Traveling on a big city train, I recently struck up conversation with a man who offered some profound insight. I learned this man was a fashion designer turned professional body piecer. He spoke with me during an hour commute into a Toronto suburb. Based on his life experience, here are three tips he believes would help you be more true to yourself;
1) View yourself as knowledgable in your field. People who perceive themselves as 'experts' are often the kind of people who evolve to become close-minded. To remain open to learning is to admit you never know it all. Yet, to believe you know little or nothing is a lie to yourself. You have power to boost your esteem without being arrogant.
2) Share what you know. Every experience you have can help other people learn. In group settings, people learn skills faster and adapt more effectively. When people have the attitude 'knowledge is power,' and they choose to keep secrets, this does not help others. In fact, it leads to fear, deception and less productive situations. Many people undervalue their role as a teacher and the good they can do wherever they already are.
3) Rise above judgement. People often decide whether they will talk to others based on appearances, assumptions about a job, socio-economic status, life choices or fear. As you evolve to permit yourself to shatter your own illusions, you move beyond stereotypes and discover what being human is all about. You have opportunities to learn from everyone about yourself. Every situation or encounter is a gift. You invite what you need.
"Wherever you go, go with all your heart." -Confucius