How do you feel about
yourself?
Tim Connor
This might,
at first seem like a silly question – and probably one you have never asked
yourself. I know I never have and I have written entire manuals that are
nothing but page after page of questions - go figure.
How about
another quickie – why is this question important?
Without
appearing to be looking for either praise or pity let me share what this
question did for me the first time someone asked it of me. By the way, this person died over 100 years
ago but is one of my mentors. When I was
recently re-reading one of his books after a few years this question just hit
me between the eyes like a baseball bat.
Trust me – I never saw it coming, but when I put the book down and
thought about it seriously - both tears and laughter filled my head for a long
time.
You might be
asking at this point – why – this question isn’t that big of a deal. OK, well let me ask you a few more and then
you can decide whether you want to finish this article or not.
Have any regrets
in life?
Ever
disappointed anyone? Yourself?
Ever felt
abandoned or betrayed by someone?
Ever felt
stuck? Lost? Confused?
Ever asked
yourself – what is this or why did this happen to me?
Ever felt
like you got something negative you didn’t deserve?
I could go
on but if all of your answers to the above were no – well - have a nice day. Yeah
right!
First –
notice that I didn’t use the words – describe yourself, defend yourself, define
yourself, explain yourself or promote yourself. How do you feel about yourself
– in other words – how and why do you – like, approve, love, accept, validate
and justify yourself? Answer these
questions in writing - one at a time – take a few minutes and when you have
finished the exercise come back and finish the article.
Did you do
the exercise? Let me guess – you just
kept reading! Oh well - here’s the rest
of the article, hopefully it will have value for you even though you didn’t do
your homework.
There are
many contributors to how and why we feel about ourselves from time to time and
just a few are – self-esteem, fears caused by either real or imaginary
emotional or physical threats, the need for others’ approval, the desire to be
in control of all areas of our life, the desire to avoid adversity, challenges
or even failure and the need for validation and appreciation.
If we handle
these or get the ones we need or value as needed on schedule and from the sources,
we feel necessary guess what – we will generally feel great about ourselves and
our life. However, if we fail to get any
or the ones we feel vital we will tend to let the absence of these have a
negative influence on our self-perception and thus our feelings about how our life
is, is going or how it might be in the future.
Keep in mind
all of these self-emotions, reactions and responses are caused by expectations
and often if not, always these expectations are not grounded in reality but controlled
by ego needs, or insecurities caused by any number of situations, people or
circumstances in our past. The real
issue is – how do these feelings contribute to the quality of our life? It’s really simple but not easy – negative
stuff tends to make us feel negative and therefore think negative stuff and
these tend to create negative circumstances that drive negative emotions and
feelings. The opposite is true –
positive stuff tends to make us feel positive and positive feelings generally
create positive outcomes. Neither of
these are absolutes - as I said – they tend to.
So, the real
question is – how can we learn to always feel good about ourselves no matter
what is going on in our life, who is in it and/or what is missing etc.?
One of the
topics I discuss in some of my seminars is – are you an inside-out person or an
outside-in person. Let me explain.
Outside-in
people turn over the quality or the responsibility of their lives and how they
react, accept, deal with etc. to outside circumstances or people i.e. the
weather, traffic, long lines, unpleasant people, poor service, flat tires – you
name it - if it happens to them they go into blame mode, whine mode, complain
mode, anger mode- whatever.
Inside-out
people just accept what is happening whether they like it or not, feel they
deserve it not and deal with it. They
don’t scream, yell, panic, blame – whatever – they just wait, fix the tire etc.
and move on.
So, before
we wrap this up let me share a few ideas on how to better manage life’s
circumstances that contribute to how we feel about ourselves. I call these my
Life ”Mantras.” In no special order here are just a few of them; If you want
the whole list let me know – it’s on me.
-If it
happens I’ll get excited if it doesn’t I won’t be disappointed.
-I was not
put on the earth for your approval.
-I can’t
control much but IK can control me.
-If I’m
thinking it it’s impacting me.
-Every day I
can learn something important if I’m open and willing.
-We are here
for a little while and then we are gone forever.
-I am on
God’s schedule not mine.
-Every day
is a gift.
-It is what
it is.
-My life
does not revolve around yours.
-Failure,
adversity and trials are necessary to grow and get better and wiser.
-Gratitude
and appreciation of others are more important than selfies.
-We’re born
then we die – everything in between is trivia.
-If you
don’t ask you will never know.
-It’s not
over till it’s over.
-My age is
none of my business.
-What can
you lose that you don’t really need.
-Our dreams
should be better than our memories.
-If you
always tell the truth you don’t have to remember what you said.
Got any of
your own that you use to help you deal with issues, people, challenges in a
positive way so that they don’t have a negative impact on your day, life,
career, relationships etc.?
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