CHAPTER 1
The Lie:
SOMETHING ELSE WILL MAKE ME HAPPY
I peed my pants last week.
Not full-on peed my pants, like that one time at summer camp when I was ten years old. We were playing capture the flag, and I couldnât hold it a second longer. I didnât want to admit that Iâd just wet my pants, so I doused myself with a bottle of water. Imagine, if you will, that once all of my clothes were wet, no oneâmost especially Christian Clark, my camp crushâwas the wiser. I was resourceful even then.
Did others find it odd that I was suddenly soaking wet?
Probably.
But Iâd rather be an oddball than a pants-wetter any day of the week.
As for last week, this wasnât that level of peeing my pants. This was just your regular Iâve-pushed-three-babies-out-of-my-body dribbling.
Giving birth to a baby is like a space shuttle launch. Everything gets destroyed on the way out, which means that sometimes, you guys, I pee my pants. If this knowledge hurts your tender sensibilities, then Iâm going to assume you havenât had bladder-control problemsâand I offer you my congratulations. However, if my experience makes sense to you, then you probably have this problem tooâwhich means you just laughed a little, having experienced a similar predicament.
I was jumping with my boys out back, and somebody hollered for me to show off a midair toe touch. This is my only known skill on a trampoline, and if Iâm going to work up the gumption to hoist myself onto that spring-loaded death trap, youâd better believe Iâm going to give it my all. One second I was soaring through the air like one of the extra-tiny gals they launch into basket tosses during a cheerleading competition, and the next moment my pants were wet. Nobody noticedâunless you count my prideâbut it happened just the same. I had to keep jumping so that the continuous wind rush would dry out my shorts. Iâm resourceful, remember? The timing was perfection, too, because not thirty minutes later, a previously programmed Facebook post went up showing me trying on dresses for the Oscars.
Before you get the wrong impression, I am not fancy enough to go to the Academy Awards. I am, however, married to someone ultra hunky. Heâs not really fancy either, but his job certainly is. That means that sometimes I get to wear dresses like a princess and drink free wine in well-lit ballrooms. In these instances, photos show up on Instagram or Facebook of us looking well coiffed and ultra glam, and the internet goes wild. This is prime real estate for people to write me notes about how glamorous my life is, how stylish and fashionable and perfect my world must be. And all I can think when I read those comments later is, Iâve just peed myself, in public, surrounded by other human beings. Iâve literally gone to the bathroom in the air while trying to force my hamstrings into unnatural gymnastic positions in order to impress my three-year-old.
Yâall, Iâm about as unglamorous as you can get.
And I donât mean that in a celebrity, stars-are-just-like-us kind of way. This is not like that time Gwyneth went makeup-free and, with her perfect skin and her angel-blonde hair, tried to convince us she was just a regular gal even in her four-hundred-dollar T-shirt.
No, I mean this literally.
I am not glamorous. I am 1,000 percent one of the nerdiest people youâre likely to meet. If Iâve somehow managed to convince you otherwise because I run a lifestyle website with pretty pictures, or because my hair looks extra shiny on Instagram sometimes, well, sister, let me set you straight. I am not a perfect wife, not a perfect mother, not a perfect friend or boss, and most definitely not a perfect Christian. Not. Even. Close. Iâm not perfect at anything I doâwell, except for making and eating dishes that are primarily cheese-basedâbut the other stuff, the life stuff? Oh girl, Iâm struggling.
I feel like itâs important to say that. Important enough to base an entire book around the idea, in fact, because I want to make sure you hear it.
I am so incredibly flawed in big ways and small ways and sideways and beside ways, and I make a living telling other women how to better their lives. Meâof the workout regimens and DIY skin-brightening scrub. Meâwith the tips on cooking Thanksgiving dinner and the itemized list of how to parent your kids. MeâI am failing.
All. The. Time.
This is important because I want you to understand, my sweet, precious friend, that weâre all falling short. Yet even though I fail over and over and over again, I donât let it deter me. I still wake up every day and try again to become a better version of myself. Some days I feel as if Iâm getting closer to the best version of me. Other days I eat cream cheese for dinner. But the gift of life is that we get another chance tomorrow.
Somewhere along the way women got the wrong information. Or, I should say, we got so much of the wrong information that we washed our hands of the whole thing. We live in an all-or-nothing society that says I need to look, act, think, and speak perfectly or just throw in the towel and stop trying altogether.
Thatâs what I worry about the mostâthat youâve stopped trying. I get notes from readers and see thousands of comments on my social media feeds. Some of you feel so overwhelmed by your life that youâve given up. Youâre a piece of jetsam being tugged along with the tide. It feels too hard to keep up with the game, so youâve quit playing. Oh sure, youâre still here. You still show up for work, you still make dinner and take care of your kids, but youâre always playing catch-up. You always feel behind and overwhelmed.
Life is not supposed to overwhelm you at all times. Life isnât meant to be merely survivedâitâs meant to be lived.
Seasons or instances will inevitably feel out of your control, but the moments when you feel like youâre drowning are supposed to be brief. They should not be the whole of your existence! The precious life youâve been given is like a ship navigating its way across the ocean, and youâre meant to be the captain of the vessel. Certainly there are times when storms toss you around or cover the deck with water or break the mast clean in halfâbut thatâs when you need to fight your way back, to throw all the water off the boat bucket by bucket. Thatâs when you battle to get yourself back to the helm. This is your life. You are meant to be the hero of your own story.
