“Uncertainty, Risk, and Emotional Exposure”

That’s how Dr. Brené Brown defines vulnerability.

On June 1st, I put my novel, the story of Martha, a middle-aged woman who walks the Camino de Santiago, on my website as a free downloadable PDF. Yesterday I posted about and promoted its presence. Today, I feel vulnerable in about twenty different ways.  

I don’t know if anyone will read it. If you do, will you like it, hate it, or be bored?

If you don’t like it, if it offends you or annoys you, what will that mean about me?

I’ve shared a few raw pieces of my childhood in it, and I’ve included a scene I’m just not sure about. Martha’s conversations with the Divine will offend some readers. (If there are any readers.)

I’m swimming in uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure.

Thankfully, other creators have lived through this and shared their wisdom. I’m finding strength and courage in these words from Elizabeth Gilbert’s Big Magic: Creative Living beyond Fear:

“Recognizing this reality – that the reaction doesn’t belong to you – is the only sane way to create. If people enjoy what you’ve created, terrific. If people ignore what you’ve created, too bad. If pople misunderstand what you’ve created, don’t sweat it. And what if people absolutely hate what you’ve created? What if people attack you with savage vitriol, and insult your intelligence, and malign your motives, and drag your good name through the mud?

Just smile sweetly and suggest – as politely as you possibly can – that they go make their own fucking art.

Then stubbornly continue making yours.”

So why be vulnerable? Because here’s the thing. Everything I’ve said about my novel applies to my life, my whole life, when I’m being who I am in the world. There are aspects of me, when I’m living in integrity and letting all of me show, that you might not like. I may say something that offends you. I might just be ignored. Or misunderstood.

It’s simply not my job to manage your reactions to me. It’s not your job to manage my reaction to you, either.

Our purpose is to be who we are, as fully and completely as we can be at this moment, stubbornly and continually. Living as whole people requires accepting the discomfort of uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure. As my ability to tolerate and even embrace the discomfort of vulnerability grows, the fuller my life becomes. My tolerance for uncertainty, risk, and emotional exposure — vulnerability — is directly correlated to the amount of peace, freedom, creativity, and true connection in my life.

I’m proud of myself for sticking with Martha, myself, and this story. I’m proud that I’ve brought it into the world. I’m proud of myself for risking vulnerability. Whatever happens, I’ll have done this courageous thing. However this turns out, I’ll have grown my capacity to tolerate discomfort for the sake of growth.

You can download Lost and Found: A Magical Journey on the Camino de Santiago here.

8 thoughts on ““Uncertainty, Risk, and Emotional Exposure”

  1. I feel such huge admiration for not only your gift of writing but also for your huge jump off the high dive right into the deep, dark pool of vulnerability!!! And diving right back in by expressing those feelings about it! I know I’ll love your book, but I love you even more for showing us what real bravery and authentic transformation is all about! I say you deserve red velvet cake (Jed, hear me?!) You inspire me in the “Camino” I am walking. ❤️

  2. I’m looking forward to reading your novel Have so enjoyed and the snippets you have posted already and was left wanting more of the stores. Thank you for being brave and true to yourself. It encourages me to di the same.

  3. I have not read it, but plan to. Reactions and judgments of the reader has more to do with them than with the novel. Whatever you wrote was meant to be written either for you or for someone who reads it, or both. The discomfort is ego trying to spoil it. Congratulation for such a wonderful accomplishment.

  4. You deserve to feel the pride you reference in your last paragraph. Talk about modeling what you preach! Admirable and impressive and brave.

  5. Hello Barb,
    I appreciate the generosity with which you are making your novel available to us. And I totally get the vulnerability in doing so. I feel that most times I push the “publish” button for my blog (a wabi sabi life dot ca) so I can only imagine this feels exponential. I, too, have drawn wisdom and inspiration from Liz Gilbert’s Big Magic. Her voice is a lighthouse.

    So now you have heeded it’s call to be released into the world, and I look forward to reading.

    I have dreamed of walking the Camino for 20 years (since the publication of Shirley MacLaine’s book) and regularly walk with a group in training. Recently though, I have come to wonder if I will ever walk it (Covid 19 aside), as I have come to realize deep in my heart and soul, that I walk it every day by how I live my life and recognize that everything I need is in my backyard, give or take a mile or two. So we shall see.

    Kindest regards,
    Katharine

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