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Adopting great habits

By Blogpost, habits

Remember when you were learning to drive, and you had to think about every single action you took to make the car go? Remember how overwhelming that seemed at first? Now when you drive, how much conscious thought do you devote to your physical actions when you’re driving (clutch, shift, brake, signal, etc.)? Probably not much. All those years of practice have paid off – now you operate the car subconsciously and turn your attention to more unpredictable matters like traffic!
 

How many other habits have you developed over the years? Do you even think about how you brush your teeth or the actions of getting dressed? Do you ever think about the mechanics of walking and the communication that’s going on between your brain and your legs? Do you have a habit of procrastinating when it comes to doing things you don’t want to do? Do you have conditioned responses to certain situations?
 

Habits are nature’s brilliant way of allowing us to operate without having to make any conscious mental effort to make it happen, freeing us up to think about new or unfamiliar things. Habits are nothing more than actions repeated over and over until they become subconscious. Just as we have motor habits (walking, for example) we also have thought habits.
 

Thought habits can be beneficial, but they can also be very damaging to your goals. Procrastination is an avoidance habit that your brain uses to prevent the possibility of harm. Your brain’s main job is to keep you safe. Take yourself out of your safe zone by doing things that are new, and your brain says “whoa, this could be dangerous!” and releases chemicals that create negative emotions about the new activity and entice you to go right back to where you feel comfortable.
 

But, as you know, you can’t get “there” by repeating the same behaviors that got you “here.”
 

So it’s time to bring out the whip and the chair and tame that unruly beast of a brain, right? Yes – only it doesn’t need to be that dramatic!
 

Developing new habits (habits that actually serve you) is just as easy as developing bad habits. You simply have to repeat certain thought patterns until they embed in your subconscious. The problem lies in becoming aware of the thought patterns that need eliminating. Can you listen to yourself objectively? Can you see past your inner self-talk (designed to make you feel good about staying right where you are!) and deliberately make yourself think different thoughts? This is not something that’s easy to do on your own. Identifying the thought-habits that hold you back is much easier when you can talk to someone trained to spot your habitual negative thoughts and help you formulate a plan to move you past them.
 

Try an experiment for the next 45 days. Every day, write in your journal the opposite of a belief and negative thought pattern you have. For example, if you are shy about asking for money for your services, write in your journal, “People see the value in what I’m giving, they gladly pay for it, and I receive it gratefully. This is how it should be.” Or something like that, in your own words. You have to write this every single day for 45 days. If you miss a day, you must start over! This is similar to experiments done by brain scientists to figure out the precise moment when a thought becomes a thought-habit. It takes somewhere between 30 and 45 days for a new thought to become a thought-habit, and you must be consistent about it. Stick to 45 days, just for good measure.
 

What’s going to happen at the end of those 45 days? You will start feeling worthy of the money you receive for your services. You will be bolder when asking for fair compensation. You will actually attract more customers or clients because you will project confidence in yourself (and you will be perceived as having more to offer than if you short-change yourself!)
 

Building these new neural pathways takes time and persistence. Your new thoughts will lead to new beliefs, and new actions. Then, watch your results go through the roof!

Influences

By Blogpost, Goals, inspirations

Influences

What influences your outlook on life and your goal-setting? Experiences, family, friends, education, society, and religion all have had some impact on your outlook and your goal-setting. You may be aware of some influences but others may be buried deep in your subconscious. How do you unearth the hidden beliefs you had no conscious idea cause you to think and behave a certain way?

Here’s a game you can play: think about a really big goal of yours, and allow all of your emotions to come into the light. Pay attention to all of them. It’s really important to allow all of them, especially the negative ones, surface. Don’t deny any emotion because it’s a clear signal that there is some underlying belief that will probably cause you to take actions to sabotage yourself. This is one of those situations where talking about these emotions with a coach can be helpful. You’ll need an objective point of view to counter all the rationalizations and excuses that will come up – and they will!
 

Are your emotions surrounding money positive, negative or neutral? How about your emotions about your self-worth? Or your importance? Or your attractiveness?
 

So pay attention to the negative emotions, and think back to what influenced those feelings in you. It can be hard to dig up those old memories, but if you’re going to move forward, you’ll have to make yourself do it. Just the once is enough! Once those old memories are out in the open, you can let those emotions go.
 

