Remove Your CAPE–No More Superwoman Syndrome

In our WDNAI documentary, we were asked about the “Strong Black Woman” persona and how we thought it was affecting black women. One of my Destiny Diamond sisters from Volume 1 (shout out to Shadawn McCants) was absolutely right when she said that cape is choking us!! I said I reject my cape—I’m giving it back! And as I’ve said before, I want every woman to know that it’s time to take that CAPE off and say no to Superwoman Syndrome!

For me C.A.P.E. stands for: Checking boxes, Anxiety, which is very much associated with Perfectionism, and Exhaustion.

We don’t have to be superhuman to be powerful. Our vulnerability IS powerful. Our authenticity IS powerful.

I want you to choose:

Progress over Perfection.

Purpose over Perfection.

Power over Perfection.

Peace over Perfection.

Checking Boxes:

I was just walking around and performing and succeeding because it was what I knew how to do. And I felt the weight of having to be the ONE that looked like me in most rooms—there is that weight of representing your gender and ethnicity that follows you.

I was doing it to the detriment of my health and had to ask myself to what purpose. And I was overwhelmed by all of it—the mom and wife and physician and leader and migraine. I had to make a change. As my sister Rochelle Jacobs says, no one is coming to save you but you. I had decisions to make.

I started with learning to sit down, evaluating my core values, and asking myself if my life was consistent with these values. I realized that it wasn’t, so it was time to do something about it. It wasn’t easy, but it was possible. And if I can, you can.

Purpose over perfection.

Anxiety:

Did you know that perfectionism is associated with anxiety and depression? Well, I was definitely having some dark moments trying to figure out how to break the cycle I was in or keep performing at peak levels when my body was literally giving out on me. And what would people think when I had to admit I needed a break? What would people think if I needed help?

Setting boundaries, using my NO, and learning to choose goals and activities that were consistent with my core values were essential to my shift. I worked on changing the way I approach life, and it is crushing the feelings of anxiety. The people who love you want you to take care of yourself, and typically want to help you in the ways they can. The ones who are judging you? God bless them. They likely have their own issues they are dealing with. Truly. It’s not about you but you also don’t need their negativity. Pray for them and keep it moving.

You deserve better.

Power over Perfection.

Perfectionism:

So…at the heart of it all is the spirit of perfectionism and the topic is so deep I can’t fully go into it in this space. But some fast facts:

  • it’s more prevalent in recent years than 30 years ago
  • People with perfectionism rarely participate in adequate self-care
  • while high standards and a desire for excellence can be a good thing, perfectionism typically inhibits enough that it keeps a person from performing to their true potential due to fear of judgment and procrastination

Although I was quite successful in my perfectionism, I can tell you that I found it keeping me from speaking up in meetings where I had great ideas or holding back from projects or steps in my life where I was scared of some type of failure. In fact, I realized I had not really ever failed at anything because I never really attempted anything I didn’t know I could do—I played it safe which also likely kept me from growth.

One of my favorite quotes by Marion Williamson in part states, “We ask ourselves, “Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?” Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing it small doesn’t serve the world.”

We have a responsibility to live up to our fullest potential. Focus on the process, not the outcome. Failure is inevitable if you are trying for something extraordinary, but it also brings you one step closer to success. As someone said, you’ve learned one way not to do it. Don’t let your perfectionism hold you back.

Progress over perfection.

Exhaustion

I was exhausted, not just physically, but mentally and emotionally. I was running my body into the ground. I had a continuous migraine, a condition called status migrainosus, and would not get it properly evaluated, adequately treated, or simply take some days off to try to rest appropriately.

Mentally, I was drained, because trying to keep up with the demanding academics of medicine and plan and take care of domestic responsibilities when in pain was grueling. Emotionally, I was a wreck. Chronic pain is associated with depression, and I’m not going to say I was depressed, but I was definitely irritable, frustrated, a little scared—all day, every day. I also felt like no one understood what I was going through and couldn’t support me.

Exhaustion. When you’re carrying more than you should, you can be emotionally, mentally, physically, and spiritually tired, because you don’t have time to take care of you. Remember, loving others begins in appropriate self-love, and self-love equals self-care.

