Yesterday ,when I surfed around internet and read many news as well as stories then I found out this topic about “ YOU DON’T HAVE TO BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU THINK” and it helps me feel better this time because I am very nervous in my beginning of business.
I always ask myself that I can do it or not. So the below is the thing you should read and find for yourself the good way to drift your worries away. It seem like my case right now, I couldn’t sleep well in 2 weeks when I had idea to do business, I worried about many things and I kept thinking and it made me feel too tired to do other things. Let ‘s read it together with a cup of coffee with PASSIO Station and see what does the author want to give us ?
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I spent the last seven days worrying over an upcoming client phone call in which -- I was convinced -- the client was going to say "Thank you . . . and goodbye." I worried about it, stressed about it, played out in my head the conversation I expected to take place (and replayed it and replayed it).
What
are we worrying about?
Reportedly, the average human
being has around 50,000 thoughts a day (which explains why my
"brain" is rarely quiet)! All this silent chatter and
self-talk can be powerful in its ability to build self-confidence, overcome
barriers to success and get us out of danger.
However, unhealthy self-talk and
worry have the ability to paralyze us -- limiting our
perspective and options, because:
- We worry about the future: what might happen, what potential pitfalls we may experience.
- We worry about the past: what we should have said or done.
- We worry about the here and now: missing an impending deadline, worrying about what others think of us.
In fact, we "should
have" and "could have" and "if
only" ourselves into a frenzy of hypothetical outcomes, as
we attempt to rewrite history. Sometimes, the insights we gain from this
self-talk are helpful. But other times, it's conducted without deliberate
thought or intent to learn, and it tends to knock us down and wear us
out. Especially when things have gone wrong and we are experiencing a tough
time.
What’s interesting is that when
things don’t go as planned, most of the stories we tell ourselves are negative.
We rarely start by giving ourselves (or the other person) the benefit of the
doubt. Don’t believe me?
- Imagine you’ve been working hard on a project for the last few months and have prepared an executive presentation. You are scheduled to deliver that presentation in ten minutes, when you receive a message to say the executive team has canceled your meeting. What's going through your mind?
- A colleague who has missed past deadlines is due to submit a document to you by close of business today. Your phone rings and the caller ID displays this person’s name. What are you thinking as you answer the phone?
- A colleague continually interrupts you in meetings. What are you telling yourself about this person's motives and how they regard you?
Experience has shown that your
mind will assume the worst: The executives don’t know what they
are doing; your project isn’t important; your colleague is about
to let you down again and not have the work done on time; your colleague
is arrogant and doesn't respect you.
Only a small percentage of stories,
if any, will provide a best-case scenario. For example, “The executives
have confidence in me and are focused on another priority.” “My colleague
is calling to say the project is finished early.” "My colleague is
excited about what I just said and wants to go deeper."
In my case, I worried about the
possibility of my client saying "goodbye," even though I
had no reason to, no facts to lead me to this conclusion. In fact, it turned
out quite the opposite -- we had made progress in the program I'd facilitated.
The participants were applying the insights and making a real difference in how
they led their teams and in the results they were able to deliver.
However, I still had that knot in my
stomach, that sense of self-doubt. I was worrying both about the
past and the future! But just because something might happen
doesn’t mean it will. The requisite rule, then, may not be easy, but
it’s simple:
You don’t have to believe everything
you think.
Get off the trash-talk
roller-coaster
I recently stumbled across something
I now call the “trash-talk roller-coaster.” It goes like this:
1.
This is awesome!
2. This is harder than I expected.
3. This is awful!
4. I am awful.
5. This is barely okay.
6. This is awesome!
2. This is harder than I expected.
3. This is awful!
4. I am awful.
5. This is barely okay.
6. This is awesome!
What I realized (and why I refer to
this list every day) is that it neatly sums up my thought
process on a daily, hourly and minute-by-minute basis. And the really
scary thing? It can take me nano-seconds to go from number 1 to number 4.
It can then take considerably longer to get from 4 to 6.
Even after all the time I've
spent relating these principles, debilitating moments of self-doubt
still creep in. Being able to translate limiting self-talk into something
more positive, and to reach out to an ally for an empathetic ear, or a quick
kick in the pants, can be so critical.
In the case of that dreaded client
call, one of my colleagues gave me a pep talk, exploring the triggers
behind my worry and providing suggestions for the upcoming conversation.
I power posed, listened to some powerful music, prepared and
pictured a positive outcome.
Ultimately, I chose to wait and
see what the client had to say and then decide how to reply. As a result,
the knot in my stomach got smaller.
And the call? The client wanted to
discuss the next program. My worry had all been for nothing.
How do you get off your own version
of the trash-talk rollercoaster?
Morag Barret
Founder and CEO of SkyeTeam, author of Cultivate: The Power of Winning Relationships.
Founder and CEO of SkyeTeam, author of Cultivate: The Power of Winning Relationships.


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