This doesnât mean you become selfish. This doesnât mean you discard your faith or quit believing in something greater than yourself. What it means is taking responsibility for your own life and your own happiness. Said another wayâa harsher, more-likely-to-get-me-punched-in-the-face wayâif youâre unhappy, thatâs on you.
When I say unhappy, I mean unhappy. I donât mean depressed. True depression has everything to do with your genetic makeup and the chemical balance in your body. As someone whoâs battled depression personally, I have the utmost compassion for anyone whoâs going through it. I also donât mean sadness. Sadness or grief brought on by circumstances outside of your controlâlike the soul-shredding loss of a loved oneâis not something that can be walked through quickly or easily. Sadness and pain are things you have to sit with and get to know or youâll never be able to move on.
When I say unhappy, I mean discontented, unsettled, frustrated, angryâany of a number of emotions that make us want to hide from our lives instead of embracing them with arms wide open like a Creed song. Because happy peopleâthe ones who are enjoying their lives 90 percent of the timeâdo exist. Youâve seen them. In fact, youâre reading a book written by one right now.
Ultimately, I think thatâs what people are commenting on in my photos. Theyâre saying, âYour life looks so perfect,â but what I think they mean is, âYour life seems happy. You look content. Youâre always optimistic and grateful. Youâre always laughing.â
I want to explain why . . .
I didnât have an easy start. Actually, if I am being honest, the word I would use to describe much of my childhood is traumatic. Our house was chaoticâthe highest highs and the lowest lows. There were big parties filled with family and friends, followed by screaming and fighting and crying. Fist-sized holes would find their way into the walls, and plates would shatter against the kitchen floor. My father handled stress with anger; my mother handled it by going to bed for weeks at a time. Like most children who grow up similarly, I didnât know there was any other way to be a family.
Then, when I was fourteen years old, my big brother, Ryan, committed suicide. The things I saw and went through that day will haunt me forever, but they also changed me in a fundamental way. I was the baby of four children and had spent my life up until that point largely ignorant of the world outside my own home. But when Ryan died, our already turbulent and troubled home shattered. If life was difficult before he died, it was untenable afterward.
I grew up in that single day. And amid the anguish and fear and confusion of his death, I recognized a great truth: if I wanted a better life than the one Iâd been born into, it was up to me to create it.
The year he died I was a freshman in high school, and I immediately started taking as many classes as I could in order to graduate early. My junior year, I received my diploma and moved to Los Angeles, the closest major city to my small California hometown. To this country mouse, LA seemed like the kind of place where any dream could come true. I was seventeen years old, not even grown-up enough to get a phone line or sign the lease on my apartment without an adult signature, but all I could focus on was finally getting away. For years Iâd lived within the chaos of my childhood home thinking, Someday Iâll get out of here, and then Iâll be happy.
How could I not be happy in LA? I soaked up every inch of it from the second my feet hit the ground. I absorbed the frenetic energy of Hollywood and adapted to the rhythm of the waves rolling to shore along PCH. A multidimensional skyline made me feel worldly. I appreciated the kind of views that only an outsider would see.
Most people donât notice the trees in Beverly Hills. Theyâre much too busy coveting the mansions that sit below them, but the trees were one of the first things I saw. I gloried in beauty for the sake of beauty, since that sort of thing hadnât existed in the place where Iâd grown up. The thing is, the trees all match in Beverly Hills. On any given street, around any given corner, and even amid the chaos of a bustling city, you will see row after row of perfect symmetryâa menagerie of Canary Island pines and camphor trees and date palms. They were laid out by the original landscape architect back at the beginning of the twentieth century. They hug the wide streets in meticulous rows, silent sentinels of one of the worldâs most affluent cities. After a lifetime of chaos, I delighted in the order.
Finally, I thought to myself, Iâm where I belong.
Time passed and seasons changed, and my new city eventually taught me one of the most vital lessons Iâve ever learned. Moving or traveling or getting away? Itâs just geography. Moving doesnât change who you are. It only changes the view outside your window. You must choose to be happy, grateful, and fulfilled. If you make that choice every single day, regardless of where you are or whatâs happening, you will be happy.
I get to see my best friend, Amanda, a few times a year. Every time we hang out we talk until our throats are sore and laugh until our cheeks hurt. Amanda and I would have just as much fun hanging out in my living room as we would lying on a beach in Mexico. Now, granted, Mexico is prettier, the weather is nicer, and weâd have easier access to cocktails with little umbrellas in them . . . but we can have a great time whether weâre in my backyard or behind the Dumpster at the local Walmart because weâre so excited to hang out with each other. When youâre engaged and involved and choosing to enjoy your own life, it doesnât matter where you are, or frankly, what negative things get hurled at you. Youâll still find happiness because itâs not about where you are but who you are.
THINGS THAT HELPED ME . . .
1. I stopped comparing myself. I stopped comparing myself to other people, and I also stopped comparing myself to whomever I thought I was supposed to be. Comparison is the death of joy, and the only person you need to be better than is the one you were yesterday.
2. I surrounded myself with positivity. I cringe even writing that because it sounds like a poster youâd see taped to the wall of your eighth-grade gym classâbut cheesy or not, itâs gospel. You become who you surround yourself with. You become what you consum...