Natalie Ferrier | Actress | Artist | Communication Skills Coach | Speaker | Writer
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Thoughts from the

Nativerse

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Reach further, ask for more

3/25/2022

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Are you playing the big game in life and going after what you really want, Or are you shrinking to accept life’s current circumstances?

I’ve been reflecting this last little bit on how easy it can be, when the pressure is on in life, in terms of things like your current bank balance, perceived work availability, partner, employer, family demands, resource scarcity and especially during times like the last two years of global circumstances relating to pandemics, lockdown and the far-reaching impact these have had on our social interaction, prior face to face earning capacity for many industries, and what reach or impact we can have out there in the world, for example, to start shrinking to life’s circumstances. Not just in ones psychic perception of how far one can physically go out into the world at such times and what is acceptable or possible to achieve at such times. It’s easy for your expectations or visions or weekly goals to also start shrinking to match.


When we start thinking in terms of fear and lack, it suddenly becomes very easy to start shrinking dreams, visions and daily goals and expectations, to fit the circumstance. To fit the external demands. To accept the status quo, to not want to rock the boat, especially if one perceives one is at risk of losing something that is now perceived as rare or more scarcer than it used to be. And that’s too much of a risk to take.


But then, if there are genuine circumstances in life we’re trying to break through and rise above, like our financial set point; like establishing ourselves as a Leader or Authority on a subject,  like succeeding in upping our business service fees to be more profitable than charitable, like not repeating the same mental or karmic patterns at work, or in personal life, from a decade ago, that one never wanted to go through again; playing into the fear and limits of the old, is exactly how we can start to fall in the hole of creating and ultimately accepting, the precursors of the exact same thing all over again.


Example 1: We worry (especially as Women) about running out of money and the implications of not being able to pay bills or feed loved ones, or being evicted, so we temporarily give up and take the job that’s half the pay to what we could be getting, at almost the 11th hour, instead of backing ourselves and applying for 50 more, better fitting opportunities at double the pay rate, that we’re actually entitled to at our level of expertise.  That same job, different day job you take again, eventually drains you in the same way, so you inevitably leave it, not being able to tolerate it any longer, likely before you really had a backup plan, only to end up in the exact same 11th hour circumstance when the back up funds run short, and be faced with the same decision again. When this same circumstance happens multiple times over the course of a decade, one makes a series of the same decision again and again, and then can wonder at the end of a decade why they’re still stuck in a job they hate, that sucks them dry, are still financially no better off and haven’t  made the massive impact, or haven’t achieved the ascension and recognition one hoped one would’ve by now.


Example 2: Despite having a desire to want to connect with higher paying markets in one’s business, one concedes to serving and dropping their price for the same 20-200 people who can’t pay that, conceding it will help one get momentum and testimonials, increase reach and awareness and ultimately make a bigger difference in the world.
One ends up staying up and working huge hours trying to build out something that works for the people that are showing up. Only to end up realising later that they’re actually still building out ones services and offerings to meet the exact market and circumstances one was trying to move beyond’s needs, instead of building to meet the one they were wanting to break into instead. Then one might wonder at the end of a decade why they still have low paying clients, are still exhausted from overworking to serve them for low rates, are still trying to sort of their wounds and limiting beliefs and haven’t reached their financial goals. Let alone made the global impact they hoped to.


Example 3: One has a passion for doing something creative, like fashion design or dance or photography or cooking or singing or painting or building cute little cabinets from certain types of wood or knitting things. One really wants to do this and get paid for it. And maybe get some recognition for it for being really good at it. But again, every time one has some free time to do these things, or a break between work, which would allow a possibility for the pursuit of such things, one starts playing the lack game; lack of time, can’t justify doing this right now because need to do something that makes me more money, guaranteed, “i’ll do it right after I “pay off this thing,” “look after the needs of [insert person’s name from family or personal life.” And then, all of a sudden, a decade goes by, and one realised that one hasn’t accepted any of the extra or featured acting roles or singing jobs they signed up for, one hasn’t painted or knitted or created more than one cabinet and one still hasn’t made money from it and it’s still a pipe dream. That one indulges, occasionally, when one “has the time.”


But of course my love! Because what we often don’t realise in the moment of “the crunch” itself, is that what we were actually doing, almost every time we had a choice (and a window open to create a different reality) was shrinking to the perceived confines of the prevailing circumstances, out of fear and lack and doubt. Sticking to the known path, the predictable and safety of the comfortable. Swimming straight back to the shore, when we swim on out ok, but then panic when we realise how far out we are and that we can no longer touch the bottom. And thus went back to accepting the status quo. But what action did we commit and follow through on, to actually play a bigger game? And stick with that game, even when the grass on the pitch we’re nurturing hasn’t popped it’s shoots above the ground for us to see results yet? 