The thing is (and again, you may need an objective set of ears) you really have to decide once and for all that you choose to NOT be influenced by what happened in the past. You have to decide that you do NOT agree with what people said about you or to you, or did to you. I’m going to say right now that this is not an easy process! But at the same time, once you’ve done it, it’s incredibly liberating.
 

You are not the person you were then! You’ve evolved, you’ve experienced other things. You know that you can choose whether to react or respond to some negative thing/person. You can choose to accept a person’s unkindness and let it become part of your belief system – or not! You can choose to let painful experiences become part of your belief system – or not!
 

As a simple example, let’s say your mother-in-law says disapproving things about your parenting. You can choose to let it ruin your day… or not. You can choose to let her opinion become part of your belief system… or not.
 

If Tom had always been told that he is incompetent and lazy, chances are that he subconsciously agreed with it. But did he become incompetent and lazy because he truly was, or because it was drilled into his head by his parents? Let’s say he just found out that he had a choice whether to agree with his parents – and he chose to disagree with them. What do you think happened?
 

Everything we do as adults has a “past”. Everything is influenced by something that happened in the past, or something we learned. The real beauty of the situation is that once you know this, you can choose to agree with other people’s beliefs. You can also choose to agree with your reactions to situations and follow those old patterns for ever, or not. You can look at beliefs you accepted and decide whether you agree with them or not. How liberating! It’s not easy to break free and follow your own beliefs (the ones NOT borrowed from others or from past experiences). But the rewards are beyond anything you can possibly accomplish while you agree to be bound by the past.

 

Overcoming Doubt and Other Negativity

By Attitude, Blogpost


You know by now that negative thoughts lead to negative actions and result inevitably in negative results. So when your goal is looming frighteningly large (“how can I possibly…?”), how do you keep those paralyzing negative thoughts at bay? How do you reprogram your own mind to avoid those destructive thoughts?
 

And where do you turn for help? Who can help you reprogram your habitual negative thought processes?
 

One of the best places for support in this area is a group of people who, like you, are in the process of achieving some pretty grand goals. I’ve mentioned before, that other people can see right through your own rationalizations and other negative self-talk. Your support team will help redirect you to thinking the way you need to think; ultimately, you have to learn how to take full control of your mind, and it’s a much easier journey when you don’t go it alone.
 

If you let your thoughts run wild with negativity like “I can’t”, “I don’t have time”, “it costs too much to get started”, you can bet that your resulting actions will NOT move you closer to your goal. Thoughts always result in action (even inaction is action!). Taking control of your mind means that your prevailing thought patterns become those of “I can”, “I am being wiser with my time management and I have plenty of time to work on my goal”, and “I’m finding creative ways to finance my dreams” (and so on). And just as sure as saying “I can’t” results in you doing nothing, “I can” results in you trying new ways to accomplish something. So where does the group come in?
 

First, you can see that you’re not the only one in this situation. Your group knows exactly what you’re going through! Second, you can spot each other’s negative streaks and in a cooperative spirit, help each other redirect those thoughts. Third, by meeting consistently to talk and brainstorm about your goals, thoughts of success (“I can”) become firmly entrenched in your mind. Can you think of other reasons why surrounding yourself with people who support you will have positive results?
 

Let’s say you have one friend who’s the one you go to when you talk about your goals – that one, wonderful, non-judgmental, unconditionally-loving friend who’s always encouraging you… how wonderful to have someone like that! Does this friend allow you to wallow in self-pity when you can’t do something right away? No. Your friend encourages you to try again, or try another way. Does this friend agree with your negative self-talk? No. That raised eyebrow says it all, doesn’t it? Does this friend agree with your excuses and rationalizations? No. The eyebrow is still raised! Does this friend say “oh well, I guess it wasn’t meant to be?” Of course not! Your friend has far more faith in you than you have in yourself – and it’s contagious, and soon you’ll come to have that faith too!
 

Now, imagine this positive energy multiplied by ten.
 

“It wasn’t meant to be” becomes “I created it.” “I don’t think I can” becomes “I’m becoming the person who CAN”… and then, truly, miracles happen. There is also a snowball effect as the energy of your group becomes more positive. You’ll begin to feed off each other’s enthusiasm and successes. You’ll take such massive action that all negativity will simply vaporize… and this will fuel the fire of passion, creativity, desire and dedication to your goal. In an atmosphere like that, success is inevitable!
 

Negativity becomes a thing of the past when you’re surrounded by other people who think they can… and think YOU can.