Because we feel the need to stay relevant—to measure up to a standard that is always changing— and we choose our least messy mess and call it authenticity, without sitting with it, feeling it, and making it home.
Or, worse, we choose the least messy mess to avoid the big, hairy, audacious slop. “That’s too much,” we say, “no one will ever trust me if I talk about that."
What would happen if, instead of being social-media authentic, for the sake of significance, we took the time to get to know ourselves so that we could be real-life authentic?
Authenticity is more than a marketing tool.
The magic of our authentic lives lies deep inside ourselves, waiting for us to take a look.
Your authentic self is biding her time, yearning to breathe a sigh of relief once she’s released from her cage.
She holds the key to belonging, to freedom, to power, and to magic.