The Negative Thoughts Are
Hurting You
Have you ever had a negative thought? Have you ever uttered
it out loud, even jokingly? Most of us have. More
often than we’d like to admit. Negative thinking can be
damaging not only to our self-esteem, but can begin a cycle
of thought and behavior which negatively impacts our own
perception of events in our lives.
For example: Perhaps you’ve been assigned a special project
at work. You’re confident in
taking it on, but upon completion you notice one tiny error.
You begin to criticize the way in which you handled the
project, even though the error was not significant. While your
boss is telling you what a great job you’ve done, you begin to
make excuses for it. Your negativity has minimized the entire
project, and magnified one area of it. Focus on the positive
not the negative. Remember, what we focus on expands.
What steps can you take to avoid this pattern? Take a
step back and look at the project objectively. Not only
did you complete it in an efficient manner, but it will become
the template for future projects. Forget about the mistake;
think about what you’ve achieved.
The holidays are approaching and you need to begin the
house-cleaning project. You look around and decide it’s
just too much; you can’t do it; why bother. Stop! Take a
deep breath and consider dividing up the tasks. Enlist the aid
of your family to help by assigning each one a specific
job. Once you begin the process of prioritizing, you will
feel better and it will be accomplished.
You’ve started a diet before the holidays. One day,
you have a yearning for a particular dessert. You quickly
decide your diet is over, and it wasn’t worth the effort.
You walk over to the mirror and utter to yourself, “I’m fat,
and there’s nothing I can do about it.”
Wrong! Setting yourself up for failure by thinking negatively about the way you look
does not solve the immediate problem. Instead, admit to
cheating; promise you’ll try harder, and allow positive thoughts to guide you through
it.
Probably the most intensely negative
thought processes are experienced by teenagers. Perhaps
their life isn’t going the way they thought it would; or they
are unhappy with school; or peer pressure has made them act in
a way that cultivates anger. “I don’t want to live
anymore,” one might say. While they may not mean what they say;
it is still a sign which requires immediate intervention.
Thoughts are things and that
thought can become a seed which could germinate into the act
itself.
Either through family, friends, counselors or skilled
professionals – negative thought can quickly be turned around
into positive reinforcement. It is up to each and every
one of us to ensure that any hint of negativity is purged from
our thought process; and to avoid
imprinting unwelcome thoughts onto our family or friends.
Back
Basic Meditation
Techniques Be Happy For
Your Own Good
Fear, A Detour On The
Road To Success
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