change: inertia and the power of baby steps

“What in the world are you doing?”

She stopped short at the door of my studio where I was covered from head to toe with glaze dust. This is a normal scenario for me. Whenever I’m looking my absolute worst, people get the most interested in what I’m making.

She was a lawyer from California and been a guest at our inn before, but had somehow missed this glamorous step in the pottery production process. I swiped my hand on my sweatpants and beckoned her in.  

She looked doubtful “I don’t know. I don’t think I belong in here.” Half-cough half-laugh. I assured her it was not sacred ground, only a creative disaster space. She looked at the jars of chemicals lined up on the shelf. Titanium dioxide. Zirconium. Kaolin.

“Was it scary?” she asked. “Scary making the change and coming here?” I assured her it was scary as hell.  She thought about this.  ”So why did you do it if it pushed you back so hard?”  I could see wheels turning inside her head.

I laughed.”Well, once you start checking in on exactly what it is that’s going to make you happy, and you make baby steps in that direction, you end up realizing that you’re on a path that’s going to have its way with you.”

She nodded. “Which is why most people don’t even start.” I agreed. She continued, “But did you ever feel stumped and tired after you started, like it was all too much, like you couldn’t keep going?”

I considered this.  And of course, the answer was yes. In the middle of a sea of change, a wall of inertia in the form of fear can rise up and knock a person completely off course, causing all kinds of second guessing and self-doubts and negating everything.  It’s terrifying and it happens at the most inopportune time, it seems. But fear forces us to grapple with our own limits, with what’s not working in our new reality.  It’s there for a purpose – not to control our behavior and cause us to run away, but to check our critical boundaries and make sure that we’re stretching them but not destroying ourselves on the way to living the lives we want.

The lawyer looked at me.”Whenever I  think about quitting my job, which I do just about every day, I get this sense of numbness inside and this inertia takes over. It’s like I can’t see that there could be a future if I stopped lawyering. Which scares the hell out of me.”

“What do you want to do?” I asked.

“You’ll laugh,” she said. I assured her I wouldn’t.

“I’d love to have a little pottery studio and a couple of  B&B rooms somewhere.” That did make me laugh. “See, I told you,” she smiled. “Don’t worry, I’m not stalking you. I don’t even know how to make a damn pot. Plus I’d like to do it in Northern California. Whatever.” She shook it off, as if saying the words brought the dream so near that it might hurt her.

“You know,” I put my hands on my hips. “When you first came in here you told me you didn’t think you belonged here.”  Her eyes were starting to well up. I continued softly. “Maybe this is exactly where you belong and you’re just fighting your fear, uh, your inertia, of leaning into the possibility.”

I reached up and grabbed a little bag of glaze I had put aside over a year before. It was one of my standards that works well time after time. I pressed it in her hand. “Here,” I said. “When you go back to the states and find yourself a ceramic school to train at, tell them you want to glaze your first pot with this. Remember, Counselor, there’s nothing you can’t do. Nothing.” She looked down.

Then I went in for the kill. “Which is more soul killing, staying where you are, thinking there can’t be a life after lawyering or actually moving forward with your plan and seeing where it leads you?  You don’t have to answer me. But think about it.”

She rolled down the hill towards the airport a few days later.  As she got in the car, she held up the packet of glaze for me to see, gave me a fist pump and threw me a kiss.

Go to blazes, inertia. Change is coming, one baby step at a time.

 

Interested in the subject of life change and courage? Then click and  subscribe here to download the free chapters of my upcoming Ebook, Your Truth – Changing the Path Back to Yourself, to be available July 15th- xoxo

  • http://amyoscar.com/ Amy Oscar

    What a beautiful story. Wow. Amazing the power of imagery – reading about this, envisioning the transfer of that little bag of glaze from your studio to that lawyer’s hand, broke through a kind of inertia in me. There is something I’ve been ‘meaning to do someday’ for a very long time. I can see it now and as I move toward it, I know I’ll return to the image of that lawyer in California, sitting in her first pottery class… and then the next. I see her opening her bed and breakfast. I see her there. And now, in that alchemy that story contains, I see me in my ‘someday’, as well.

