Our 2023 word of the year? Admittedly it's unsettling.
For the last several years, Mylene and I, the co-founders of SmallGood, have chosen our “word of the year. ”?
We do this little ritual to help us both reflect and look forward, to check in with ourselves and with our business and ask, “What did we learn this past year?” “What do we want to be true of us in the year ahead?”???
We like to share this word, this intention, put it out into the world, say it out loud publicly because we believe it’s a bit like saying “I do” in a wedding. Why do people go to the trouble to have a whole public ritual to say something they could just say to each other in the privacy of their own home? Or could just say to themselves in the privacy of their own heads? Because saying those words out loud in front of witnesses carries more weight. It says you mean it. And you’re willing to be held accountable for it.?
In 2020 our word was??“Antiracism.” ?In 2021:?“Openness.” ?Last year, it was?“Compost.”
For 2023 the word we find ourselves drawn to is “Unsettled.”
For me that word was inspired in part by the fact that I moved this year. I have been quite literally un-settled. My husband and I sold our house in the Chicago area – a house we’d been in for 28 years – and moved to Asheville, North Carolina.
It was a big move - one we had been thinking about for a while. We met many years ago in the Asheville area and had always loved it and thought it could be wonderful to live here. So, it was a move we chose, one we were happy about – happy that we both have work we can do wherever we live now and happy to be able to live someplace where you can see beautiful trees and mountains outside the window. And it rarely gets below zero. Or much below freezing for that matter.?
But it wasn’t easy. Packing up a house we’d raised our kids in, going to a smaller house and letting go of much that we had refused to let go of for too many years – all those things you think you might need again sometime (Notebooks from college? Scarves you once loved from your scarf phase?).?
It hasn't always been easy trying to figure out how to arrange the furniture in a new space, where to put everything so it felt “right,”?where to make a space to think and create. Or?dealing with the quirks of a different house, switching insurance, finding doctors, figuring out what to do with our garbage. Or having to use GPS just to not end up lost on the side of a steep and curvy mountain in the dark. Oh yeah and encountering our first bear in the yard.?
It’s been a LOT.
People started asking me a few weeks after moving here, “Are you getting settled in yet?“ And I’ve said, “Sure…pretty much…” because the boxes have been unpacked, the furniture arranged and rearranged, a handyman hired to fix things that the previous owners decided to live with but we can’t.??
The thing is, though, I still feel unsettled. So many things feel unfamiliar and strange and unclear and uncertain…and not quite comfortable.?
But still…good…?
Like, I’ve noticed I feel more awake in some ways. More alive in some ways.?
And I’m coming to believe maybe “unsettled” is a wonderful place to be – if we don’t fight it, try to fix it, if we simply embrace it.?
Mylene recently got the same message from a difference source…funny how that works.?
Allison, a pastor friend of hers recently told a story in one of her sermons about doing a recital with a friend and playing violin publicly again after a long time. Before the recital, she was feeling uncomfortable. A little scared. Uncertain. A friend asked how she was doing, and she told him, “I’m nervous!” And he said, “Yeah you should be.”
What? Not the answer she was expecting – not the “Oh don’t worry, I’m sure you’ll do fine,” – words we often say to people in nerve-wracking situations – words, which in truth, often lead you to feel ashamed of your feelings and like you need to just “buck up” and shut up.?
No, this “Yeah, you should be,” was?validating,?an acknowledgement that she was in an anxiety-producing, unsettling moment and her nervousness was totally appropriate.
As Alison said, feeling?nervous, or unsettled, can be a signal that we are doing something “vulnerable and exciting.” And that’s “part of growth and doing powerful things in the world.”
Unsettledness can feel terrifying. Fear of the unknown,?Nicholas Carleton, a psychology professor at the University of Regina, Canada believes, is one of humanity’s?“fundamental fears”? – maybe even more powerful and disruptive than our fear of death.
Ema Tanovic, a psychologist who’s researched how people respond to unsettledness and “the unknown” has discovered it “… can intensify how threatening a situation feels.”?
