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KICKING THE WORRY HABIT
By : by Michael Angier
I GREW UP ON A VERMONT FARM.
Farmers don't lead easy lives. The work is hard and the risks
are great. They're dependent on the weather and many other
things outside of their control.
I used to worry all the time. I worried about livestock disease.
I worried about getting bank loans. I worried about the buying
price of grain and the selling prices of livestock. I worried
about not having enough money. I was unhappy, fatigued and
irritable. It had become a disease.
And then I read Dale Carnegie's classic, HOW TO STOP WORRYING
AND START LIVING. In doing so, I realized that I was making
myself sick with worry and that I could pay a very heavy price.
Reading that book may have saved my life.
I came to the awareness that worry was like prayer in reverse.
When we worry and fret over things, we make them bigger than
they really are, as well as attract what we're fussing over.
It's proof positive of the principle of visualization--only in a
negative way. It's contrary prayer-prayer in reverse.
Somehow, I had it wired up that worry was actually virtuous. I
guess I figured that I wasn't being a good parent unless I
worried about my kids. I thought I was being irresponsible if I
wasn't worrying about my business and my finances. Not so.
It took me over a year to kick the worry habit. It wasn't easy.
It took daily diligence to eradicate it from my life. I
occasionally slip back into worry for brief periods, but I don't
stay with it. It no longer runs my life.
Worry is not our friend. It's our enemy. Jim Rohn says, "Worry
is like an economic cancer. And if continued, it will haul you
off into a financial desert where you will choke on the dust of
your own regrets." How's that for a vivid picture?
Most of the things we worry about are things over which we have
little or no control. If we think about it, it's stupid.
Agonizing about what might occur and about things we can't
control gives our power away.
Thankfully, most of what we worry about never occurs. The French
philosopher Michel Eyquem de Montaigne, wrote in the 1500's, "My
life has been filled with terrible misfortune; most of which
never happened."
What do YOU worry about? In my research, I've found most people
are excellent worriers. They worry about illness, lack of money,
old age, taxes, the next generation--you name it! They burn up
their energy, lower their resistance to illness and actually
draw to them what they fear. Like Job in the Bible, "That which
I have feared has come upon me."
Our hospital and cemeteries are filled with people who made
worry an everyday companion. Don't be one of them. If you suffer
from this affliction, you need to cure yourself.
The biggest lever for change is to be aware of what we're doing
and realize how detrimental it is to our lives. If you find
yourself upset or anxious, check to see if you're worrying. If
so, focus on what you WANT rather than what you DON'T want. You
can't STOP worrying. You have to START thinking about desired
results—something good instead of something bad. Start working
on the solution rather than a possible negative outcome.
By doing so, you'll be healthier, live longer, have more fun and
produce more of what you want.
This article is an excerpt from Michael Angier's eBook,
Strategies for Success. To find out more about how you can learn
and practice the principles of success--and how you can even
receive yours free, go to http://SuccessNet.org/book.htm
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