The Universal Narrative: When You Feel Unworthy
The Universal Narrative: When You Feel
Unworthy
By Leo Babauta
A little boy was
told by his father, from a young age, that he wasn’t good enough. Not in so
many words, but through his actions — by criticizing him, yelling at him,
hitting him, leaving him.
The boy grew up
into a man, knowing that he was unworthy of praise, of success, of love.
The boy, as an
adult, got a job, but didn’t really think he was good enough to do the job
well. He faked it, deathly afraid every single day that he would be found out
and mocked, then fired. He tried to hide, not to put himself in the spotlight,
because then maybe no one would see his unworthiness.
But he was always
deathly afraid of people seeing him fail. So he held himself back, careful not
to do anything where he might fail. He put off taking on tough tasks, and
formed a long habit of procrastination. This came to rule his life, affecting
his health habits, financial habits, relationships.
The boy, now that
he was an adult, got into a couple of long-term relationships, hoping to find
someone to make him happy. He didn’t believe he could make them happy or get
them to love the true him, because he already knew he was unworthy of love. But
maybe if he was really nice to them, and only showed them the good parts of
him, they’d think he was lovable. So he never tried to be truly honest, never
found true intimacy, because he could only show them certain parts that might
win him love.
And he was always
ready for them to find out how bad he was, to leave him. In fact, he left them
before that could happen. Or if he didn’t leave them, he was only halfway in
the relationship, one foot out the door. Ready to leave. Only partway
committed. And in truth, they always felt that, and craved his full commitment.
This was true of
every friendship, every professional relationship. He was never fully
committed. Never fully honest, because he couldn’t show his true self. Always
anxious that others might know how unworthy he was. Always trying to prove how
worthy he was, even if he knew he wasn’t.
This is the story
of Unworthiness. And it is fairly universal.
My Inner
Narrative of Unworthiness
It’s one of my
longest-running inner narratives. That I’m not good enough — that I’m somehow
unworthy to teach, to write books, to train people in uncertainty.
As I’ve worked
with thousands of people in changing their lives, I’ve found this is one of the
most common inner narratives there is.
We’re unworthy. Unworthy
of praise, of putting our work out there in the world, of leading a team or
community, of creating something meaningful in the world. We’re unworthy of
success. Of happiness. Of peace. Of financial comfort. Of loving relationships.
We’re unworthy of love.
We’re not good
enough. Not good enough to tackle our toughest struggles. To change our
addictions and old habits. To change our diet, to start exercising, to start
meditating — or to stick to any of these for very long. We’re not good enough
to put our writing or art out in public. We’re not good enough for others to
recognize our accomplishments. Not good enough to write a book, start a
podcast, put videos online, start an online business, start a nonprofit, create
a thriving entrepreneurial empire, launch a startup, teach ourselves a really
hard skill, pursue a lifelong dream.
We’re not good
enough, and we’re unworthy.
The Great
Secret
Here’s the thing:
it’s all just a story, isn’t it? It’s a narrative in our heads that we replay,
over and over, until it beats us down into submission.
The thoughts
aren’t true. There’s no objective panel of judges in the sky who have judged us
unworthy. We just made up this story, and we pick out evidence to match the
narrative. When someone says something remotely critical, we take it to heart,
and offer it up as yet more proof that we’re not good enough.
The narrative
isn’t true. And worse, it hurts us in every single part of our lives. It means
we’re only half in relationships, hiding ourselves, never honest, never fully
committed. It makes us anxious, afraid of failure, never putting ourselves out
there (at least, not fully, not honestly), and if we do put ourselves in
public, it’s a performance, trying to prove our worthiness. It holds us back.
It makes us procrastinate. Hurts our health. Makes us unhappy.
This is the
Universal Narrative of Unworthiness, and it’s not true, and it hurts is deeply.
Unlearning the
Story
So how do we stop
believing this untrue, hurtful story that goes so deep we don’t usually even
realize it’s there?
I’ll share two
practices that have helped me start to unravel the story, even if it still
persists when I’m not being vigilant.
The first
practice: writing out a mantra and repeating it. This is something I use when my
unworthiness narrative comes up around writing a book or public speaking.
When I’m writing a
book, the narrative inevitably asserts itself as something like, “No one is
going to find this book valuable, this is going to be terrible.” It makes it
much harder to write the book and I get very good at cleaning my kitchen
instead of writing, let me tell you.
When I am supposed
to give a talk, it seems fine when it’s months away and I agree to it. Then I
get deathly afraid as the day gets nearer, and the flop sweats start. I start
questioning my sanity: “Why did I ever say yes to this? No one is going to want
to hear what you have to say.”
So last year I
came up with a mantra to start to see the world in a new way: “The world craves
you and your gift.”
I repeated this
whenever I noticed my heart fluttering because of having to give a talk,
conduct a workshop or webinar, lead a course or program, write a book or blog
post. I repeated it many times: “The world craves you and your gift.”
Over and over,
until I start to believe it. Yes, it sounds incredibly corny. And yet, it
works. I start to look for evidence of it being true. I can’t hear the other
story so much, if this one is being told.
The second
practice: letting the
story dissolve. I do this all the time, and it’s absolute magic.
Here’s how it
works. I notice the narrative. I notice how it’s making me feel — I feel
crappy, I’m fearful, I’m procrastinating, I’m hiding. And then I ask myself,
“What would I be like if I didn’t have this story?”
This is a magical
question for me. I imagine what it would be like, in this particular moment, if
I didn’t have this narrative. All of a sudden, I’m completely present in this
moment — I notice how my body feels, I notice my surroundings, I notice the
sensation of the air on my skin and the light in the room and the sounds all
around me.
All of a sudden,
I’m immersed in this moment, free of the story. I’m free. I’m at peace. I can
open my heart to the moment, to the beauty of the person in front of me if
there is one, to the beauty of myself. What an incredible gift it is, to just
drop the story and be completely present and in love with how things are, in
love with myself and other people around me.
Practicing a new
mantra and the magical question, the boy is gorgeously free of his old
narrative, and can run wildly through the jungle, joyfully alive.
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