One way they studied this: research participants were hooked up to electrodes that delivered a harmless, but somewhat painful, electric shock to the skin and researchers measured their physiological stress responses.?(By the way, this is why we never sign up for research studies.)
What they found was that “…any element of unpredictability significantly increases people’s discomfort, despite there being no objective difference in the intensity of the shock. Participants?show greater stress if there is a 50% chance that they might receive a shock, ?for example, compared to situations in which there is a 100% certainty that they will be electrocuted.”
So yeah, humans don’t like feeling unsettled. Uncertain. Unsure of the outcome. It makes us nervous. Very, very nervous.?
Which is hard since according to the cultural trend spotters at Sparks & Honey we’re living in an “era of uncertainty.”?
That feels true, doesn’t it?
`I’ve got to say, all this uncertainty, this unsettledness is very…unsettling.?
Yet the truth is, real change, adventure, transformation - begins there, in that place where things are unsettled.?
No great discoveries ever happen without someone feeling unsettled about the current state of things. No great change ever happens when people are complacent and willing to settle for the life they have.
Transformation begins with stirring the waters, with making “good trouble,” with things being uncomfortable and unsettling. It’s like how unsettling metamorphosis??must be for the caterpillar…but it’s necessary for it to become a butterfly.?
“When a caterpillar becomes a butterfly, it takes all of its experiences and everything that lives inside itself and transforms into a beautiful creature. What people don’t always notice is the metamorphosis - the isolation, the discomfort, even the pain.”―?Terryca Taylor,?Memoirs of a Butterfly: Letters to a Caterpillar
Yes, unsettled can feel like a scary place, but as?Brene Brown has said , “Anxiety and excitement present exactly the same neurologically. In studies those who labeled it as excitement had positive experiences. Those who labeled it as anxiety had negative experiences.”?
So that’s where we find ourselves at the beginning?of 2023, so aware of the uncertainty in our world, so aware that we don’t have all the answers, so aware we can’t control what the year ahead will mean for our personal lives or for SmallGood. So aware that we need to choose how we will deal with it. Will we embrace the unsettled, open ourselves to it, get excited about the possibilities of it? Or will we let fear get the better of us? Hold us back? Push us into making the “safe” choices. The “tried and true.”?
One of the things Mylene and I talked about a lot when we first started SmallGood was that we didn’t want to settle for the way things had always been done before in big agencies. And since running our own company we’ve continued to talk about not settling…not settling for what’s easiest or the way it’s been done before – even for the ways?we’ve?done things before.?
But it’s been almost 6 years since we started SmallGood.?
It seemed like time to recommitt ourselves to not settling. Not settling for what’s easiest. Not settling for less than our best. Not settling for obvious solutions. Or no solutions.?
Not settling for the insidious belief that we are too small to make a big difference in the world.?
We’re holding on to Unsettled as our word for the year to remind us to embrace the uncertainty, let unease be our teacher, let bewilderment be our friend, let unsettling be a door opening and believe it’s not going to be the death of us.?
Unsettled might even be the beginning of transformation.?
Executive Search Partner Digital, Consumer & Retail
1 年You have beautifully articulated the giant anxious question mark hanging over the beginning of this year
Founder and president @ Effective Marketing Communication Inc driving innovation in marketing
1 年Love this post so much! I'm inspired by your words and actions. And I'm proud to partner with you two to challenge the status quo.
Director of Software Engineering | Senior Manager of Software Engineering | Software Engineering Manager
1 年What a heartfelt piece!
Founder @SmallGood, LTD. | Branding, Digital Marketing
1 年Lenora Rand So good to get this out in the world... Interesting to see how many other people have been feeling this way too. I'm glad we chose this word, for so many reasons! And I hope you are home and settling in after your last excursion. ?? ?? ??
Commercial Real Estate Investor, Developer, Broker and Entrepreneur
1 年Excellent. Such truth and nice to read. Thanks for sharing this and all the best to you in 2023.