Let’s see if we can sit down long enough to listen
I met my new dentist yesterday. He’s actually lovely. The ‘actually’ is completely unfair; there’s no reason he wouldn’t be lovely. Except for all the reasons in my head, most of which go back to primary school (where there weren’t even any dentists).
Disappointing the authority figures around me, and being humiliated as a result, looms large in my internal world. The ‘fact’ grown-ups somehow take against me and shame me – for not finding my exercise book in my tidy tray fast enough, not running fast enough around the block, not understanding the unwritten rules of social interaction or where the ball is going (usually at my face) – is not based on up-to-date information about me, or about the world. It’s about a 1980s primary school.
I am older now than any teacher is likely to have been in any of my primary school memories. My dentist does not see the child my brain thinks I become when I walk into his room (and, because he is a human being, potentially very likely doesn’t see himself as a ‘proper’ adult because nobody sees themselves as a proper adult; we all believe other people are proper adults and we are just pretending). He is an adult talking to another adult, with genuine interest in who I am and what I do. And because I have built my creative confidence muscles through regular use and can ‘what if’ my way beyond my fears, I can resist going into fear or victim mode and choose to show up instead as the person everyone in the world outside my head – everyone except me – knows I truly am.
Anyway, none of that is the point (Not anywhere outside my brain, anyway). The point is how little I could concentrate before going to the dentist.
I call that feeling beginner’s call, when I can feel in all of my body that beforeness. It reminds me of the feeling of time having stopped as stage management over the tannoy called me to my position for curtain-up. You can’t do anything in those moments of ‘before’. You can only wait, and focus on what’s about to happen.
Which is fine when it’s five minutes. The problem with anxiety, if it goes unchecked, is you can end up letting yourself live there. And (worse) thinking that’s helpful.
Luckily, my inner line-manager knows all about ‘beginner’s call’. They know the time before I do something new or challenging feels like this and they know something far more important I would otherwise forget: that it’s okay to feel this way. Therefore, the line-manager makes reminding myself this is something that happens, and needs time around it means taking that time is company policy.
When I came back from the dentist – who, as mentioned, was lovely – I did more of my work than I had in double the time before. There was no beginner’s call feeling. I could be in my own head and body. I could take my time. And when I take my time, instead of pushing myself to work at someone else’s speed, what I do is deeper, richer and better than if I’d forced it before.
Join me for Coffee & Creativity at Olympic Studios or the Century Club this month, or visit the Writers’ Gym for a Creative Cuppa online every week.
What’s perhaps saddest about these primary school memories is I was one of the luckier ones. I had a diagnosis. They knew I had learning difficulties (mainly dyspraxia, and mild dyslexia). But the message was always, fundamentally, disappointment. I was a nuisance. I was too slow. I shouldn’t find difficult the things I found difficult. Part of it was disguised as a compliment: they knew I was intelligent, but shy. I left primary and secondary school in a state of permanent hurry, which – ironically rather than coincidentally – reflects the posture problems around learning to walk by staggering forward instead of finding my own centre of gravity. This fear of being slow has become an ingrained habit of being early, and natural disorganisation and motor function issues means I relish in recognising what it’s helpful to delegate, and what it’s helpful to do myself taking as much time as I need. My inner line-manager reminds me to be proud of this. I’m not disappointed in who I am. I’m curious about what helps me be the best version of who I am.
I talk to my freelance-career-building clients about our line-manager relationships a lot. It’s often about noticing when our line-manager (us) is recognising our efforts or milking us for all the energy we have.
My back has been better since I noticed my tendency to really, really believe I ‘had’ to be at my desk. (Different had too, around working harder instead of better.)
The truth? The actual truth, not what it says about me but what it purely, simply is? That’s less complicated:
I write better when I move.
And by ‘move’ I don’t even mean standing up, sitting well, talking breaks to move my neck and back or walk around. I mean move from the desk to the sofa.
Longhand, or laptop doing what it’s named for and being on my lap, more happens when I move around.
Because that’s an important part of writing ourselves a truer story than we might have been telling ourselves. Building a healthy professional and personal life often needs to look less like hurry and a lot more like this:

Think on the Page:
How might your inner line-manager support you this week?
Remember these questions work best if you let them take you by surprise. Start writing before you know exactly what’s on its way. You’re welcome to share in comments, but these aren’t for me or for anyone else – they’re for you.
- If your line-manager gave you one piece of advice about how you talk to yourself in your head, what might they say?
- When does your line-manager need to step it and ask you to recognise your efforts before leaping straight to the next thing on the list?
- If they gave you one suggestion for your work or life, what would it be?
InkCouragement is the newsletter of Rachel Knightley Coaching and The Writers’ Gym podcast and membership, online and in London.



