Please read Chinese with BIG5How to Lighten Up and Not be So Hard on Yourself
By : BY: Michael Angier
A long-time friend called me the other day seeking some support.
"Jack" was feeling stuck. He's going through a tough time in his
life--financially, professionally and emotionally--and he was
reaching out to a few trusted friends to gain more clarity. I
thought his approach was very smart, and I was honored to be one
of the few he called.
Jack didn't want to repeat some familiar and unhelpful patterns
and was asking what I thought might be holding him back.
The fact Jack recognized that he was feeling stuck and reached
out to ensure he didn't STAY stuck told me he was way ahead of
where he had been in the past.
After asking him a few questions, I told Jack I believed his
biggest challenge was, and has always been, that he was too hard
on himself.
He accepted my observation, but he wanted more. Jack wanted to
know what it would look like for him to lighten up. He wanted
the specific recipe for going easier on himself.
You see, I can easily relate to Jack's issue. I used to put
myself down a lot for my mistakes. I often felt stupid,
inadequate, guilty and remorseful. I can still fall back into
that occasionally. But I catch myself pretty quickly, and I
don't stay stuck in it.
Nonetheless, I didn't feel particularly articulate or confident
in the answer I gave him. Just how DO we lighten up? How do we
forgive ourselves?
I think acceptance is the first step. All too often, we justify
and defend instead of acknowledge what we did that didn't work.
Jack wasn't doing this. He was anxious to learn and grow from
past mistakes. He's also very grateful for the many good things
he DOES have in his life--a very important thing.
It's also important to recognize that it's a big life. Your
current situation is only a chapter in your life--maybe even a
page. I'm not saying we shouldn't learn from where we are. I'm
only suggesting that we keep it in its proper perspective.
If you're being hard on yourself, would you be as hard on others
if THEY had made the same mistake? I doubt it. Where is it
written that you should be above making mistakes?
And you don't have to understand all the reasons why things are
the way they are. It would be nice to understand it all, but you
can't always do that. You can expend all your energy studying
the root instead of picking the fruit. Learn what you can and
move on. You may only be able to fully understand it later.
Remember that it's our resistance to what is that causes our
pain. When we think we shouldn't be in this predicament, that
it's not fair or wonder, "How could I have been so stupid," we
create pain for ourselves. And in doing so, we perpetuate the
stuck icky feeling.
Another thing that will move us onward and upward is to take
action each day on improving our situation. We may not be able
to change what's happened, but we CAN change how we react to it.
When we consistently take positive action to improve upon our
difficulties, we feel better about ourselves, and we begin to
see progress.
We all need to forgive ourselves for our shortcomings. Jack is
one of the kindest, gentlest men I know. He has a big heart. But
I'm guessing, like I had done, he bought into other people's
criticism and began to question his goodness. In doing so, it
made it easy for him to beat up on himself.
For me, I had to learn to develop a thicker skin to protect my
soft heart. As a writer and Internet publisher, it's been
essential. I tell others, "Develop a thick skin and a soft
heart--and never mix them up."
It also helps to surround ourselves with people who believe in
us. Not necessarily people who AGREE with us, but rather people
who will tell us the truth without judging us--people who see
the best in us.
By being more aware, by trusting ourselves, by forgiving
ourselves and by not taking ourselves too seriously, we can move
out of self deprecation and into self confidence. We can lighten
up, be gentle with ourselves, break fr ee and achieve the best
that's within us.
Related Article:
Just How Much Responsibility Should We Take?
http://SuccessNet.org/articles/angier-toomuch.htm
Our Self Esteem
http://SuccessNet.org/articles/esteem.htm
Copyright Michael Angier & SuccessNet. Michael is the author of '101 Best Ways to Be Your Best'. SuccessNet's mission is to inform, inspire and empower people to be their best--personally and professionally. Download your fr-ee report "10 Essential Keys to Personal Effectiveness" at http://SuccessNet.org/subscribes.htm . Explore their frëe access, eBooks and SuccessMark Cards at http://SuccessNet.org
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