Breaking up with the old Catching up with the new

Transcriber: Denise Andréia
Reviewer: Eunice Tan

Hello, everyone.
My name is Danielle Sanchez,

and I’m actually going to start
this talk with a bit of a downer.

But I promise that we will all lighten up

and hopefully learn something new
by the end of this talk.

How many of you have ever felt lost,
anxious about the future,

or struggled to find passion in life?

Now, I may not know the details
of how you are or might have struggled,

but that’s exactly how I felt throughout
the earlier parts of my teenage years.

I suffered from anxiety
and fits of depression daily.

Every day, even the better ones,
felt like a battle.

I remember constantly feeling confused
with what I wanted in life

and worried about whether or not
I would ever reach any of my dreams.

Until all the built-up anxiety collapsed
into a pile of nothingness,

leaving me empty and dissatisfied.

In reality, it wasn’t that I didn’t
know what I wanted

or that I didn’t have
anything to cling to.

It’s that there was a barrier
standing between me

and the person who could
actively fulfill her purpose.

That barrier was the incessant thought
“I am not good enough.”

I would constantly tell myself
that I wasn’t smart enough,

I wasn’t pretty enough,

I wasn’t talented enough as an artist,

I wasn’t even compassionate enough
for my friends and family.

And because of these thoughts,
I was left with zero motivation.

Why would I even want to try
if I was never going to be enough?

Eventually, I grew tired of this story
that I was telling myself,

and I desperately wanted
to fight for my life back.

Instead of waking up ready to be flooded
with overwhelming thoughts,

I made a decision to wake up ready

to be intentional with my mind,
my body, and my time.

Throughout this process
of reinventing myself,

I developed a method that I cling to.

And it was throughout each of these steps
that I learned how it is fully possible

to distance yourself from anxiety,
depression, insecurities,

or whatever else may be alienating you
from achieving your full potential.

So to begin, I first identified
that there was a problem,

figured out exactly where
that problem was coming from,

and tackled it from there.

For me, it was placing all of my value
as a human being into external forces.

I cared so much about
meeting societal standards

and trying to be what I thought
I needed to be to impress the world.

As a dedicated student,

I cared more about what
an A-plus said about me

instead of the actual learning process

that brought me
real joy and gratification.

Even as an artist, I cared more about
what someone else thought about a piece,

which would only suck the
creativity right out of me

because it wasn’t about perfecting
my craft or enjoying myself.

So I made the decision to ask myself:

What do I need to be happy?

What do I need to grow?

What do I need to feel satisfied?

I realized that when we ask
ourselves these questions,

we end up opening an internal dialogue

that allows our minds to really
process each area of our lives

and determine whether they will
perpetuate a negative mindset

or be catalysts for growth.

That is why the next step
is to cleanse and sort.

In the same way
you would organize a closet

by tossing out anything that doesn’t fit
or maybe isn’t quite your style,

you have to look
at everything in your life

and see if it fits the standard
you are trying to set for yourself.

Now, I encourage you all
not to be lazy with this.

Truly go out and journal, self-reflect,
spend time meditating on it.

In doing so,

I’ve allowed myself to see my life
from a second-person point of view

and really analyze.

Look to the people
that you’re spending your time with,

where your time and money is going,

and the content that you are consuming.

If none of them adds value to your life,
it is time to let them go.

As a silly example,

aspects of social media
simply did not make the cut for me.

I just wasn’t interested

in what was happening
in everyone else’s lives on Instagram.

So I made a decision.

I revised my feed to include
museum blog posts, book recommendations,

and exhibitions by some
of my favorite curators -

all content that I consume gladly.

And I even scheduled
a five-minute time period

where I’ll check it about once a week.

And in doing so,

not just with an example like Instagram
but with everything in my life,

I was left with more time to partake
in the activities that really mattered.

I read more, drew, spent time in nature,

and partook in new, exciting activities.

And it was through those mindful tasks
that I began to really love life again.

Lastly, you have to see it to believe it.

You have to place the life
you always dreamed of

into the GPS system of your mind
as a feasible destination

and get it ingrained in your skull
that you will arrive there

simply because it exists.

Think:

What does your destination look like?

Is it a place, a career,

a healthy lifestyle,
a peaceful state of mind?

Whatever it is,

you have to start working
towards that goal and really seeing it.

Visualization and imagination
are absolutely crucial

because neurologically,

the mind does not distinguish very clearly
between reality and imagination.

Thus, when you visualize
something so powerfully,

your mind begins
to mobilize within reality,

grasping at the resources
already presented to you,

to bring into existence
what you are picturing.

When I did so, I experienced
a sense of tunnel vision.

I could zoom in on exactly what I wanted
and start working towards it.

I imagined fulfilling relationships
with those around me,

acquiring more knowledge
in my field of study,

dreams of making it in the art world,

and being at peace with myself.

I started to see my environment shift,
and I naturally began to achieve my goals.

Now, this doesn’t mean
that it’s a straight path,

it doesn’t mean that you won’t
confront failures,

and it absolutely means that you will have
to work towards what you are picturing

and show up for yourself
every single day.

But you will get there so long
as you continuously remind yourself

of that initial picture you painted.

I am far from perfect.

Some days are harder than others,

and as humans, we make mistakes
and forget who we are.

But I’ve learned
that I’m not defined by this.

I’ve learned that I am defined
by my dreams, my resilience,

and my ability to progress.

I’m defined by the decision

to choose personal growth
and bliss every single day,

and so are each and every one of you.

I encourage you all to go out and seek
the life you’ve always dreamed of.

Chase it. Today.

Thank you.