Friday night musings…

It’s Friday night and I’m laid on my sofa. It’s been an average week for me…delivered some training, coached a few clients, tried to avoid paperwork, failed at recording my macros, avoided opening my delivery of AG1 (green vitamins), drank too much chai. Same old same old. Attempted to catch up on some course work (I’ve got a portfolio that is seriously overdue) but got distracted by Vinted…that bloody app keeps calling to me. I’ve got way too many pairs of Converse and repetitive strain injury in both my thumbs from excessive bargain scrolling. 

It’s Friday night and I’m home trying to enjoy some light TV. Death in Paradise. Okay, so it’s murder but…well, it’s funny. And it’s in the Caribbean, and everyone dies near a lovely beach, so silver linings and all that. And it’s romantic. (Last year, when Mum was in hospital, she asked me to pick up a few romance novels from the charity shop. Debbie Macomer. She writes about lovely rural communities in the States, all cookie shops and church fetes, lonely divorcees and heartbroken widows, classic Channel 5 afternoon movie mulch. I picked one up, pre-emptively tutting at the absurd storyline that was destined to unfold. Fast forward 9 months and I’ve read 6 of them. I take notes.)

So this Friday night, with Luna (my Frenchie baby) snoring next to me, I’m musing over my week, over the past few months, thinking about romance, relaxation, care, cleansing. I’m reflecting on how Luna can just spread herself out and drift off when she needs it. She isn’t embarrassed about taking up space. She’s in the moment. I’m reflecting on how I often struggle to just chill out, but how for some reason, my body is crying out for it. When I say crying out, I don’t mean literally, but I do sense my body speaking to me in it’s own way. Not in pains or creaks, but it the way I feel it’s leading me. I’ve stood up several times in recent weeks and felt the urge to stretch my arms above my head, to circle my wrists, to extend a leg to one side, to move gracefully like an aged swan. At other times, late at night I’ve fallen onto my mattress and imagined myself swimming, dolphin-like, my bed a deep, cleansing pool. I’ve found myself longing for green and blue, for turquoise, thinking of kale and broccoli while sat in traffic, hence the order of AG1…I figure my body knows what it needs and will keep piping up until it gets it. 

So this Friday night, I’m also reviewing a list I started a while back. A list of things I wanted to try but like lots of my lists aimed at improving my mental and physical wellbeing, I tossed it to one side when it started feeling like work and the beginnings of a new religious formulation (an OCD compulsion of mine that I’m alert to). I’ve crossed a few things off with a thick red pen (Become a pianist? Hmm…not sure, not with my RSI. Register for an Ironman? Maybe next year!) but have given a definite nod to others. Like, next week, I’m taking my roller boots to Supper Club. One of the women is going to give a lesson in the car park. Tomorrow, I’m booking the pottery course Bruce bought me for my birthday. I need to use my hands and my feet, to be connected with my body outside of the routines of work. To surrender the tensions of recent years, to receive healing, to admit vulnerability and accept forgiveness. Also on my mind, as I move into the weekend are my coaching colleagues, my therapist friends, the artists, activists, advocates, truth tellers and change makers that I have the privilege to do life with. Life on the frontline can be harsh, particularly at the minute. I pray that we can be joyful in our work, congruent in our connections. And like Luna, just relax. 

I’m tired of being scared…

Years ago, I remember hearing, ‘If you can’t beat fear, do it scared.’ This much parroted quote, attributed to Glennon Doyle Melton, has been used in a multitude of settings – self-help groups, therapy rooms, life-coaching seminars, board meetings, pulpits – to spur the listener to move from a place of stuckness towards that thing they feel is just out of their reach. 

I have relied on this phrase – ‘do it scared’ – in numerous situations. At times, I’ve found it liberating, the idea that I can be my own coach and push myself out of my stupor.  Doing it scared has served me well, through studies, public speaking and walking into new networking spaces. This past year, though, I’ve come to recognise where this falls short, where it offers only a shallow and temporary relief.

In April 2024, my Mum was admitted to hospital. She needed a serious but routine heart operation and we expected her to emerge from hospital energised and renewed. Instead, she suffered a cardiac arrest during the surgery, which set off a catalogue of episodes including three strokes, long periods of delirium where she lost the ability to speak, a fall and a brain haemorrhage. My own heart, which dances to an irregular beat, became heavy as each new diagnosis was laid on her, her pain gripping my chest in solidarity. I tried to get up each day as normal, summoning faith before visiting her in hospital, caring for my son, navigating my own physical symptoms and running a business. Suffering from insomnia, night sweats and joint pains. Meeting the pessimism of exhausted doctors with a vision of the death my Mum wanted for herself. I remember running to Bradford Royal Infirmary late one night with fresh pyjamas and one of Mum’s favourite homemade quilts, just in case her intensive care bed was destined to be her final one…in that event, it was my job (we’d agreed before) to ensure she was surrounded with colour. 

After five long episodes in hospital, Mum was discharged in February. She is doing well, and I’m not overstating things by saying she is a walking miracle. I thank God. 

