| When
negativity knocks at your door, do you recognize it and send it away? Or do you
invite it in for dinner, or worse, to stay with you as long as it likes--possibly
for your lifetime? First, be clear that being the manager
of negativity in your life isn't about the fact that you have negative thoughts
or feelings--you will. It isn't about eliminating negative thoughts and feelings
so you never experience them again--that's not realistic. It is about training
your conscious mind to notice such thoughts and feelings when they appear, and
to recognize the different "costumes" negativity wears. You can't manage
negativity until you recognize and own how you engage it. Whatever
costume negativity puts on, what's really embodied is fear. You might call it
anger or another emotion, but underlying any negative emotion is fear--the fear
you'll lose something. This has everything to do with living in your personal
power. Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross said, "Natural anger
lasts for only about seventeen seconds." This means the actual emotion you
feel (any negative emotion) has its full-charge expression for that period of
time. Past that, your conscious (and subconscious) mind takes over, usually engaging
in reactions related to whatever fear was triggered. When
fear is triggered, you may project a negative future vision. You may pull up old
memories to support why you feel the way you do. You'd call this justification
for the reaction. What it really is, is feeding negativity--because you aren't
focused on what you can do that's productive; you're focused on self-preservation
at any cost. Depending on your habitual reaction mode, you may close up like a
telescope or let your sharp claws and teeth out. Here are
several common forms of negativity you may feed (or feed on):- Prejudice
of ANY kind (race, religion, financial status, etc.)
- Demonstrating
lack of self-respect or respect for others (if you do one, you do the other)
- Unproductive
criticism (everyone needs to vent; but there's a productive way to do this)
- Replaying
past events as though they're still happening (which only triggers more negative
emotions in the present)
- Allowing more "news"
into your life than you really need to know (this includes any form of "entertainment"
or "information" that creates extraneous negative feelings for you about
anything that doesn't have a direct impact on your life or how you choose to engage
it)
- Intentionally negative "humor" or comments
(sadly, the ability to slam someone with hurtful words, directly or indirectly,
is considered a prized trait)
- Paying more attention to what
others are doing than what you're doing
Telling jokes or using comments to
bash others (gender-bashing is top of this list) - Stating
speculations then acting as though they're facts (ignoring that maybe you don't
have enough information)
- Using the words "always"
and "never" (or labels), especially when you assign them to others'
behaviors (which closes your mind to allowing they "could" one day be
different)
You can add more to this list as they occur
to you. A good question to ask yourself whenever you do one of these is, "What
fear is underneath this for me, and how can I address it appropriately?" Feeding
negativity is a learned habit. You can: - Acknowledge you
engage in it.
- Remind yourself to get your own attention
about this. Author Guy Finley said, "No intention can be any stronger than
our ability to remember it in the moment that it is needed."
- Start
now to begin to do things differently. Choose to ask if your attitude, words,
and actions are aligned with opening the path for a desired productive experience
and outcome. There's a difference in telling someone you feel angry and why and
asking them to participate in a mutually beneficial resolution, and verbally attacking
them. There's a difference in telling yourself what you feel, why you feel it,
and considering what you can do rather than entering the negative vortex.
- Consider
how you really see your authentic self. It isn't that you have to suppress your
personality or nature. It isn't that you have to deny and keep quiet about what
you really feel. It's about what you do from there and how you do it. What do
you really want to feed--as your experience and what you believe about yourself?
If you don't believe in your personal power, and right to live from it, how can
you expect to act from there?
Train yourself to respond
more often than you react; and acknowledge that will take conscious energy management.
Reactions happen when you feel events or others have more power than you do. They
don't; that's an illusion. They can only have as much power over you as you give
them. Any person or event that tests your personal power is
an opportunity for you to pause and consider how you really see yourself: are
you a volunteer victim or someone who looks out for your best interests--with
integrity? If you feed (or feed on) negativity on a consistent basis, it can seem
nearly impossible to feel you embody personal power. Personal
power is not a way of acting--it's a way of BEing, even if you have to BEcome
it one more-consciously-aware moment at a time. Compare how
much time you give to negative thoughts, feelings, words, and actions to the time
you apply these to what makes you feel authentic, joyful, intentional, fulfilled--living
on purpose. No matter what's going on around you, you always
choose how to experience and process it. When you embrace this as a fact, you
stand in your personal power. The more you do this, the more your innate power
expands. Feed negativity or feed intentional living. The choice
is yours. ====================== About
the Author: Joyce Shafer is a Life Empowerment
Coach and Author of "Reinvent Yourself: Refuse to Settle for Less in Life
and Business." |