I made alot of massive decisions, as it turns out, as I turned 40. One of those was to choose a theme of this year that reads like “PLAY BIGGER.”


Inspired by the stories of a few awesome people, who achieved Awesome things in the world, by choosing to back themselves, by choosing to actually share their “audacious” visions and ask for more than they were first offered, or told was “possible.”


On International Women’s Day, you might have seen I shared a blog with seven examples of high achieving Women (who never had biological children of their own), who refused to except the status quo and pushed all the boundaries in life and achieved amazing things, driven by the desire to want to make a positive impact in the world, to achieve new things for Women like them and change the limits of the way things were.  It was here in case you missed it.


There are also two awesome Men who Immediately come to my mind as standout examples of people who chose to be audacious in the face of both opposition and opportunity, to play a bigger game and, in some cases, to be willing to reach higher and ask for more.


In his autobiography, Greenlights, Matthew McConaughey describes numerous times in his acting career where, from a young age, he was put forward for a particular role, a part that some colleague or agent or casting professional, producer or director initially had their idea of what they thought he could do or be. But then McConaughey had his own ideas of what he saw and his vision of how he thought a particular character could be played. Or his own idea to instead play a lead role that he thought he would be a great fit for. That rather than just secretly wishing for it like many people would, but saying nothing, and rather than just playing by the hierarchy, playing the game as you’re supposed to and auditioning for the part that he was put forward for, for not wanting to seem ungrateful, he was bold enough to put it out there to ask for the possibility to audition for a lead role/another character when he thought he’d actually be perfect for it instead.

When he was then given an opportunity to audition, he would go above and beyond to bring his visions of those characters to life and bring his own life experience, imagination, research, professionalism and empathy to them. In that way, he went from being type cast as, for example, some KKK bad guy, to successfully being offered the chance to play a hero and a Lead, like Jake Brigance in "A Time to Kill." He backed himself, he had the balls to just put it out there, he showed up, he delivered and history clearly shows his prize was that he won the bigger possibilities many times. Including earning an Academy Award for his Performance in Dallas Buyers Club.



His faith in his shared vision with the Creators of that movie was such that he started preparation and losing weight for that role a year in advance. Up until a couple of months before they were due to start filming, there were still major doubts as to whether there was sufficient funding to be able to complete that movie or not. Yet he felt to stay the course and keep trusting that it would work out.  He stayed in regular touch, reinforcing that he knew it would happen. And history now shows that that movie happened and it's now a pinnacle of his career.


He now sits in my head as as a constant reminder that it’s ok to play bigger. To show up as your full potential. Put your visions out there. To ask for more. To have faith and be willing to receive something bigger as your means of service. To be brave and back yourself enough to stop excepting less than that, because we worry that this is all that we can get. Or, if we do get it, that we might “ $h&t the bed”, as Justin Timberlake once put it in “Friends with Benefits,” in reference to a job opportunity at GQ Magazine. (Well we might, but what if we also win? And what if even “$h&tting the bed” actually turns out to be a win?)



A little closer to home in Australia and NZ, last year, I was very fortunate to get to attend one of the inspirational speeches of the “awesome”  Paralympic Sprinter and International Inspirational Speaker, Cam Calkoen. If you haven’t seen him speak, please see him. Cam’s story was that, from a young age he dreamed of travelling the world, entertaining and making a positive impact. He also had dreams of running. But, on account of the fact that he was born with Cerebral Palsy, he was told by Specialists and many Educators alike, that  it was not realistic to think he would ever be able to do any of these things, for people with his condition. Cam decided he wasn’t having that as a reality. Took up trying to get exceptionally good at running….and came out a Paralympic Gold Medalist, before then going on to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. For someone who was told he would never walk well or be able to speak well, he also decided he wanted to get really great at Professional Speaking. Got to connecting with some leading organisations and BIG personalities in the processing of seeking opportunities to speak more, and is now an International Motivational Speaker and Social Entrepreneur, who has spoken to and inspired people across the world, despite, as he puts it, his “funny accent.” Again, his stories of not just what he refused to believe and what he's he’s achieved, but his decisions to go “why not” and just send those emails to the people he did, let alone to accept and rise to the possibilities, again, is the epitome of “dream big, achieve more” well-lived.


Many of us Women in particular are conditioned NOT to do any of this. How dare we be so bold and ungrateful to ask for more? But do we really want to keep playing that game, for fear of rocking the boat?