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      Amy,  it’s all about allowing doors to open and seeing what’s inside, and deciding whether the path that leads beyond the door is one to venture down.   I would love to be a part of your move towards what you’ve been meaning to do, so I will follow your guidance and your steps with my heart. 

  • Marco

    Tears of freedom
    Painting a dream of now

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      tears of freedom is right, Marco.  

  • laurie

    Brought stinging tears to my eyes. And a smile. Thanks Diana.

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      Lots of love, Laurie.  xo

  • Sue Pownall

    I hope she does at least the pottery classes.

    “fear …’s there for a purpose – not to control our
    behavior and cause us to run away, but to check our critical boundaries
    and make sure that we’re stretching them but not destroying ourselves on
    the way to living the lives we want.”
    Considering how exhausted I am, maybe I need to think about this sentence and check those boundaries. Thanks.

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      Good boundaries are a part of successful living.  Exhaustion can cause so much anxiety, Sue.  Rest up.  I can’t wait to see you. 

  • Barbara

    It’s funny Diana, once you’ve taken the baby steps and begin to stride the first thing you want to do is encourage everyone else to do it.  I see it all the time.  I even find it difficult to not shake people sometimes.  If you never try you will never know.  It’s never all or nothing, so what have you got to lose.  I’m certain there’s a lawyer in California who will be forever grateful to you.
    b

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      So true Barbara. So true.  

  • Christa

    Gorgeous, Diana, and it strikes true. Thank you!

    XOXO

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      My pleasure, Christa. 

  • Fran Sorin

    Diana….what a magical interlude. I believe that nothing happens by accident. And just in this one meeting, with you opening the possibility for this woman, you made an impact on her….and perhaps will be the motivation for her changing her life…and finally doing what makes her happy. Everyone should be so lucky to meet a ‘Diana’ in their lives. xxoo-Fran

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      And everyone should have a Fran to help her garden grow xoxox

  • http://jwallace154.fineartstudioonline.com/ Diane Wallace

    Came to your post through artist Susan Pownell’s Facebook link.  I am so grateful she shared.  Lovely writing. Lovely story.  As I’ve recently taken the large step to quit my “safe” job and face my life’s work, I’m very appreciative of your writing.  Just subscribed, and look forward to catching up on those I’ve missed.  Using babysteps, at 60, I’ve finally found out what I want to be when I grow up.  Thank you for sharing.

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      Diane, warmest thoughts to you as you follow your life’s work.  You’ve missed nothing — you come to your work with the wisdom of all you know, and the time is right. 

  • http://www.beallican.com/ Graham Dragon

    This post made me think of Julia Roberts in “Eat, Pray , Love”.  Not quite the same thing, but they both share certain indefinable qualities.  It is, though, perhaps important also for readers not to lose touch with reality.  It is great to have a dream, and once having dreamed to take all the necessary steps to get there.  But I would hate to think that someone might throw caution to the wind with such force that they find themselves without a job, home, or family in the middle of a recession and realise that perhaps they didn’t really want to go in that direction at all but that now it is too late to go back.  Just a thought!

    • http://acertainsimplicity.com/ Diana Strinati Baur

      Thanks, Graham.  There’s a line in the prose above that refers to critical boundaries.   Assessing what is appropriate change for us to endeavor has more to do with entertaining thoughts of personal development and allowing that some of our paradigms about our situation might not be accurate.  If one does not begin that process, there is no hope of even finding out about how one feels.  Every grand scale change begins with tiny steps, and the beauty of that is that there is no rush.  

  • Lucindakeller

    Beautiful- made me cry. Currently hitting the wall … Working on the fear. Thanks for this. I’ll explain later! Hugs to you.

  • Amy

    I am at the beginning of a major change – in location and profession. Not unlike the lawyer in your story I am contemplating leaving a profession that required years of special training. Sometimes looking over the edge of the precipice is scary. I googled “inspiration for making life changes” and found this entry. And cried. Thank you. I’ll be back…

  • lisa | renovating italy

    Oh I can’t wait to see what she does with that bag of glaze, it is tiny steps but each one taken makes the next one easier. We are on the home stretch to our life in Italy, then it will be a whole new lot of baby steps…scared tired overwhelmed …yes but taking leaps and bounds!!! x