Self-esteem is one of those things you earn by doing things. If
you are not doing all you’re capable of, you know this, and so
you can’t talk yourself into self-esteem. It’s hard to fool the
most important person – you. Take some action today that will
make you feel good about yourself. This could be something as
simple as cleaning out one closet! We always feel good after a
“job well done.”
Then work on your self-talk. How we talk to ourselves generates
over a lifetime. First become aware of what you say to yourself
all day long. 80% of our “conversation” is with ourselves. If
you’re saying, “I’m a failure,” this is what your brain is
hearing, and it will work to make this come true. Cancel this
thought (say “cancel, cancel”) and put something else in there,
“I, Marianne Delmer, am on my way to success,” or something like
that.
Be careful how you word things like this, because your
subconscious will hear it without the negative, i.e., you don’t
want to be saying, “I, Peter Aylward, am not a failure,” because
your subconscious hears “failure.” See the difference? You can
also try an affirmation such as “Every day I’m getting better
and better.” Envision the end goal. Don’t limit things by being
too specific. If you want to feel better about yourself, that’s
the place to start.
The 12-Step Programs suggest if you don’t want to quit, first
pray to want to quit. If you want to succeed, first pray to want
to succeed. Wanting something gives us motivation!
Remember that your ___ years, whatever your age is, have
produced your current self-talk, and so this won’t change
overnight. Affirmations only work if you are diligent and
consistent, and this will be a good exercise for you because you
need to work on diligence and consistency as well.
At different points during the day, work on your self-talk.
Cancel negative thoughts and replace them with positive thoughts
about yourself.
There are many good free resources on the Internet. Here is one
inspirational site:
http://www.unityonline.org/read_daily_dailyword.htm .
SelfGrowth.com is another good one, www.selfgrowth.com, and
you’ll find inspirational affirmations here:
http://www.susandunn.cc/inspirational_quotations.htm .
You would also benefit from subscribing to a good eZine. I have
a nice informational and inspirational one, and there are
others. Look up “free eZines” on a search engine.
Whatever you do, avoid the “victim” stance, i.e., believing that
you’re “helpless and hopeless.” There’s an affirmation you can
use: “I am able to help myself and I have hope.” Set small
goals, take baby steps and look at this as a new, long-term,
exciting project.
Work on learning optimism. I have a course on this, and there
are other resources on the Internet. It’s a state-of-mind that
you can learn that increases your chance of success and
happiness.
In Emotional Intelligence, we recommend solution-focused
problem-solving, not emotional-based problem-solving. Just as in
physics, two objects can’t occupy the same space, so your mind
can’t hold both negative and positive thoughts at the same time.
When you find yourself getting negative, “cancel” and put
something positive in its place. In other words, distract
yourself while you take action to remedy things. The journey of
a thousand miles starts with a single step. Give yourself
incremental learning goals, and reward yourself copiously for
each thing you do that takes you further toward your goal.
About Author :
©Susan Dunn, MA Clinical Psychology, The EQ Coach,
http://www.susandunn.cc . Coaching for individuals, executives
and teams, business programs, distance learning courses, the
innovative EQ Learning Lab™, and the EQ eBook Library –
http://www.webstrategies.cc/ebooklibrary.html .
Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for FREE eZine.