So the point of today? It’s a reminder to look for the ways in which we’re playing small and shrinking to fit our perceived, present reality. And to make sure we’re finding ways to stretch to rising into, and creating our actual destiny.



We can choose to have the audacity to raise the bar. To endure the freak out that can come when we will inevitably have to let go of what people and opportunities aren’t in alignment with, or willing to receive us in the full capacity of who we are here to be. Or to endure the equal freak out that can come when bigger opportunity actually presents itself….and find ways to lean into the excitement of it, into one’s faith in one’s entitlement to it, and keep going, until one realises one’s dream. Whatever, or whoever, it is.


Become aware of when you’re playing small and taking on the external world's perceptions of what is possible. Start making different decisions, moment to moment. Aim higher. Go for more. Do more that's in alignment with who you know you're truly here to become and what you know you're here to achieve. And surround yourself with the kind of support and belief system that pulls you more in the direction of your new reality, than back to repeating the old habits, relationships and circumstances you didn't want. Get busy something different to what you've always done, notice the moments where it's all working in your favour, and before too long, one day you'll look up and realise you're actually there and you've done it. Whatever it is. I look forward to hearing from you what you'll be doing to play your own bigger game this year and smiling with you about it when you're there. (Before too, but definitely when you're there!)


Until next time …

Nat xx

P.S. Live session support and events are back from April. You can check out what's on under the Events and Programs tabs on this site, and or book a time to chat, virtually NOW, or live from the second week of April, HERE.
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IWD 2022: 7 women leaders without kids who've helped change the world

3/8/2022

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Happy International Women’s Day to you! This year, in addition to sending a little love to all people who identify as Women everywhere, I also wanted to celebrate the achievements of one of the sometimes forgotten, but ever growing groups of Women; those without children by choice or circumstance. There is an unfortunate stereotype that exists for this group of Women, (for the whole group of people of all genders who identify as childfree by choice or circumstance really) that inherently impacts on the open participation of this group of Women in today. One that says that if you are one, you’re inherently narcissistic, selfish and contribute nothing of value to society by doing so.


This notion, as a self professed Women without kids by the combination of choice and circumstance, who is friends with, works with, runs programs for, speaks and writes now about how to thrive in career love and life as a Women exploring life beyond the traditional life path of biological Motherhood, I feel the emphatic, compulsive obligation to, with love, call bullsh*t on.  So much so, that I spent the last few days navigating through hundreds of wikipedia linked articles and digging up lists of at least 400 famous people of various occupations who didn’t go on to have children of their own, yet are household names you would likely recognise, and then shortly after also likely realise have more than likely been a frequent part of your reality, growth and enjoyment during the course of your time on our humble planet, wherever upon it you reside.


Granted, this is a little Western White Privileged Middle Class born White Woman who identifies as slightly more bisexual than cis gender heterosexual centric in my compilation. But if you’re in this group of people yourself, I want you to know, especially today, that I see you! I see how often, how very purpose oriented and driven, how extremely dedicated and just how hard-working for your causes that you are. I see you struggling with your own version of creating work life balance, wealth and sustainability, while you’re managing and juggling all your professional projects, relationships, businesses, side hustles…and trying to squeeze in time to date or be present for friends and family at the same time. I see you feeling second to the hard working, high achieving Mums and feeling like it’s not ok to honour you in comparison, to ask or to celebrate all that you are and bring to the world, out in public. But you know that you really do deserve your time today too, right? There are so many millions of Women without kids of their own out there doing life changing, world impacting work out there that is absolutely a legacy to the world that deserves to be seen and celebrated, openly and with pride, today of all days, and every day.


So if you are one, please join me in taking just 5 minutes some time today to sit somewhere quiet, close your eyes, list at least 3-5 reasons that the world is so damn lucky to have you. To affirm that what unique gifts you bring to the world are so very needed in the world, right now of all times. And to reaffirm to yourself that you are needed, your belong here and it is your time to not just shine in the world, and to build your legacy. But to thrive in being happy, in creating a life you truly love,  and expressing your fullest potential, in a thousand other ways (other than having achieved the miracle of growing a life and squeezed a baby out your ………. That is an EPIC achievement that deserves a whole lot of celebration…..and so too is the reason your were born to this planet, and you living this next phase of your journey is a needed part of your unique life purpose…and the very reason you’re here. For the little and big differences you will make in the world, we thank and celebrate you today. Bless and thank you. Massive love and huge hugs to you.


