Sisterhood: How Do You Affirm Women?
I once spoke at a girls' empowerment conference to a group of 300 ten to thirteen-year-olds. As I was waiting to go on stage, I overheard a small group of four young girls talking about their day. One of them was on fire after learning about civil engineering, and she was inspired to share her career dreams with others. I could see her face quickly shift from a state of open excitement and joy to one of embarrassment and withdrawal as the other girls subtly expressed their discomfort at seeing their young friend so clearly own and express her personal power. And, just yesterday a successful author and dear friend poured out her heart to me, sharing through tears how a long-time mentor was suddenly threatened by her success and was now “shutting her out,” and challenging her very right?to be seen and heard.
This is so?not ok.?Not on any level. Not ever. And it needs to end once and for all.
Growing up, I don’t specifically recall being around women who modeled true “sisterhood” for me. But, when I was in my late twenties, I took a communications/leadership course with a woman who ended up being a life-long mentor to me. She modeled some beautiful ways to “be,” but most importantly she challenged me to stop playing small and she held an oceanic space for me to blossom into the fullest expression of who I am. Slowly, over the years, I learned to do this. Not alone, but with many incredible women by my side.
Today, as a wife, mother, leader, business owner, mentor and community activist, moving in the world with the support of my sisters,?is the only way I know how to be.
What does sisterhood mean to me??It’s a way of being with other women—both young and old— where I:
One fall I led a?week-long self-renewal?retreat for women?at the?Omega Institute?in upstate New York and heard–as I always do at our retreats–“I was so amazed at how comfortable I felt in this group; how quickly we dropped into real, heartfelt conversation; how healing it was to have dialogue with such depth and how powerful it was to be with other women and to feel so supported.” I also heard, “I have never experienced anything like this; I didn’t even know being with other women in this way was possible!”
I took these powerful words to heart. For many, this IS a new way of being with other women. It’s a courageous path that requires us to practice extreme self care AND fully show up willing to be both seen and heard.
On the last day of that retreat, a fellow retreat leader who had been on campus all week, commented to me how brave I was to have invited other amazing guest teachers to share the spotlight with me (thank you to my dear friends?Deb Kern?and?Deb Roth?for sharing your gifts). I looked at her with wonder, not fully understanding what she meant. Then, as her words sank in, I responded, “It was MY joy. When I help my sisters shine, we all shine.”
领英推荐
Shine on sisters. Shine on.
An Exercise ~ Sisterhood: Your Journey?(grab a notebook/pen, a mug of tea and reflect on the following):
-What does sisterhood mean to me? Who in my life models this for me?
-Do I have women in my life that provide a soft place to fall and allow me to show up “warts and all?”
-What would it feel like to interact with other women in a more vulnerable, authentic way?
-What do I perceive as barriers to experiencing a deeper sisterhood in my own life?
HOW CAN I SUPPORT YOU? HERE ARE THREE OPPORTUNITIES FOR FINDING MORE FLOW:
Subscribe here?to Renee’s weekly Live Inside Out blog written by life balance coach/author/speaker and self-care evangelist Renée Peterson Trudeau. Passionate about helping men and women find balance through the art/science of self-care, Renee has been facilitating high-impact interactive workshops for Fortune 500 companies, national nonprofits/conferences and organizations worldwide for 25 years. Her work has appeared in?The New York Times, Fast Company, Good Housekeeping, US News & World Report, Yoga Journal, AARP Magazine, Spirituality & Health?and more. She and her team have certified more than 450 facilitators in 10 countries around the globe to lead self-renewal groups based on her pioneering self-care curriculum. She’s the author of two books on life balance including the award-winning?The Mother’s Guide to Self-Renewal: How to Reclaim, Rejuvenate and Re-Balance Your Life.??She and her husband live in Western North Carolina and Austin, Texas; her latest venture is?Wild Souls Nature Adventures.?More on Renee?here.