Creating a Life Worth Living - Part Three
Written By: Melissa Galt
Getting Launched And
Letting Go
In the meantime, I was launching my own design
practice six months earlier than planned. I had to put some pieces
inherited from Mother up for auction to gain some working capital and
pay down debt. I like to think of it as she was there to help, but it
was tough because they were pieces I had grown up with.
I had
never worked with an independent designer, so I was truly winging it.
I made a lot of blunders, yet knowing I was pursuing my passion made
it all possible. It was scary without a client for three months, so I
stayed in catering for a year and a half. My classes were popular and
soon I was seeing business growing. Referrals didn’t really kick in
until the eighteenth month mark, not unusual, but it seemed forever.
In the meantime, I focused on abundance, on prosperity, and fought
back any doubts.
The Lesson: It is our doubts that betray us,
and since what we think about expands, it is critical to focus
exclusively (though not blindly) on positive results and achievements
and let go the what ifs.
Time To Think
In 1999 I took
five weeks off for a trip to Australia and New Zealand. It was during
this trip that I reached some true milestones. I had unknowingly
battled long-term depression since my early twenties, unknowingly
since it was undiagnosed, and I just assumed that the emotional
rollercoaster I was on was part of who I was. It was tough, the high
highs, the rock-bottom, black lows and never predictable.
No,
I didn’t qualify as bipolar; that would have been too easy. And
besides, it was the age when depression was “cool.” Pop a pill
everyone said. I wasn’t into medication aside from the occasional
aspirin and vitamin C to ward off a hangover (I unsquared after
college).
I thought that maybe this disorder ran in the
family, knowing that my mother had been a big proponent of counseling
and remembering the saying about great-grandfather, that genius is
always next to madness. But the Australia trip was solo, and for the
first time in my life I felt at home when I stepped off the plane in
Sydney. I can only guess it was some unique imprinting from when I
was a one-year-old and taken there to live for a year on my parents’
ranch, an indelible impression.
The Lesson: When you find your
roots and a real sense of home, you experience a sense of security
that is previously unknown. Perhaps you are lucky enough never to
have lost it, but if you have, it is still to be found.
Fearless
Results
Anyway, it seemed a big adventure and I wanted to do
it all. From climbing the Sydney harbor bridge to bungee jumping and
tandem hang-gliding in Queenstown, New Zealand. I suddenly realized I
had no fear. I wasn’t careless or carefree, but I had been to such
dark places emotionally and mentally, that I realized that each and
every day is a choice for each of us.
Few like to admit that,
and most immediately assume I am talking life or death. Well, I could
be, but consider that so many people go through this life only
partially alive; I had, and I finally realized it and made the
decision to live fully going forward. And since that was the case, I
was going to seize it, live it, and experience it to its fullest.
Having always been very unathletic and convinced that I couldn’t do
anything of that nature, this was a huge step.
Now, whenever I
feel even slightly stuck, or my life seems to have stalled, I will do
something new whether it is parasailing, sky diving, or attending an
event where I know no one (that can be truly frightening, if you let
it). The Lesson: Life is an adventure to be lived, not a
problem to be solved.
Success
I returned with new
vision, new ideas, and new energy. And by 2000, after six years in my
own practice, I had a full assistant on board and two other
part-timers. The company was slated to break $1 million in sales and
I was opening a retail venture the following year.
But, yikes,
I had forgotten one of my previous lessons learned. I hated retail! I
hated staying in one place all day long, relying on others to come to
me for business rather than going to them. I loved setting up the
storefront, the renovation, the design, buying goods for sale,
inventorying and all. It was much like the best parts of my first
career. But the old day-to-day operations were the same -- mundane,
tedious, and not for me. Of course, opening the month of September
2001 definitely put a damper on things as well. I stuck it out for
two years, but found it just wasn’t working.
I was the first
kid on the block of a restored strip center in what should have been
a great location but without like-minded vendors nearby and traffic
really stopping, sales were weak at best. I pioneered and that can
get very expensive! The good part is that I have acquired two very
valuable and wonderful clients from that experience.
The
Lesson: Each new experience allows us a new learning opportunity.
There is no such thing as failure, just unrealized success or lessons
not yet learned and therefore repeated. I learned a
lot!
Regrouping
I opted to store my unsold inventory,
placing it as projects arose, and return to focus solely on design
services and teaching. I had even created a private certification
program for decorators at my shop and moved that back to my office
location.
It was a move that ultimately saved my business. I
had to cut staff to bare bones and return to a revolving door of free
interns every ninety days. Frustrating, but affordable. And while it
has taken the last four years, we are back solidly and I am now
reinventing myself again.
Once I made the decision in
Australia that fear is a choice, I simply don’t choose it.
Rejecting fear opened up unlimited potential and achievement for me.
Most of us lose our dreams because we lose the possibility of them. I
will never lose that again, because I have learned that I can
redirect, refocus, and reinvent as much and as often as I need to.
I
know that I have all the skills and talent needed to make my dreams a
reality; I just have to persist and persevere. I want to give back,
and give forward, and give today, and know that the giving I have
already done is coming back to me in great abundance.
The
Lesson: It is by giving of ourselves that we truly realize our worth
and create a legacy for ourselves and for others.
Giving
Back
I am now on a mission to share my experiences and my
vision with others: to help them realize their dreams, and achieve
their goals, and overcome the obstacles along the way. Too many we
know stay stuck, complaining and waiting for some outside force to
change what has to happen from within. It is truly disheartening to
imagine how many achieve so little and wish for so much. Without
purpose and passion, life is merely an existence and time
filler. The Lesson: We have this journey but once; make it
count and make it yours.
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