Nat xx


P.S. For inspirational and educational purposes this International Women’s Day, here is a list of 7 well-known Women who didn’t have children of their own (+ at least 1 Step Mum), that you might know of, that I think are pretty epic, who’ve made a massive positive impact in society in various ways too. (Big thanks and acknowledgement to the countless contributors to the wiki resources and articles linked below and paraphrased or quoted above, from which I’ve compiled the below achievements and bios.
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Oprah Winfrey

American television personality, actress, philanthropist and entrepreneur, Oprah undeniably has one of the most popular daily talk shows in the genre not just in the United States, but is undeniably influential across the world in shaping the conversation and trends of modern day life, not to mention in promoting numerous causes. Plus has been a role model and highly influential in breaking down many of the glass ceilings that exist for Women of colour, in not just the US, but numerous other countries where she is aired, or her content is accessible. Her compassionate, but honest interview technique is brilliant in the quality of honest human sharing she makes it safe for her guests to engage in…and many of us are undeniably better off for the personal journeys we’ve been on, watching her work. She also happens to not have had any children of her own, but is undeniably one of the world’s most prominent nurtures, in a whole host of ways, and so makes our list of Women who’ve made a massive contribution to humanity, despite being “without children.”[1]​
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Ellen Degeneres
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After surviving coming out on national television, her sitcom being dropped by the Network and advertising sponsors shortly after, navigating 2 years of proverbial “dark night of the soul” in the contemplation of “What now?” and then rising a few years later into the amazing public presence that Ellen is today, American comedian, television host, actress, writer, and producer Ellen De Generes is widely regarded as having been massively influential in opening up the LGBTIQA conversation in America (and Internationally, given the global reach of media) and was publicly praised by President Obama for her contribution to the gay rights movement during his term in office. Not to mention has also won numerous awards for her charitable contributions to the world. How many lives the world over has her good humour, with and kindness touched the hearts of? What an awesome legacy she and Spouse Portia De Rossi leave to the world….but yep their legacies also extend beyond having had or not having had children. [2]
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Bell Hooks (Gloria Jean Watkins)

Gloria Jean Watkins, pen name Bell Hooks, was (as she put it) a “queer-pas-gay” American author, professor, feminist, social activist, and academic, who taught at institutions including Stanford University, Yale University, and The City College of New York, before joining Berea College in Berea, Kentucky, in 2004,  where a decade later she founded the Bell Hooks Institute. [3]


Having published around 40 books, plus a range of essays, poetry and children's books, published numerous scholarly articles, appeared in documentary films, and participated in public lectures, the focus of Hooks's body of work has been summed up as the exploration of the intersectionality of race, capitalism, gender, and what she described as their ability to produce and perpetuate systems of oppression and class domination. It is undeniable that her legacy of work and contributions to feminist theory and activism have positively influenced whole generations of women, men and non-binary people seeking to abolish gendered violence, misogyny, discrimination, exploitation and oppression, in order to achieve the gift for each individual of freedom and bring about a better world. And it just so happens that she never formally married or had children. Yet her work is still rippling onwards and outwards, continuing to positively influence the globe, beyond the state she set out to help change. [3]
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Shabana Azmi

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At age 66, Shabana Azmi, is widely celebrated for her career achievements as a Hindi film, television and theatre Actress, known for her portrayals of distinctive, often unconventional female characters across several genres.  Having received the National Film Award for Best Actress five times, making her the overall most-awarded actor in the function and numerous other industry awards, in 1998, she was also honoured by the Government of India with the Padma Shri, the fourth-highest civilian honour of the country, and in 2012, she was awarded Padma Bhushan, the third-highest civilian honour. In addition to acting, as a Psychology graduate and recipient of numerous honorary doctorates, Azmi is also a social and women's rights activist and a United Nations Population Fund (UNPFA) Goodwill Ambassador, promoting reproductive rights for Indian Women through greater access to contraception and abortion in India.  In appreciation of Azmi's life and works, the President of India also gave her a nominated (unelected) membership of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of parliament. Married to poet and screenwriter Javed Akhtar, she also has never had children of her own. Yet, in entertainment and activism, is creating a wonderful legacy in the world. [4]


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​Fatema Mernissi

Fatema Mernissi, a Moroccan sociologist and feminist writer, who was one of the founders of Islamic feminism, is known for her sociopolitical approaches towards discussing gender and sexual identities, specifically those in Morocco and other Muslim countries. Throughout her career, Mernissi was an avid spokesperson regarding women's rights and equality, while also embracing the Islamic faith. Mernissi's works focused on providing a voice for oppressed and marginalized women, tackling issues such as Eurocentrism, intersectionality, transnationalism and global feminism in her publications and public lectures.  She has also brought to light the contributions of Muslim women to the economy and politics and acknowledged many factors that affect how females are viewed within Islamic cultures. As well as externally by Western Feminism.  She apparently studied political science at the Sorbonne in Paris and later at Brandeis University in the US, where she gained her doctorate in 1974.  And then returned to work at the Mohammed V University in Rabat and taught at the Faculté des Lettres between 1974 and 1981 on subjects such as methodology, family sociology and psychosociology. She was also apparently a research scholar at the University Institute for Scientific Research there. [5]


