|
Articles
Download
this article in .pdf format or view it here. A free copy
of Adobe Acrobat is required to view the .pdf file. If you
don't have this free program, simply click on the logo to
download.

The Queen of Courage Coaches
Women to Reign Over Their Lives
By
Jill H. Lawrence
Sandra
Ford Walston is the personification of courage. You can hear
courage in the fervor of her voice, you can see the courageous
determination in her eyes, and most of all, you can feel the
courage of her heart. She's the real deal.
Does this mean that she's some kind of mythic heroine who
has slain dragons, conquered mountains, and saved villages
from plague? She would be the first to say, "Absolutely not!
I am truly 'everywoman,' not the exceptional woman!" Which
is her point exactly.
Whether she is inspiring audiences with a keynote speech,
teaching a business seminar at a stellar university, authoring
one of her many articles, conducting one of her fifty plus
interpersonal-skills training programs, or autographing her
book: COURAGE-The Heart and Spirit of EveryWoman/Reclaiming
the Forgotten Virtue, her authenticity and passionate
message come through loud and clear.
Her message has welled up from within her since she was a
little girl and her mission has long been clear: she's come
to the planet to unearth and cultivate her own courage and
to help other women develop and own theirs as well.
Few women are celebrated for their courage
Sandra is well aware that every human must call on courage
many times throughout a typical lifetime. She points out that
some historically well-known people are known for their couragepeople
who have made public contributions such as George Washington,
Martin Luther King and other leaders and military heroes.
Some, like Christopher Reeves, are hailed for personal courage.
"My personal research has revealed that most of these famous
'heroes' are men, not women. Why? Probably because women have
been socialized to believe that courage is simply not meant
to be part of the feminine nature," Walston explains.
Walston says it's been commonplace for women not to own courage,
not to see their own need for it nor their own demonstration
of it. "Not surprisingly, my research and personal experience
revealed that women who do own courage are much better equipped
to deal with everyday life than those who do not," she emphasizes.
Walston was indignant early on regarding gender inequities
"In junior high and high school, I'd just get mad about how
women were viewed," she recalls. "I declared someday I am
going to write a book about this! I was indignant about how
women were treated and the double standard that thrived. I
always defied the current 'beliefs' and said to myself that
they were a bunch of garbage!"
Women and courage were words that rarely occurred in the same
sentence when Walston was growing up. Instead, women were
considered to be the "weaker sex," the inferior gender. Only
men were labeled courageous and yet a deep conviction inside
Walston told her the truth was different.
But before she was to share this revelation of courage with
everyday women in the world, she had to live it. This, of
course, is why her eyes flash so passionately and her words
are so inspired-she's been there, done that in spades!
Unmarried and pregnant, a woman's eternal crisis
Contempt for illegitimate births has been around since ancient
times. In more contemporary times, as recently as the 1920s,
pregnant women were forced to marry their rapist; so unthinkable
was it to be an unwed mother. Thinking progressed in some
small degree over the following decades, but the social stigma
to be an unmarried pregnant woman still prevailed in the late
sixties.
Nonetheless, this is precisely the state in which Walston
found herselfin college and pregnant by a boyfriend
she knew she could not marry. "I was a Catholic, unmarried
and pregnant at age twenty," she remembers. She suffered the
pregnancy in silenceoften stumbling to class in a nauseated
haze as she vomited into gutters on her way. She hid in shame
from her hometown friends and tried in vain to become invisible.
Not only was she pregnant, alone and subject to societal vilification,
like other women, she was treated to movie dramas that, showed
childbirth as truly torturous, often resulting in death. "I
went to confession thinking that when I delivered my baby,
I might very well die. The priest heard me crying in the confessional
and declared, 'God has forgiven you, but you have not forgiven
yourself.' It was a very profound moment," Walston assures.
This nonjudgmental priest helped Walston tap into her courageous
nature and go forward. In the aftermath of this intense experience,
Walston composed herself and chose to give her son to a family
that she authorized. She felt very strongly that he would
have a much better life if Catholic parents (who had already
adopted one other child prior to her son) raised him. "I felt
that otherwise we would be two kids leaving the hospital,"
Walston remarks.
Not surprisingly, Walston's book is dedicated to her son:
"Dedicated to David. Always loved, never forgotten." And she
talks about her experience now publicly, using it as an example
of couragecourage that is present in every woman.
Using courage as an ally
Over the course of Walston's life, courage has been brought
front and center time and time again, "just as it does for
all women," she reminds. She has demonstrated tremendous resilience
and the ability to courageously reinvent herself a number
of times. She taught gifted students she lovingly referred
to as "Walston's Weirdoes." "We were known as such because
we did so many innovative, creative things," remembers the
educational maverick.
Later she moved to Los Angeles with very limited funds and
began a career in real estate. "Why not Beverly Hills?" she
said more as a statement than a question. Courageously, she
entered a new career in a new city and did remarkably well.
But when the prime rate hit twenty-three percent, she opted
not to weather the economic cycle. Instead she made another
radical change and went into banking.
Courage was the catalyst
As Walston applied her courage and savvy to a new industry,
she quickly worked her way up to Vice President of Private
Banking. Her success in this third arena triggered people
to ask, "How do you do that?" These quandaries, typically
posed by women, triggered the advent of her fourth career
as a speaker and seminar leader.
"Their questions were the catalyst for some self-examination.
I began to see how the key ingredient in my life has always
been my courage. In this case, it was the courage to reinvent
myself," Walston notes.
Along the way, Walston's courage was harvested to keep her
going in the face of both career challenges and more personal
challenges as well. She moved to Colorado with her fiancé,
leaving friends, career and family behind, and the condominium
she loved, only to find herself unceremoniously dumped five
months later. "I had no friends, no family and only knew my
way within a tiny radius from where I was. I didn't know what
I was going to do, but I can usually make lemonade out of
water." It was from this experience that a defining moment
arose: an insight came to her that she was to write a book
about women and courage. "I had to reinvent myself one more
time and pull from my reservoir of courage!" Walston emphasizes.
She faced her fear and asked for help, almost holding her
breath to see what would happen. "People helped me. People
want to help people. People are good. I asked and it was given,"
she happily reports.
The French "corage" says it allheart and spirit
Walston has surveyed over 700 women for the purpose of learning
their courageous stories. As a result, she is a cornucopia
of true stories, including her own, that stand as testament
to the fact that women are courageous.
Walston is most inspired by the French version of the word
courage, corage. In her opinion, the French have said
it best by defining corage as "heart and spirit." She herself
is brimming over with heart and spirit and so are the women
with whom she comes in contact. Her passion is to help other
everyday women see themselves as courage personified.
So, if you see more and more women with dazzling eyes, courageous
hearts, and passionate spirits, you'll know that women everywhere
are getting the courage message and using it to be Queen of
their own lives, thanks to Sandra Ford Walston.
Jill H. Lawrence is host of Jill & Friends on Wisdom Radio
six days a week. She is a journalist and speaker, and she
can be reached at rubyslipp@aol.com.
[TOP]
|