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Today is World Book Day, so it seems fitting to send you this.
Earlier this year, I was FED UP. 😡
I’d been talking about writing the HeartPath® book (based on my popular retreat series) for years.
I had numerous files containing different pieces of the book, but I had never gotten around to completing the manuscript.
What’s worse is that it’s not like I don’t know the story. 😂 I started HeartPath on 11/11/11, so I’ve taught this same content numerous times over the years.
So what was holding me back?
In a word?
Fear.
Even though I’ve been a writer my whole life…
Even though I have a Master of Fine Arts in Writing…
All that external stuff is no match for the stories our minds make up.
And when it’s something that REALLY matters to us. It’s easy for fear to overcome all attempts to actually get the thing done.
What have you been putting off?
If it’s one of those BIG dreams, you might not know which will be worse: Not doing it or doing it.
Why Success Can Be So Scary
We don’t usually think of success as something to fear. It’s supposed to be the goal, the win, the finish line we’ve been crawling toward for years. But here’s the plot twist most people don’t talk about:
Success can feel terrifying.
Why? Because success changes things.
It challenges your identity.
The version of you that fought for the goal isn’t necessarily the one who knows how to hold it. You’ve gotten really good at the grind, the hustle, the striving.
But receiving?
That’s a whole different skillset. One that doesn’t come naturally to a lot of us.
There’s safety in the struggle. You know the terrain. You know how to survive there.
But when the money starts flowing, the opportunities roll in, or the life you journaled about for years is suddenly right in front of you—it stirs up all the stuff you thought you left behind:
The fear of being seen.
The pressure to perform.
The worry that you’ll lose it, blow it, or that it was all just a fluke to begin with.
And then there’s the real kicker:
Who am I without the struggle?
For many high performers, pain has been the fuel. We’re used to proving something to someone, somewhere (even if that someone is a ghost from the past or never existed at all).
When that external motivator is gone, we have to recalibrate.
So if you’ve ever found yourself resisting the very thing you’ve been working so hard for, know this:
You’re not broken. You’re just evolving.
And evolution is messy.
You don’t need to sabotage your success to feel safe. You don’t need to shrink to stay connected to people who don’t get it. You don’t need to overcomplicate the simplicity of actually having what you wanted.
The real work is letting it be enough, letting it feel good, and letting it be yours.
The good news is that we can channel our pent-up frustration over NOT doing the thing into actually getting it done.
I did this recently.
I took a week off from everything else. Completed my book proposal. And sent it to a major publishing house.
Afterward, I thought of a million different ways I could have made it better. But at least I sent it. This is how progress happens.
Here are a few journal prompts for you to explore your own relationship with success:
“What part of success feels unsafe to me?”
Dig into the fears beneath the surface. Is it fear of judgment? Of responsibility? Of being alone at the top?“What old identity might I have to release in order to fully step into my next level?”
Sometimes it’s not about what you’re stepping into, but what you’re letting go of—like the version of you that always had to hustle or prove yourself.“Who in my life might be triggered by my success, and how do I want to handle that?”
This isn’t about abandoning people, but it is about setting boundaries and staying true to your own growth.“What would it feel like to trust that I can hold success with ease?”
Describe the version of you that doesn’t sabotage, doesn’t hustle harder, doesn’t wait for the other shoe to drop. Let them come through on the page.“What am I afraid I’ll lose by becoming who I say I want to be?”
This one can sting, but it’s powerful. Sometimes we’re afraid that success will cost us our relationships, time, or freedom. Get honest about it—then ask if that’s really true.
Let me know how it goes in the comments.
Mindie Kniss, MFA, PhD, is a High Performance Mindset Coach. 🧠 Futures Trader. 💰 Bestselling author and publisher. 📚 Resources to help you create a more Lucra(tive) life are available at her website: Lucra.com
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