In addition to her most influential publications, she received several awards for her work. “In 2003, Mernissi was awarded the Prince of Asturias Award, along with Susan Sontag. Mernissi's acceptance speech, The Cowboy or Sinbad?, covered the topic of globalization, and was recognized for her pensive take, considering both the issue and effects of culture. In 2004, she was awarded the Erasmus Prize, alongside Sadik Al-Asm and Abdolkarim Soroush.” “For this award, she was recognized for her sociocultural impact since it was dedicated to "Religion and Modernity". “In 2017, The Middle East Studies Association created the Fatima Mernissi Book Award to recognize outstanding scholarship in studies of gender, sexuality, and women’s lived experience ”. [5]


Mernissi, I believe, never had children, but her legacy is the scholarly and literary contributions  she made to the early Islamic feminist movement and the undeniable impact they have had and continue to have in the world. [5]


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Frida Kahlo

Magdalena Carmen Frida Kahlo y Calderón was a world famous Mexican painter known for her many portraits, self-portraits, and works inspired by the nature and artifacts  of Mexico, as well as for her famous self portraits. [6] Given how they were painted, she has also become a role model for generations of artists and  people with disabilities, having overcome multiple disabilities including childhood polio, spina bifida and pelvis damage from a car accident, to became a world-renowned self-portrait painter, using special devices created to mount her canvas and equipment, while she lay in bed. [7] Given the barriers for Women with disabilities in obtaining employment or achieving entrepreneurial success, she is iconic within both the art and disability communities for her achievements . [7] Do I really need to say any more than that? Oh, no wait, I do. Married to artist Diego Rivera, she was also bisexual and a person of influence within the LGBTIQA community. [7] She didn’t have children of her own, but again, has widely influenced the evolution of the global art community and the world with her perspective, determination, dedication, technique and contribution to art and culture.
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Amelia Earthart
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Then there was this powerhouse. Amelia Mary Earhart, was an American aviation pioneer, author and the first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. [8] “She set many other records, was one of the first aviators to promote commercial air travel, wrote best-selling books about her flying experiences, and was instrumental in the formation of The Ninety-Nines, an organization for female pilots.” [8]

“Ranked ninth on Flying's list of the 51 Heroes, decades after her presumed death, Earhart was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1968 and the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1973 for her career achievements.” She also apparently achieved all this, with respiratory complications; having (while working as a nurse at Spadina Military Hospital during the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918, contracted it herself and faced 2 months of hospitalisation, followed by a year long recovery from the flu itself pre antibiotic era.  [8] While she went on to train at medical school and leave to instead pursue flying lessons and her career as a pilot, Chronic sinusitis significantly affected Earhart's flying and activities in later life, and she sometimes wore a bandage on her cheek to cover a small drainage tube.  [8]

​Known as one of the most inspirational American figures in aviation from the late 1920s throughout the 1930s, for both her competitive flying, world record attempts, early promotional activities of the safety of aviation, her legacy also involved the Women's causes she and friend Eleanor Roosevelt collaboratively worked towards.

While she never had children of her own, she was apparently step Mum to her partner’s children too. [8] And continues to inspire global explorers, high achievers and Women seeking non traditional career paths to this day.
Thats just seven stories of millions and millions the globe over of people without kids creating an awesome legacy in the world, beyond just that of passing on their genes. Wherever they are, and how visible or not, please do join me today in sending them a little acknowledgement and thanks for all that they do in the world too, in countless little and big ways in which they do it.


P.P.S. If you’d like to celebrate and discuss the achievements of these and other awesome Women and people of all genders and walks of life without kids, talk self care practices that help us be our best selves and connect with some other awesome Women who are working on thriving and creating their legacy in life without kids due to choice or circumstance, feel free to join us this Saturday 12th March 1:30pm Sydney/Melbourne AEDT for our next WELCOME Women’s Virtual Gathering. More info and register below:
REGISTER HERE
References:
​Image credits to Wikipedia
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oprah_Winfrey
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellen_DeGeneres
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_hooks
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabana_Azmi
[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatema_Mernissi
[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frida_Kahlo
[7] https://www.respectability.org/2019/03/women-disabilities-frida-kahlo/
[8] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_Earhart
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