Self-doubt ruined my weekend.
Self-doubt ruined my weekend.
It was in the fall of 2014. I had just moved to Asheville, NC, and heard about this Wild Words weekend writers retreat to be held at a secluded yoga center in Tennessee.
It was my first writing retreat. I was excited and optimistic.
We wrote to prompts and after twenty or thirty minutes of writing, we all shared what we read. After the second prompt, I listened to everyone else read their work.
They were incredible.
It dawned on me that what I wrote was shite.
I could feel this sense of dread twist and turn in my bowels and claw its way up my throat.
It was my turn to read.
“I pass,” I said.
In a Gateless Writing retreat, you’re in a safe space. The only feedback you get is positive. Not patronizing but constructive:
What speaks to you as a listener? What word or phrase punched you in the gut with its power and vulnerability?
“Are you sure?” said the facilitator, Suzanne Kingsbury.
I nodded.
The doubt ate away at any confidence or optimism I had. The whole weekend, I couldn’t shake it.
I continued to write to the prompts and read, not much with feeling.
I felt too low on the totem pole to reach out to Suzanne, so entrenched was my doubt.
Finally I confided with another attendee. She made me promise that I’d read the piece I passed on before I leave that retreat.
At the last possible moment, I did. It took every ounce of courage to do so.
As I read, everyone’s jaw dropped. Or maybe that was my jaw, as I received the feedback from the room and the deep knowing from Suzanne, who saw and felt in my words what I wasn’t yet able to comprehend.
It was the first time someone mirrored back to me the depths of my soul and called it good.
I sobbed.
That piece became my first published story.
Don’t give up. Believe in yourself.
And find your tribe who will empower you and encourage you.