Tuesday, May 12, 2020
The 8 Most Damaging Ways People Let Themselves Down Every Day - Kathy Caprino
The 8 Most Damaging Ways People Let Themselves Down Every Day Part of Kathy Caprinos series Braving Up To Build Your Best Life As I enter my second decade of helping people build happier lives and livelihoods, I continually see that our professional successes and failures, and our crushed hopes, have everything to do with what we believe about ourselves internally, and how weâve come to operate in the world and navigate through our challenges. People tend to see outer circumstances beyond their control as the culprit for their dissatisfaction and disappointment in life and work, thwarting them at every turn. But in reality, itâs our inner experience that drives our outer one. My research has shown that when people are not sufficiently clear (about who they are and what they are capable of), or confident and courageous enough, they fail at achieving their dreams and goals, and let themselves down on a daily basis. Below are the eight most damaging ways people fail themselves every day: You donât speak up for yourself. The vast majority of people who are deeply dissatisfied with their lives, work and relationships suffer from one core challenge: an inability to speak up authoritatively and clearly for what they want and what they deserve. In my work with adult children of narcissists, for instance, whatâs emerged is a powerful trend around their not being able to make sense of or evaluate rationally what they want, or take a bold stand on it. But this challenge isnât reserved only for those whoâve experienced narcissism growing up; itâs also apparent in thousands of women and men around the world who feel guilty or selfish (or unworthy) if they think about pursuing what they want most deeply. Tip: Commit today to having the one most important conversation in your life that is begging to be had, that will pave the way for asking for what you want and deserve, and getting it. You donât take the time to understand what youâre feeling or what you want. Life is grueling for many today, with zero time to unplug, relax, and be quiet and calm within ourselves. Weâre running, chasing, and striving, without giving ourselves the chance to just be. Sadly, when we stop being alone and quiet with ourselves, when weâve neglected building a relationship with the most important person in our life (ourselves), and when we donât take the essential time to shut out all the chatter, noise and competition of todayâs hyper-connected world, we lose our ability to hear the stirrings of our soul, and the our deepest longings for our lives. Tip: Every day, without fail, take just five minutes to sit with yourself without distraction or disturbance, and breathe deeply. Watch and listen to what emerges for you. You donât let go of the relationships that hurt you. I remember when I was in my late 20âs, it began to occur to me that I had a few âfriendshipsâ that werenât friendly at all, but were very hurtful. My âfriendsâ were cruel, biting, grasping and selfish, and Iâd had enough. I remember committing to doing the tough work of âpurgingâ from my life people who just couldnât give, or be kind or loving. It was tough, and sad, but I did it, and it was a life-changer. I then started to be more careful who I let into my inner circle and trusted. So many of the people I work with are engaged in relationships that are demeaning, devaluing, abusive or unhealthy. Why do we enter into these relationships? Most often itâs because we hook into them unconsciously because donât feel we deserve beautiful love and support. Many have never had it as children, so they donât know what love, care, and compassion truly looks and feels like. Tip: This week, take a good, long look at all your relationships. Are they loving, healthy, happy? Do they serve and support you or are you the one doing all the work in the relationship? Do they help you achieve your highest potential and growth and allow you to have your deepest needs and wants met? If not, do something bold about it. Where you can, purge out of your life those people who chronically hurt and demean you. You donât know how youâre special, important and valuable. The vast majority of people I meet canât answer these pivotal questions: ⢠How are you special? ⢠What important gifts, talents and abilities do you have that you love to use? ⢠What types of outcomes in the world do you love to support? ⢠How do you stand out in the world? ⢠What are your deepest, core values and how are you honoring those in your life and work? ⢠What matters most to you in life, and why is that important? ⢠When youre 90 looking back, what do you want to make sure youve contributed, achieved and created? In our society, weâre not taught to understand ourselves deeply, or even dare to look at how weâre special and valuable. Many are raised to think that exploring these questions means were self-absorbed or