But I have changed. In a quiet moment this weekend, I wondered to myself if I was actually at peace or if it was the medication. If I’ll have to take anti-depressants for the rest of my life. They helped me cope throughout Covid and saw me through the past year, and now I’m too busy and menopausal to try and reduce them. (Maybe when I can take 2 months off and have some respite at a spiritual beachside spa retreat, I’ll try). 

I was delivering some training online last week and realised that my hands were shaking for most of the 3 hour session. Part tech anxiety, part imposter syndrome, I got through by leaning into the fear, but later that evening, something (obvious) occurred to me. I don’t want to be scared! I don’t like it! I don’t find it energising or motivating! Fear is horrible. Debilitating. Cruel. I’ve had way too much of it in my life. Fear of not fitting in, of being embarrassed, of being hurt, abused, rejected. Of wicked men and fickle friends. I’ve been afraid of the dark, of monsters real and imagined, of dying of a sickness or by my own hand. I’ve feared being alone and being in company, of exposure and loss. And now, in this current political climate, fear of being erased by those in power, fear of being attacked – the list goes on. I don’t need to practice feeling fear (as the other famous saying goes)…my body has been imbued with it for way too long. 

My mission now is for it to leave my body, for it to release my heart. I don’t need to do things scared, because seriously, doing things is overrated. Being productive is sold as a means of quantifying our value as a human being, of totting up points, of doing your share but I’m down with the idea that I’m valuable just for being a human being, made in the image of God. I say this as a hopeless workaholic, but I’m working (ha!) towards doing less and being more. Being more content with quietness, disconnecting from my phone. Sitting in silence, looking at the sky. Being more comfortable in my skin. Moving from shaking and stammering to moving fluidly and occupying space. Taking some dancing lessons and swimming in the sea. Being more attuned to my appetite, to nature, the universe and God. Eating green food and watering myself regularly. And if I really have to do things while being scared, I’m going to take time to recover before running headlong into another scary situation. 

Right now, I’m heading to bed. I need some rest. I’m seeing my Mum in the morning and she needs me to be unflappable as we brace for a few meetings. Not fearful, but centred, confident and clear. It’s my job to speak up for her now. If fear shows up, I’ll postpone the meetings and we’ll go have a Greggs instead. That’s my gift to myself. To listen to my own heart beat, and if necessary, step back from the edge. 

A short rant about getting paid…

One of the toughest things about being a freelancer is the waiting. To hear back about commissions, auditions, applications, bids, or just from people who have promised they will call or email. Occasionally, it feels like you’re in a toxic relationship with someone who insists they love you despite the fact that they regularly stand you up, ignore your calls, get romantic with old flames (while you watch) and then gaslight you when you say they’re behaving badly – which you hardly ever say, because (and this is the worse type of waiting) they always owe you money. 

On paper, I have money. Sometimes lots of it. I should (I hate ‘shoulds’ but I’m making a point) be able to eat out a couple times a month, pay my bills without checking my bank balance, treat myself occasionally to new shoes, have a gym membership – shit, I should be able to buy sourdough bread, shop at The White Company and get my vits from Holland & Barrett (I am that person). The truth is, I’m often anxious about how I’m going to make ends meet or whether or not I can fill the car up, basically because some finance department won’t pay me. I’ve done the work, sent off the report, delivered the workshop, or written the script but then there seems to be this disconnect between the people who friended me, invited me in and said ‘thank you’ on completion, and the people who need to press ‘send’ in the finance team. Last year, I did some work for a local authority who took 6 months to pay me. Which employee could stand to wait that long? Why do we have different rules for freelance labour? 

I’m 51 years old and have worked solidly since I was 18. I have never been unemployed or on benefits* – I’ve been lucky and consider myself privileged. I’m also married to someone who works full-time, so we have more than one income coming in. 

And still, it feels hard. Without credit cards (and a mum, who quite frankly, should get an award for her services to saving and bailing her children out) I would be up that smelly creek way too often, and yet even this is a privilege some others don’t have.

It’s not lost on me that so many people are struggling. January is a particularly hard month for many, while for others it is just another difficult milestone amidst years of grinding poverty. I don’t really consider myself hard done by – but I do feel pissed off that these systems, that should serve the growing self-employed infrastructure, just keep failing so badly and it’s not consequence free. I can’t save, am always playing catch-up, and have low level stress always hovering, like white noise spoiling a tune. What I would like to see is:

  • Set pay days for freelance labour
  • More partial payment in advance (my favourite clients do this)
  • A proper introduction to the finance team and a named contact
  • Automatic late invoice payment enhancement eg. 10% uplift
  • Non punitive complaint procedures eg. I won’t lose work if I call you out

Just to say, I like being self-employed. I don’t have a boss, but I have loads of brilliant relationships. I choose where I work, who I work with and what I focus on. I have creative freedom. Most clients are brilliant. 

I still want to get paid though. Please.

*No shade to those on benefits. I grew up on benefits, so in one sense, I’ve benefitted from the benefit system. There’s obvs no shame in being on benefits (how many times can I use ‘benefits’?) or being under-employed. It is what it is until it isn’t. I was just making the (clumsy) point that this struggle is broader than just those deemed to be on low incomes.

Image by Claudio Schwartz, from Unsplash.com