Tag: fear

  • Stop Fear-Mongering Women

    Stop Fear-Mongering Women

    I received a fear laced text about COVID-19 and climate change from a political party.  My gut reaction was:

    “OMG!!!!  I’m going to die!!!”

    I decided to reply to the text which began an exchange with an unknown person. Our exchange was frustrating, so I ended it by saying:

    “Get freaking real!  Stop fear-mongering me and stop trying to manipulate me. Treat women as if we have a brain.” 

    Politics and COVID-19 proved a powerful combination to fear-monger and emotionally manipulate women.  We’re susceptible because:

    1. We mistakenly identify with our emotions, not our ability to think.
    2. We aren’t as technically savvy, so we rely on “the experts.”
    3. We rely on other people (news media and politicians) who also aren’t technically savvy to interpret and analyze for us what the experts are saying. 

    These media personalities and politicians also conditioned us to believe that anyone who utters those three magical words,

    ‘Science, Data, Facts”

    must know what they are talking about. 

    However, that’s not true. Those of us who are trained to work with numbers know “Science, Data and Facts” are completely meaningless until they are analyzed.

    Too often people don’t analyze the data.

    Instead, they hear big numbers such as 214,917 COVID-19 deaths and believe they are at high risk of dying if they get COVID-19.

    Fear-mongering such as the text I received reinforce fears that may be completely unfounded. So, in order to understand the risk of dying from COVID-19, I looked for the COVID-19 facts that were analyzed.

    It took a little research, but I found the Covid Data Tracker on the CDC website: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#demographics

    Using the study data I created this chart:

    Doing some elementary school math reveals your statistical chance of dying if you get COVID-19 based on your age group.

    More simple math reveals that over 79% of deaths occur in people over 65. The largest number of death – 30% – come from people over the age of 85. 

    Now since this is a study and the findings are subject to what data was collected for the study, it probably has some flaws. So, I did more digging and found this CDC website: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid_weekly/index.htm#AgeAndSex

    I first noticed that their chart says: “Deaths Involving COVID-19.” 

    The chart DOES NOT say “Deaths From COVID-19”

    This suggests that COVID-19 was in many cases the final overloading cause of death (the final straw), not the stand-alone cause.  (Important distinction) We also notice that there is a jump in deaths beginning with people in their mid-fifties. For most of us this is when our health issues become apparent and begin to require care or intervention.

    Like the study, the chart also shows that about 79% of deaths occur in people over 65 with 30% of the deaths coming from people over the age of 85. 

    So from the Science, Data, Facts and Analysis should we be fearful of getting COVID-19?

    Well that depends on your age group and maybe more importantly your health.

    The analysis helps us know where we should place our concern. It also helps us stop creating unfounded fear. But more importantly, it prevents us from being fear-mongered by those who an agenda and want to use fear to manipulate us.

    Teacher protesting during Covid-19
    The average age of teachers is 41. Older teachers have reason for concern if they have health issues. Young, healthy teachers have little to fear.

    Empowered Women Are Not Fear-Mongered

    Because

    Empowered Women Analyze the Facts

  • Our Fear of Being Powerful

    I want to share a quote I’ve seen several times this past year:

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    “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that frightens us. We ask ourselves “Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?” Actually who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn’t serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We were born to manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us; it’s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”

    Marianne Williamson, A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of “A Course in Miracles”

     

    I thought was odd that we would be afraid of our own power.  But if you think about it, that is what we are afraid of.  It made me wonder – Why?

    I read some opinions that said that if we believe we are powerful, then we feel responsible to step forward and serve the world.  But then when we put ourselves out there we open ourselves up to ridicule, critique, questioning and possibly failure.  There is the possibility that the power we felt within ourselves can be taken away.  So in order to protect our power, we hide it – we play it safe by playing small.

    When we play it safe, we wait for the right moment to let ourselves shine but those moments don’t come often, if at all.

    For myself whenever I consider backing off and playing it safe – like every week when I write these articles about empowering women – I examine my perspective.  It is the perspective I have been taught that makes me want to play it safe.  Marianne said “There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you.”  What she is saying is that we are taught to believe that if we are powerful, then we diminish or disempower others.  That however, is a Blue Zone perspective – a perspective based in male traits.

    When I want to feel powerful, confident and shine, I reject this male perspective in favor of my natural female perspective.

    As women we don’t believe in the male hierarchal perspective that says there is a fixed quantity of power and for one person to rise up another must be diminished.  We don’t believe that to be powerful, brilliant, gorgeous, talented or fabulous we have to take those qualities from others.  Instead we know these qualities originate from within ourselves and we project them outward as an expression of who we are.  So when we express our power we are saying “This is how I shine.”  And it makes us look around to others and say “Tell me how you shine.”

    To keep our female power, we must keep our female circular perspective.  When we see people in a circle, we recognize each person as an equal individual and value them for who they are.  Each person is a vital piece contributing to the whole.  It allows us to say “This is who I am” without impacting other people – we only impact the sum of the whole.  When we keep this perspective, it encourages other people to do the same.  In a circle everyone can express who they are without taking anything away from who anyone is.

    I think of a circle as a container.  Each person adds to the whole and each person’s contribution of themselves only increases how much the circle contains.  So as we express ourselves, we don’t feel our energy dissipate or be consumed.  Our power isn’t attacked with ridicule and criticism.  Our energy is captured and interacts with the energy of others.  This is why when women gather in circles they get to experience their own inherent power.

    Contrast our female perspective to how we have been taught to think about our personal power.  The hierarchal male perspective we were taught doesn’t have a mechanism to collect and contain everyone’s power.  It is about competition of individuals – winners and losers; givers and takers; risers and fallers.

    So then, why aren’t we taught to think through a circular perspective?  Because it doesn’t produce the individual heroes the male hierarchy promises us.  We have subordinated the collective energy of many in order to pursue the dream of the ideal individual who is as powerful as the collective many.  When we hold ourselves back and play it safe we are hoping there is superhero out there who is stronger, more powerful and better in every way than us.  But there isn’t.  There are only lots and lots of other ordinary people just like us.

    We always have a choice in our perspective.  We can choose to play it small and wait for the elusive ultimate hero or we can step forward with our shining powerful selves encouraging others to join us.  Every week as I write these articles I am embracing my female circular perspective and inviting other women to join me in allowing themselves to shine in hope of creating a great big circle with boundless amounts of both male and female energy.   This is what the world needs.

    Our workplaces and communities need powerful women – women who retain and act from our circular perspective. My hope for the coming year is that women learn to no longer play it small and begin to embrace their inherent feminine power.

    Empowered Women Aren’t Afraid to Shine

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