s how Batman’s father consoles his son when he’s had a setback. “Why do we fall?” he asks him. When the boy doesn’t have an answer, the father says: “So we can learn how to stand up again.”
Whether you’re a Batman fan or not, remind yourself of this when you’re down and feel like giving up. Then find your fight and stand up again.
4. Keep trying—intelligently.
They say that Rome wasn’t built in a day. Equally, you might not resolve a complex and challenging situation in one day. It may take several attempts to find your way through. Even if one attempt fails, it’s important to keep trying, but keep trying intelligently.
Ask yourself what you can learn from your previous attempt. What worked, what didn’t, and what you need to do differently this time. Then try again, using those insights. The story goes that Thomas Edison tried and rejected ten thousand combinations of material before he came up with a workable light bulb. Know that your ‘failed’ attempts are the stepping stones that will ultimately lead you to where you want to be.
5. Keep showing up.
I have a friend who has had a most debilitating, not clearly diagnosed illness for years. Yet she makes a point, always, to show up whenever possible, in whatever way she can: to work, to choir practice, to family activities…
She dresses up and puts her make up on. And when she’s too weak to be there in the real world, she’s there online, writing and sharing her beautiful reflections about life. If that’s not fighting spirit, and truly inspiring, I don’t know what is.
So if you’re struggling too, ask yourself: In what ways, however small, can I keep showing up?
6. Insist and persist.
This was one of my methods for getting stuff done when I worked in the challenging and fast-paced world of management consulting. I’d be friendly, charming, great to work with—but I wouldn’t go away until the work that needed doing was done and people had made the contribution that was necessary. My colleagues used to joke that I could be like a dog with a bone.
Insisting and persisting serves me well when life gets challenging for myself, too: I use it to understand what’s going on, find the help I need, and try different ways of responding to what’s happening. And I won’t stop until I am through.
Perhaps that’s one kind of stubbornness worth cultivating!
—
My fighting spirit is a useful string to my bow of life skills, and I shall be forever grateful for the experiences that helped me discover and hone it.
Over to you now…
When life piles on the challenges, and you’re pushed to the edge, where and how do you find your fighting spirit? How do you go on?
About Monica Castenetto
Monica supports women struggling in a mid-life transition to (re)create a joyful, flowing, and meaningful life for themselves. A life coach and spiritual companion, she is the author of What’s Your Excuse for Not Living a Life You Love? and writes about soulful living and easeful change. Pick up free resources on Monica’s website www.livealifeyoulove.co.uk, or get her free ebook How to Know What You Want.










Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
I love how walking holds your spirit together, Gem! It’s a beautiful, real-life metaphor for keeping moving in life, whatever happens, in big but also in small ways. And how even a small walk holds so much symbolic fighting spirit, and gives so much back. I hope the stresses you describe have eased by now and that you have – literally and metaphorically – WALKED through them. Much, much good to you.
Thanks, Ryan – and what a fabulous breakthrough you’ve had about working smarter! All good wishes to you – to your blogging success!
Timely advice Monica. Keeping at things intelligently is OH so key. I had a few eye-opening experiences recently goading me to work smarter – not harder – to increase my blogging success. I finally realized this on a core, deep level. Rocking post!
Ryan
Monica, I absolutely love everything about this article. I am a two time cancer survivor who just picked myself up after a reoccurence two years ago and rebuilt my life after a medical bankruptcy took almost everything I care about away and I kept a massage practice running through it all! My secret weapons were definitely fluctuating between acceptance and the fighting spirit, especially because I am a Norse Shield Maiden!!! Most days still I have to just stay in the present moment and like a foggy road trust that what is next will be laid before me before I go off the road. Thank you for this wonderful advice and writing, it is very inspiring and helpful indeed.
What a beautiful article Monica, just in time for a struggling kid in me. Tears keep falling from eyes, but those tears were tiny bits of fighting spirit who’s ready to fight and show up in this thing called life after reading your piece. Thank you Monica.
Kristiana Jourgensen – for some reason the programme won’t take my reply to your post, so I’m posting it as a separate comment:
Wow – Kristiana, what a life you live! Thank you for sharing about your fighting spirit – you are truly a warrioress, dear Norse Shield Maiden… When I hear stories like yours I’m in awe about what the human spirit can overcome, and how strong people – and especially women – are. Often, that strength only becomes apparent when it’s tested by challenge and difficulty. You’re very welcome, and I’m glad you’ve found my article helpful. May you tread safely on the foggy road – and may the fog lift for you soon! Much good to you.
Thank you so much, Ann! I absolutely love your image of your tears being tiny bits of fighting spirit ready to fight and show up in life – it is so beautiful. I’m glad I was able, with my article, to reach out a hand to the struggling kid in you, and help her find her very own fighting spirit. May you show up in life as your beautiful self. I wish you very well!
Monica, Thank you so much for sharing your story. Reading you reminds me that we are in this together and we all have that inner power to lift us up when we need it. I started to appreciate and live a fulfilled life when I understood that my struggles are my “best friends” because each time I fell and had to get up again, I learned how strong I am. I lost my father when I was 13 years old at the sametime we had to escape my country because of the genocide (I am from Rwanda). After 1st failed marriage, I remarried again, my 2nd husband, asked me leave our home and go back to my home country when I told him I was pregnant- (he wasn’t prepared to be a father). Those struggles in my life allowed me to learn how to love myself, to trust my inner voice, and now I know for sure that everything always works out for the best when we choose to fight. Thank you for being here.
Chantal – you’re so welcome. And thank YOU for sharing YOUR story – sounds like you’ve had plenty of opportunity to stand up, again and again and again, big time! What you say in your email reminds me that, in some spiritual traditions, they say that the soul is forged in the fire of struggle. I don’t want to glorify suffering, but, like you, I have experienced that the struggles ‘make us’ in that they force us to dig deep, and show us who we really are, and teach us, as you say, to love and trust yourself. I’m glad we’re in this together!
Indeed. What a beautifully written article. I loved the aspect of showing up.
My mantra in life has been to engage with life whenever it is possible and to simply get out and walk. I cannot remember the countless times that, under the toughest of circumstances, I would somehow wear my shoes and nudge myself to go for a walk. Sometimes I would just go around the block and return but it held (and continues to hold) my spirit together in hard to fathom ways.
Interestingly, whenever I do step out, I either notice something extraordinary or bump into a friend that nurtures me.
Currently, I am in the US on a phD and a lot of things have come together to add stress to my daily life. These range from the transition woes to the fear of falling behind to withdrawal symptoms from weaning off meds. I know this is a phase and I know that this will be over.
Thank you so much I really needed my case is very small but I’ve been dealing with extreme bullying of kids roughly my age and there all are at least ten of them I have also been dealing not fitting and anxious what everyone thinks about me and will probably bully me in the future there are alot of other things and I know my case is really minor but it’s Been hard for me to deal with it so I really needed this so thank you very much 🤗
Thank you for sharing this! My mother had tumor surgery and now diagnosed with GBM. It’s getting really hard and this gave me some strength!