You will have heard sayings such
as,”Whether you think you can or you can’t, you’re right,” or “Your mind is the
limit.”
While you may brush these comments
aside as cliched pop psychology, there is definitely a trend in society to
prove otherwise. Read any interview with a successful person, and they will
always state that they believed they could do something before they did it.
Mindset is so much more than
affirmations, and it seems to go a long way to predicting our outcomes. When we
are thinking like winners we do not let things hurt our potential because we
have a better attitude and can muster more energy to work around any obstacles
in our path.
So with this awareness, let’s look
at two common traps that damage our potential for achievement and success, and
how to fight them.
1.
Procrastination
Procrastinating on a deadline can
feel like a tug of war in your head between your sensible, adult voice, and
your inner child who wants to go outside and play. The desire us humans all
have for instant gratification, the voice that tells us to have an ice cream
before dinner, is a natural part of who we are. And I think it would be a shame
to loose that fun-loving spontaneity entirely.
Thankfully, we have an adult voice
in our head too. She is the one who manages the bills and plans for the future.
When you are procrastinating on a boring task, ask yourself these two things.
Firstly, is this just my desire for instant gratification, or is it
self-sabotage? If it is the latter, we will get into that shortly.
Secondly, if it is the desire for
instant gratification, then could you parent your inner child a bit? Use a
reward as a goal to aim for. For example, when I have filed my tax return I
can… and then choose something you really love doing.
2.
Self-sabotage
Okay, here is where things get a little more serious. There is a deeper
level to procrastination too, and it is wrapped up in a bizarre co-dependent
relationship with your ego. It goes a little something like this.When we have spent our formative years in the presence of negative people, we have allowed their beliefs to shape our own. Parents, teachers, or extended family have passed on their beliefs that the world is a dangerous place, good things happen to bad people, and work is not supposed to be fun.
When we believe something ourselves, our ego wants it to be true. You see, our ego needs to be right. So much so that on a subconscious level we actively sabotage our own chances of success, just so that we can be right about life being hard.
I know that can be hard to accept. But have a think about the last time you lost out on something? Was there a little part of you that felt validated?
Just understanding this human drive to be proven right can open your perspective right up. Once you know that you might be sabotaging yourself, and you understand that it is a normal, human reaction, you can keep your eyes open and not fall into the same trap.
Have you ever caught yourself saying that something sounded too good to be true? Well, how about hoping to be proven wrong once in a while? Your ego will hate it, but your inner child will love it. And of course, as your mindset changes to focus on possibilities rather than limitations, your potential will grow and grow.
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