Dumb Little Man: A Simple 5-Step Process to Separate Your Actions from Negative Thoughts | |
A Simple 5-Step Process to Separate Your Actions from Negative Thoughts Posted: 04 May 2013 11:20 AM PDT As a collegiate student-athlete for many years, I was constantly reminded to think positively. Recently, "The Secret" emphasizing positive thinking was an incredible commercial success. ' Your thoughts become things' was the central thesis of "The Secret" and is the main philosophy taught in most mental health disciplines. Personally, the whole positive thinking thing never really struck me as a realistic mental technique in life and sports. There are times when I just have negative thoughts. I don't believe this is a bad thing, nor do I believe these thoughts to be completely under my control. I tried several techniques to change or stop my negative thoughts. What didn't workReplace a negative thought with a positive thought. "I can't study for another hour." "I can study for another hour!" Five minutes of studying later... "Nope I can't. I'm too tired." Textbook closed and I'm looking up the latest NBA Power Rankings. I also tried focusing cues, reframing, positive imagery and plenty more mental techniques, but nothing seemed to stick. It just isn't realistic to stop thinking negatively altogether. I eventually realized the issue was not my thoughts; it was my inability to separate my thoughts from my behavior. I needed to become an observer of my thoughts and an active participant in my behaviors. Thoughts alone achieve nothing. It is the action we take that achieves everything. Thoughts are useful for solving math problems, analyzing scenarios, developing business plans, etc… But it is not until these thoughts are put to action that they become useful. For example, I am walking down the street and I see someone getting mugged in an alley, and I say to myself, "Run over there and help this person out!" however, I just keep walking and don't do a damn thing despite my "positive thought". I was thinking positively yet did nothing to help this person in need. My issue was not the content of my thoughts; it was a lack of commitment to my thoughts. This lack of commitment can be problematic in situations like this, and beneficial when the content of our thoughts are self-deprecating. What are thoughts anyway?Thoughts are a bunch of letters, grouped together into words, grouped together into sentences, and these letters, words and sentences are given meaning by… us. If we gave them their meaning, how do certain words, phrases or sentences supposedly affect our behavior? Because we allow them to! This is the issue. There are times when we feel sad, think 'negatively' without much control of our own. Our behavior directly affects our lives. So why spend so much time attempting to change our thoughts, when they have zero direct impact on our lives? Committing to our values consistently is essential to our mental health, and there are times when you will have to push yourself through some negative internal states. In order to do this, it takes self-awareness of thoughts and commitment to valued action. The 5 Step ProcessHere is my 5-step process to act in a valued direction while experience negative thoughts and/or emotions:
Now over to you. Have you tried these yourself? What have you found to be the most effective?
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