narcissistic, but itâs simply not true. Every person on this planet is special, valuable and important. But you canât leverage your unique value and gifts if youâre not even aware of them. Tip: Answer the questions above as honestly as possible (take my free Career Path Self-Assessment to gain more awareness of who you really are and what makes your talents special and important in the world). Then brave up to leverage your skills and talents that you love to use, to make a difference in the world. If you canât answer these questions, get help from people who love, respect and value you, to help you see how youâre special and unique. You donât believe you deserve a happier life or livelihood. People who make a positive difference in the world and experience happiness, gratitude and success in their lives believe they deserve happiness. What we believe will come to be. And those who feel undeserving of joy and success make themselves ârightâ and never achieve it. The experiences we have in our childhoods and families of origin teach us either to feel we are worthy, loved and appreciated, or the opposite. Sadly, many thousands of people were raised to feel unworthy and undeserving. Tip: Think back on the lessons you were taught about yourself by your parents and throughout your childhood. Were you encouraged to see yourself as worthy of love, happiness and success? Were you told you are beautiful, talented, smart, competent, valued, and important? Or were you told you are nothing and wonât amount to anything because you deserve to fail and others have more than you? If those were your messages, itâs time to engage in healing and revising your core beliefs about yourself. Youâve stopped stretching and dreaming. Weâve all read 100 times that stretching outside your comfort zone is critical to your success and happiness. Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM, has said âGrowth and comfort do not co-exist.â But how many people are truly stretching in their lives? I see every day people who are stuck doing work they hate, in relationships and endeavors that limit them, but theyâre afraid to stretch beyond these limitations. And theyâve stopped dreaming. They have bought into a million damaging excuses for why they canât have what they want in their lives, and why their most compelling visions are just absurd fantasies. Tip: Start stretching and dreaming again. Do one bold thing this week that will allow you to remember what it feels like to be brave, and do something scary and thrilling. Get used to getting in the cage with your fears and walking toward the unknown. As Ive learned in my own personal life, nothing outside yourself is safe and secure â" itâs in expanding who you are internally, and building your courage to deal with the unknown, that will make your world safer and more secure. You let your anxieties and upsets turn into hate, blame and resentment. Thereâs a great deal of hate in the world today, and according to recent studies, that hate is mounting. Many people turn to hate and blame because they canât manage their own anxieties and fears. They feel vulnerable and deeply afraid, and they find that intolerable. As social researcher Brené Brown has so eloquently said, blame is a way to discharge pain and discomfort. And as international bestselling author, mystic and spiritual leader Lorna Byrne shared in our powerful live webinar recently, Hate poisons us. We hate others when we donât love ourselves enough.â Tip: If you feel wracked with hate, blame and resentment, especially in these anxious times in our country, itâs time to look at your own anxieties and fears, and get help to manage them more effectively. And itâs time to learn to love yourself more deeply. When you do, there is no more room for hate. Youâve forgotten what youâre capable of. Finally, we let ourselves down when we forget what weâre capable of. If youâre stuck in an unfulfilling life or career, youâve lost sight of what youâre truly able to do, create and achieve. There are reasons why we forget, including toxic relationships, bad bosses who tear us down, life lessons that we misread, dashed dreams that bring us to our knees. But when you get back in touch with more hope for the future, and commit yourself to becoming more powerful, life will change. Tip: Find someone who can be a mentor or accountability partner to help you see the future vision of you before itâs hatched.â As Einstein said, âWe canât solve a problem on the level of consciousness that created it.â Shift your consciousness by getting empowering and uplifting help from someone who believes in you and wonât let you take ânoâ for answer about your own life. For more info, check out my resources on kathycaprino.com, my YouTube videos, TEDx Talk âTime to Brave Up,â and my new personal and career growth programs. ShareShare The 8 Most Damaging Ways People Let Themselves Down Every Day
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