22 Feb 2008 03:51:33 | Susan Dunn, MA, Emotional Intelligence Coach
“You have learned something. That always feels at first as if
you had lost something.” ~ H. G. Wells
“It struck me like thunder,” Cammie said. “I was sitting in
class hearing about rigid people, and I recognized my father.
Could it be true the things he’d taught me weren’t right? All
the time I thought he was the authority on everything. It was
like I was sitting there taking notes. He sounded a lot like the
“Type A” personality the teacher was talking about. I began to
sort out things I’d learned from him and to see how they were
holding me back. It was one of the hardest things to face I’ve
ever been through. He taught me to take his word for gospel. But
I could see how it had driven my boyfriend away. The fact that I
always thought I had to be right.”
Most of the self-talk that goes on in our heads, we got from our
parents. Maybe from one of them more than the other. In Cammie’s
case, it was from her dad.
Thomas got a lot of messages from his mother, because his
parents were divorced when he was 6.
“I realized,” says Thomas, “how little I thought of myself and
how much it had to do with what my mother was always telling me.
I think she really hated men because me dad left her. It was
like I kept trying to prove things to myself about myself that
weren’t even true. One day I made a list of the things I
remember her telling me … men are no good … men don’t know how
to love … things like that. It took a while to get rid of all
that.”
As I cover in my book, “Changing Beliefs, Self-limiting Thoughts
and What to Accept,” one of the hardest things to do is change
your beliefs. Many of us just go on operating under the same
beliefs even though they don’t work. Usually we don’t know it’s
the beliefs that aren’t working, we blame it on other things. So
we try harder, redoubling out efforts hoping to bring about
different results.
It doesn’t work that way! Doing more of the same is only going
to bring your more of the same.
We may not even know they’re beliefs. We think of them as
absolutes, and when we find someone who doesn’t think the same
thing, we avoid them. Therefore we never learn anything new.
When we do give up a long-held belief, it feels like something
is missing, that’s for sure. We feel like we’ve lost something
big, a large part of ourselves. You wonder what else you might
be believing and operating on that’s false or non-productive.
Therefore it takes courage.
When I’m coaching, I listen carefully to hear the client’s
self-talk. I hear all sorts of awful things. Some people are
more mindful of these things than others, but they do slip out.
Under stress, we tend to revert to old messages … I could never
succeed … no on would ever love me … I’m such a fool … things
like that.
Whenever you hear someone say, “I can’t believe…” it’s because a
belief of theirs has been assaulted, and they aren’t willing to
face that fact. It happens, for instance, if you think
everyone’s going to treat you right. Some people stay too long
in relationships because their underlying belief, their
assumption. Is that they’ll always be treated right. Their
husband abuses them and they say, “He didn’t mean to” or “But he
really loves me.” That’s an underlying belief that’s flying in
the face of reality. Someone who loves someone doesn’t abuse
them.
These underlying beliefs tend to be self-fulfilling, too. I
remember reading in a graduate text book that “life is hard.”
I’ve had my ups and downs, but on the whole I hadn’t found life
to be hard. I wondered where that statement had come from. Over
the years, I’ve found people who felt that way did indeed have
hard lives, and I wondered which came first – the cart of the
horse. If you believe life is hard, surely, I think, you will go
about proving that, because we’re very clever about that sort of
thing. What if you changed that belief to “life is easy”? What
would you lose? What would you gain?
The other day I heard a very low EQ guy yell, “It doesn’t help
to be nice.” He was furious because someone had thwarted him,
and hadn’t done what he wanted.
Sometimes it doesn’t help to be nice, I thought to myself, but
it doesn’t hurt, either. What if you were nice and didn’t get
what you wanted? At least you would still have been nice. The
difference would be all to yourself, the person that matters. It
makes a difference in how well you sleep at night, I think.
If you operate under the premise that the only way you’ll get
what you want is to be nasty, I imagine you’ll get even less of
what you want, and you’ll also feel a lot worse, since nastiness
is its own punishment, just as niceness is its own reward.
What if you believe that you can’t forgive someone unless they
come to you on bended knee? Forgiveness is one of those things
that’s also it’s own reward. When you forgive, it’s your self
and your sanity that you’re saving. The event or incident
remains the same, and can’t really be taken back. If you
continue to relive it, letting it fester, you eat yourself up
with little effect on the perpetrator. The most important
injustices in life, no one could apologize for anyway. You’d
have to ask life itself to apologize to you, and that isn’t
possible. It’s comforting to believe someone’s at fault, but
sometimes things just happen, that aren’t really under the
control of anyone.
I think of my friend whose child suffered brain damage from an
operation. She went so far as to file a lawsuit, and all the
investigation proved the doctors and the surgeon had exercised
the best judgment, and done what was standard care under the
circumstances. My friend is still convinced someone should be
held responsible for this. She suffers terribly, not only
because her child suffered damage, but because of her beliefs
about why it happened.
Both Cammie and Thomas had to give up believing that everything
they’d learned from their parents was operable. Part of growing
in Emotional Intelligence is taking back your Personal Power.
Also being flexible about “always” and “never”, because the
tricky part is that some of the messages they got work quite
well. Thomas’ mother also taught him many good and useful
things, and Cammie’s father gave her some good guidance about
self-discipline that has stood her in good stead.
One way you can come to grips about changing beliefs that don’t
work, is to work on your intuition, which is another part of
Emotional Intelligence. When you hone your intuition, you can
see more clearly how you’re affecting other people and
therefore, whether it’s getting in your way or not. Some held
beliefs can be downright self-sabotaging. “No one would hire
someone my age,” is one of them.
Coaching can help because you can test out your beliefs against
the reality of someone with experience, but of course you have
to be willing to take them out and look at them in the first
place, which requires, in itself, a level of self-awareness,
which is the tenet of Emotional Intelligence. Without it, there
can be no Emotional Intelligence.
If you haven’t taken the time to become introspective enough to
be self-aware, maybe now’s a good time!
If something’s hanging you up, it could well be your Emotional
Intelligence, and the good news is that it can be learned. It’s
a set of life skills that can be taught. Most people take to it
immediately, recognizing it as “the missing piece.” It usually
brings relief, as you begin to figure things out, and
excitement, as the changes in your life are immediate and
rewarding.
When you keep getting stuck and state your belief, ask yourself
how that belief has been working for you. One belief you might
entertain is that when YOU change, your life changes.
About Author :
©Susan Dunn, MA, Emotional Intelligence Coach,
http://www.susandunn.cc . Coaching, courses and ebooks around
emotional intelligence. Susan is the author of “Changing
Beliefs, Self-Limiting Thoughts and What to Accept,”
http://www.webstrategies.cc/ebooklibrary.html .
Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc .