The Cost of Growth

The Cost of Growth

This month, I’ve wrestled with the idea that to accomplish anything great, there will always be a cost to us personally. Here’s a peek into my thoughts…

2023 was a year of extreme growth for me, and one I’m still a bit wobbly from. In January last year, I committed to painting 100 women in dresses inspired by the children’s book The One Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes. Since then, over 100K people have joined this journey, and thousands of prints have been shipped all over the world! This is a story of magic, of grit, and the wild resilience it takes to pursue a dream.

I am sharing this with you for two reasons. First, to say thank you. You are the face of these numbers, real people with a deep love for beauty in the feminine, and I’m continually honored by your love and support. 

And second, because many of you have also paid a personal price in the pursuit of something great. Growth seems to always come at a cost. 

Your extreme growth may look like taking care of a sick family member, navigating the new world of motherhood, or starting that new job that makes you sweat more than you want to admit. More than likely, it’s a combo of many things all at once. For me, extreme growth looked like creating art on a viral stage while simultaneously learning how to scale a business. It has meant long nights working through roadblocks, crying alone in closets, exchanging workouts for extra weight, staying alive thanks to frozen microwave meals, and sadly, losing a decent amount of hair. 

To be clear, I am absolutely for rest, sustainable living, and caring for our bodies. However, not every season gives us the luxury of a both/and choice; sometimes, we are left with an either/or. Last summer, I vividly remember recognizing my art dreams were at odds with my vanity, there simply was not enough time or energy for both. So, I began the process of dying to perfectionism and letting go of control around my appearance.

This is what growth looks like; shedding and flexing and stretching beyond what has ever been possible before.

Before I go further…

I want to say how thankful I am for this journey. Hard and painful at times, yes, but filled with magic nonetheless. However, some of you reading this have been on, or are still on, a much longer journey of dying to yourself. I think of women like my mom, who has cared for my dad with Alzheimer’s for 7+ years, or my sister, who has been to the emergency room with her child more times than I can remember. Sometimes, life demands growth we aren’t ready for, and in the process, we earn scars to remind us that our growth always comes at a cost. 

As women, these external scars are easier to see. Softer waists and heavy eyelids, new gray hairs and thicker necks. Yes, men experience this, too, but as women, we are predominately measured by our looks rather than our sacrifices.

Although some believe the solution is simply a game of balance, the truth is that some paths demand more than we have to give. And in the rhythmic process of laying down our armor of beauty and personal preferences for the sake of others, we find a more durable armor of selflessness–of gentle patience thicker than dragon scales–of tenacious love that guides us through painful waters–of bravery that calls us to stand back up when we’ve been crushed over and over before. 

It’s in our sacrifices, in the cuts and bruises that come with our pursuit of doing something great, that we grow into new armor fit for the battles ahead. 

To the woman who, like me, has been in an “either/or” season and is discouraged at what she sees in the mirror, remember that your scars are a testament to what you have accomplished. No, not everyone around you can see the armor of selflessness, love, and courage that you have grown into, but it’s in wearing this new armor that you will be able to create lasting change for good.

Growth will always come at a cost, and the world changes when ordinary people, like you and me, choose to grow anyway. 

A painting and poem on growth…

The Audacity of Growth

I walk through the orchard and wonder,
How did this come to feed so many?
Suddenly I see it;
these are the ones who have been pruned,
not once
not twice
but a thousand times 
over a hundred different moments 
when the promise 
of comfort 
tempted them to settle, to give in, to give up.
It was in the rainy seasons,
the terrorizing storms
they were tested with a thunderous question,
“How many times will you dare to fight back?
And time after time
they took the pounding of the rain
and watered their roots,
they accepted the pruning of their branches
so they could make room for more fruit,
and with pure audacity 
they grew
just a little bit taller.
- Andrea Jacobsen Poetry

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Scarcity, Rest, & The Trees
A Season of New Growth

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