Fearless Women

For many women, what holds us back boils down to this: Will I be loved if I become everything that I am meant to be? Maybe it’s the fear that we can’t be strong and taken care of at the same time. Maybe it’s simply the fear of looking stupid from making a mistake as we come into our power. Or maybe it’s the collective memory of witches being burned at the stake for owning their power. I know in my case, all have applied.

In talks with numerous women, I have found that there are many of us whose inner wisdom tells us that we are so much more than we are allowing ourselves to be, but we are still holding back. Even though we want to change the world for the better, we shrink when all eyes turn on us.

Christiane Northrup, MD, writes in her bestselling book, Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom, “We can’t create a new world if we believe that we must remain small and ineffective on any level in order for others to love us or for them to feel safe around us.” Although this book was originally published in 1994, Christiane’s words still certainly apply.

What I have come to discover is that each time a woman shares her truth about her insecurities, questions, doubts, addictions, abuse, etc. — and as well shares the truth about her joys, ecstasies, discoveries, mystical experiences, spiritual beliefs, and feelings of power – it heals another woman.

Haven’t you ever wondered why almost every year at the New York Marathon a new runner sets a record, or at each Olympics the athletes seem to be breaking records left and right?

Rupert Sheldrake, an innovative British biologist and author, has an answer for this. He posits that when an athlete breaks a record, it opens the door for other athletes to break the record. He explains this in terms what he calls morphogenic fields. These are electromagnetic fields that are said to contain knowledge of all the earth’s past. Sheldrake explains that the morphogenic around the world record is changed by the first person who breaks it, thus making it easier for others to equal that performance by tapping into the new morphogenic field.

Pretty cool stuff.

So in the same way, as Dr. Northrup suggests in her book, when a woman finds the courage to come out of silence on an issue — be it food, sex, money, relationships, health, spirituality, etc., — she too is breaking the collective morphogenic field of shame, fear and pain. In other words, each time a woman speaks her truth, it makes other women stronger.

“Breaking the silence takes courage. I know of no woman who has tapped her inner source of power without going through an almost palpable veil of fear, often feeling as though her very life would be threatened by telling the truth,” says Dr. Northrup in Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom.

I know for myself I have been silent on issues ranging from money (not asking for help when I needed it because I was embarrassed about not being ‘perfect’), to silent rage about being treated as second fiddle to the male gender, to owning my own power as an intuitive healer and modern day medicine woman.

Step by step, my voice is opening and my power is expanding. It has taken the courage of other women to speak their truth such as Christiane Northrup, Louise Hay, Debbie Ford, Caroline Myss, Barbara Stanny, Christiane Amanpour, Clarisssa Pinkola Estes, my dear friend Lotta Alsen, and other incredible women to help me break through my own silence and own who I am.

What it is that you have been silent on in your life?

Write about it. Talk about it. Create art based on it.

The point is that whether it’s sharing your truth with a friend at coffee, blogging about it on the Internet, talking with your family, writing a poem, writing a book, making a film, or starting up a business or organization with a cause-based mission – each time you share your truth (and by this I mean your deepest inner knowing), you help another woman to heal. And it’s this one by one healing that takes it global.

“We believe women are the healers of the planet. In order to heal, we must embrace the powerful women that we are,” says Mary Ann Halpin, photographer for the groundbreaking photo essay book, Fearless Women.

Who’s ready?!

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About tabbybiddle

Tabby Biddle, MS Ed., is a writer and editor specializing in helping women entrepreneurs and emerging authors get their message out to make change in the world. She is the Founder of Lotus Blossom Style, a yoga clothing company created to inspire and support women in their journey of self-discovery. Tabby spent her early career years in politics and journalism at the Women's Campaign Fund, CNN and the National Geographic Society. She left the desk-life to travel for two years in Southeast Asia, Nepal and India to learn about Buddhist and Yogic culture and philosophy. Along her travels, Tabby certified as a teacher of English as a Second Language and taught English to Tibetan monks in Dharamsala, India as well as yoga to Tibetan teenagers. Her passion for Tibetan culture and heritage led her to work for the Free Tibet Campaign in London as a writer and editor for their magazine. When she returned to the US, Tabby took her love for teaching into the classroom and taught at the City and Country School in New York City and in the summertime headed out of classroom into the mountains of the Pacific Northwest where she worked as an outdoor adventure instructor with Adventure Treks. Tabby is a certified yoga teacher and yoga therapist and taught in yoga studios, classrooms, community centers, and private residences for 10 years. As a gifted teacher and writer with a passion for seeing women blossom into their potential and make a difference in the world, Tabby works with women entrepreneurs around the country to help them get their message out. Tabby lives in Santa Monica, CA with her husband and enjoys hiking, running, biking, reading, writing and singing.

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3 Responses to Fearless Women

  1. jozien March 20, 2010 at 8:16 pm #

    I'm ready! Hi tabby :) It is not fear stopping me. oops late me take that back, i do sometimes fear to hurt others, with my (peaceful) exuberent life style. It is more that i feel like… say now, here on this website, i just fling it, not knowing how it works.

    Coming to class, and not knowing what they are talking about. Where as my son (our kids are way ahead of us) knows right away what it's about,what to ask and what to do.

    i did understand what you are talking about, because i am a fearless woman, loving it.

    But help me out with the 'how' part, hmmmm :)

  2. Kristen Thurman March 21, 2010 at 2:51 pm #

    Sister power! Heavenly!

  3. rhiafu9 March 27, 2010 at 1:12 pm #

    I love the advice, "write about it, talk about it, create art about it." That was a really great way to bring out the idea in a physical sense so that I could embrace it more.