Langoustine's "Stop Negative Thinking"

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One reason that negative thoughts become so automatic and pervasive in our minds is that they are consistent with our typical feelings. If you find yourself jumping to negative conclusions about yourself, your abilities, and your options and opportunities, it’s probably because that feels “right” and comfortable to you.

This doesn’t mean you have to figure out why it feels "right" to feel bad about yourself. Again, you’ll simply respond better to doing things differently, rather than spending hours rooting through emotional baggage.

Changing those negative thoughts and judgments into realistic and reasonable ones is going to feel uncomfortable and unnatural. In fact, feeling uncomfortable is probably a good sign that this is exactly what you need to be doing to get past your problems.

So when you’re unsure about what the problem is, your best bet is to do what doesn’t come naturally. When you find yourself arriving at a negative conclusion about you or your situation, stop thinking that and start thinking the exact opposite. If you’re thinking that there’s something fundamentally wrong with you, tell yourself the problem is in the situation—not in you—and look for ways to change the situation. If you think you’re "doomed forever," tell yourself that success is unavoidable if you want it; if you’re feeling like a "lazy slug," tell yourself that your “true self” really does want to be this way. You get the idea.

No matter how big, bad or scary the problem seems, you’re always just one thought away from turning it into an opportunity for change, growth and progress. All you have to do is find that thought.

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Created by Langoustine on Sep 20, 2006.
 

Comments

Read This Once a Week — 5 years ago

Just reminder notes to keep myself on the right line of thoughts.




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