Start setting boundaries. Ask for help appropriately. Rest when you’re tired. Eat when you’re hungry. It sounds so basic, but sometimes, we just don’t. That cape is at the cost of our physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health. We have to stop.

Peace over Perfection.

The Giving Tree

I read the article in The New York Times Parenting column and thought it was quite interesting. The Giving Tree was one of my son’s favorite books because he was particularly fond of trees. But I hated this book. And I felt he was too young for me to fully articulate why. The most I said was, “the boy isn’t a very good friend to the tree, and it makes me sad.” He was 4 or 5 at the time.

We don’t read it very often anymore for that reason, but now, I don’t think I’ll mind. This article, entitled “We Need to Talk About ‘The Giving Tree'” has given me some very good discussion points, and quite honestly, they’re good for young and old alike, and it inspired a train of thought PERFECT for my first post on wellness.

In The Giving Tree, a little boy befriends a tree. The tree loves the little boy and gives him whatever he asks, just for the boy to leave for long periods, grow, and return downtrodden, looking for his “friend” to give him something to fix his next problem.

The tree had no healthy boundaries, and gave him whatever he asked, only to be left at the end, with nothing, but a stump to show for this “friendship.”

I saw a parallel in life, right in my office. I have people in front of me all the time, not following their health care regimen, not finding time to eat right, exercise, check their blood sugar or blood pressure because they are taking care of a family member, over too many church ministries, bogged down at work…you name it, I’ve heard it.

My “patient non-adherence” problem is generally filled with a story about how this person has put themselves on the back burner for so many others. NO. BOUNDARIES. It’s what the giving tree did. And she gave until she was only a stump, with nothing left to give, and the boy had everything.

Many times we talk about self-care, we think, spa day, massage, etc. I read this piece a while back that shared my opinion that self-care is so much more and defined true self-care as building a life from which you don’t need escape. That requires excellent skill in setting boundaries.

Here are some wonderful quotes from the article that are great take-aways:

“Self-sacrifice is not sustainable, and it isn’t healthy either. Research shows that people who care about others and neglect themselves are more likely to become anxious and depressed.”

Adam Grant and Allison Sweet Grant

“Generosity is not about sacrificing yourself for others — it’s about helping others without harming yourself. It’s not about giving to takers — it is giving in ways that nurture more givers. It’s not about dropping everything any time someone needs you — it is prioritizing your needs along with theirs.”

–Adam Grant and Allison Sweet Grant

I thought I was very good at boundaries. And I was okay at it, but I’ve learned that for people I really care about, I have a hard time sticking to my guns. I really rely on their respect for me, and that’s a mistake—we must be comfortable with requiring that respect regardless of whether it is offered.

And actually, let’s take it a step further. Not only did this tree give everything, but it asked for nothing. This is where I have the MOST room for growth: asking for, and receiving, help from others. It’s essential to wellness. Not only does it allow others to express love for you, it allows your tank to be filled in ways you truly need but can’t provide yourself. It is also a practice in humility. It strengthens relationships, because, when we’re honest, there’s a bit of power that comes from always being the helper, never the helped. The closeness that comes from the vulnerability of you allowing someone to help you can really strengthen the bond of friendship (I think I learned this from Brene Brown).

But it’s not just me. These same patients, horrible at boundaries, tend to be givers who need to be convinced to accept help from others. Who either have a hard time humbling themselves enough to receive, a hard time realizing their worthy of the very same help they are wasting away giving others—or some combination of the two.

So, in my inaugural wellness blog post, I choose not to necessarily focus on exercise, or healthy eating, or meditation. But to focus on boundaries and vulnerability. Because the balance between these two things are essential to formulating the inner peace that is required to live well, and I always say, true health starts with mental and spiritual health.

P.S. For more information on these topics, I highly recommend Brene Brown, who is the vulnerability guru. See links to her books on amazon below (I am making NO MONEY FROM THIS—I JUST LOVE HER STUFF):

The Gifts of Imperfection

The Power of Vulnerability

Rising Strong

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