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MOJO
MONDAY
Every
Monday we do something fantastic
to get pumped for our entire
week! Each week we will
post a new activity or mantra
for YOU to use and get your
mindset ready for your week!

Women
Who Inspire US!
Jessica
Jacobs is the founder
and CEO of Little Soles
and THIS hot mama has been
kickin' ass for a LONG time!
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The
Pressure to be Perfect
by Lissa Rankin, Owning
Pink
published
Nov. 1, 2011
When
I wrote The
Story Of An Imperfect Woman,
I ran it by my hubby to get
his blessing since it referred,
not only to my quirks and imperfections,
but to his. He gave me his blessing,
but then he said, Im
not sure its such a good
idea to tell everyone all of
these things. I asked
him why, and he said, But
what about your reputation?
I
had to laugh.
I
mean this guy knows me and loves
me, in spite of all these imperfections
that are a big part of who I am.
He doesnt expect me to be
perfect. And finally, I dont
either.
I
remember, back in my thirties,
when I felt like I had to:
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Never make mistakes at my
job (after all, someone
could die)
Be the perfect wife (or
my husband might divorce
me)
Keep a tidy house (or the
neighbors would think I
was a slob)
Look perfect (after all,
those womens magazines
tell me its so important)
Be perfect in bed (or he
might trade me in for a
younger model)
Behave perfectly (or others
might not respect me)
Be the perfect mother (or
I might screw up my daughter)
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Of
course, even if any one of these
had been possible, these things
were mutually exclusive. By definition,
to even try to be perfect at one
thing, Id have to be imperfect
at another. Its enough to
make even the most awesome woman
bonkers!
I
now consider myself a recovering
perfectionist, and I no longer
expect myself to be perfect. And
yet, when my husband said, But
what about your reputation?
I felt the old familiar twinge.
Oh yeah. What about my reputation?
What will people think?
Hmmmm...
I thought about it, checked in
with my Inner
Pilot Light, listened to the
still small voice within me, and
started to laugh. I mean WHO CARES
about my reputation? Who gives
a flip what people think? So what
if patients decide not to come
to me as their doctor because
I refuse to be some plastic version
of myself who never makes mistakes?
Why would I want those people
as patients to begin with?
Who
gives a flying freak if some society
woman doesnt let me in her
country club? Who cares if the
neighbors think Im a slob
or the people from my church discover
that I took a sex workshop or
that Im twice divorced or
that I have a bit of a pooch around
my middle these days?
I
mean seriously? What am I trying
to prove?
I
know my husband means well. He
wants me to be successful in business,
pleasure, friendships, and life,
and he supports me 1000%. But
if someone like him can still
question - after all Ive
done to put my truth out there
on the internet - whether Im
crossing the line by revealing
how imperfect I am, it only shows
me how much further I have to
go to help encourage you to learn
to love yourself exactly as you
are so you can free yourself from
the burden of trying to be perfect.
Imperfection
As A Screening Tool
The way I see it, sharing my imperfections
with you is kind of the perfect
screening tool. In other words,
Im not trying to please
everyone. I only care about pleasing
my people - and if you read this
post and decide you dont
like me anymore, then youre
not part of my tribe. Good for
both of us to know, right?
I
met one girl with bright pink
hair and hairy armpits and she
said she used her hair as a screening
tool. If people didnt love
her because she had pink hair
and hairy armpits, they werent
her people.
The
more you pretend to be perfect,
the harder it is to find your
tribe. Why not make it easy for
everyone? Why not let your freak
flag fly and see what happens?
The
Gift In Imperfection
Ive learned an incredible
lesson since I started Owning
Pink over 2 years ago. It turns
out that my imperfections are
not only a good screening tool,
theyre actually the keys
to the kingdom. In my vulnerability,
authenticity, fearlessness, and
sometimes uncomfortable level
of disclosure, lies the secret
sauce. If I was writing this blog
and showing you some vanilla version
of myself, I suspect most of you
wouldnt be here. If I was
telling you what I thought you
wanted to hear instead of what
was actually true, I doubt Id
have 5 million readers and over
100,000 Twitter followers.
People
care what I have to say because
when youre brave enough
to expose your imperfections,
you give them courage to do the
same. And when we can build community
based on truth and authenticity,
rather than masks, false perfection,
and being phoney, we heal, connect,
and thrive.
Are
you brave enough to share your
imperfections?
Tell
us one imperfect thing about you
in the comments here. (I promise,
well all love you anyway!)
Perfectly
imperfect,
Lissa
Rankin, MD
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