Showing posts with label self-doubt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self-doubt. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2012

“Figure it out!”


This week I accepted the “impossible challenge” from a very convincing person; myself.  This is how it went inside my head.         V1 – Voice one                              V2 – Voice two

SUNDAY
V1:       Figure it out.  (this is the “impossible challenge”)
V2:       Is there anything to figure out?
V1:       Yes, you feel like complete shit.
V2:       Oh, you are right.  I do.   I can feel that knot in my gut.  (phase one of accepting challenge)
V1:       Go back and reflect.
V2:       I should have had water with my wine.
V1:       Why didn’t you?
V2:       I didn’t want to.
V1:       When did it happen?  When did you start to feel drunk? 
V2:        I don’t know.  OMG.  I tried making a clementine candle and broke their lighter.  What did I even eat at the restaurant?  (phase two of accepting the challenge)  Did I talk?  What do they think of me?  (phase three: fully committed to challenge) I need to apologize. 


V1:       How are you going to fix it?
V2:       I feel really bad.  Really, really shitty.  Have I no self control?  Why don’t I have that switch?

MONDAY/TUESDAY/WEDNESDAY during all AM/PM and PMSing activities including swimming, yoga, working out, brushing teeth, peeing and showering, while walking, sleeping, reading, eating and during all social engagements.
V1:       Figure it out?
V2:       Well I am sure they think I am an ass.  I have embarrassed myself.  What else did I do?
V1:       I am sure you can think of more to make you feel bad.  Go on, think.
V2:       OK.  I remember pouring wax into the clementine because the oil spilled out.  I flung my
             pizza off the plate while cutting with little coordination (memory recalled with prompting),
            ooooooh and there is more.  I was told there was more.
I could have used his help, or at least a tutorial.

V1:       So figure it out.  Figure out what everyone thinks of you, what their intentions are, and then feel how you are supposed to feel based on what you “figure out.”
V2:       OK. I am figuring, I am figuring … I feel terrible, I really do.
V1:       Good, go on, figure it out.  Go back, go back far, go back 10 years, dwell Diane, dwell!
V2:       I am going back, I am going back.  I am dwelling.  I feel terrible, my gut, this knot.
V1:       As you should.  Feel bad Diane, you are an ass!
V2:       How can I stop feeling terrible.  (phase four of challenge.  I asked for help.  Externally.  Thank you Sharon, Carol and Meg!)
REPEAT ABOVE NON-STOP.

THURSDAY  (on bike trainer with no tv)
I think he has it all "figured out!"

V1:       So have you figured it out?
V2:       This sucks. (current speed 27km/h)
V1:       Training sucks? Or feeling like shit sucks?
V2:       They both such right now.
V1:       Yes they do!
V2:       I need some weapons.  To combat this big ball of fear and anxiety. 
In Patagonia I used some external support to help me walk.

V1:       People, people can make you feel better.  How they feel about you matters. 

V2:        No, I am not sure they can or it does right now.
V1:       You should fear fear, Diane!
V2:       I do … but do I have to?
V2:       Did you figure it out?
V1:       Maybe …. Maybe there is nothing to “figure out.”

V2:       But you are such an ass!
V2:        I remember a Yoga teacher named Jason Crandall once say, “you are only truly ok in life,
            When you are ok, with not being ok.”
V1:       You are not ok.  Physically you are hating riding this bike in a stand-still.  And you are over-
            analyzing everything!
V2:       And that’s ok.  I have right now, and right now only.  (current speed 31km/h)
V1:        But, did you figure it out?  Go back … maybe you can figure it out!
V2:        Be present Diane.  Stop going back.  You can’t change anything.  You can change your attitude right now.  You ARE a culmination of “right nows.”  (current speed 33km/h)


V1:        (sits silently in shadow of bright light)
V2:        If I can actually get to the one hour mark of this miserable bike ride, I can ease out of
             discomfort.
V1:       You have some good ideas.  Why don’t you get off the bike and write them down.
V2        Should I?  (current speed 31km/h)
V1:       Yes. 
V2:       Don’t you dare get off this bike.  You finish up your hour.  No matter what.
V1:       But …
V2:       You attached yourself to expectations Diane.  Don’t attach yourself to expectations.
V2:       But …
V2:       Do not live from below the line.  You get what you give or you get what you are.  If you are
insecure you will either present a false-secure or you will shrink.  Have expectations, have high ones.  Have high ones for both you and others.  But DO NOT attach your feeling and emotions to their outcomes.  (current speed 35km/h).  Act from above the line.  Be secure, ambitions, confident, be brave, do not fear fear, be proactive not reactive, be extraordinary, and above all, BE YOURSELF. 
V1:       I …
V2:       Presence yourself Diane.  Your “right nows” are adding up.  YOU decide what they look like and how long they last.  YOU! Add a positive or add a negative, decide.
V1:       (yawns)
V2:       You attract what you are Diane!  You met the people you did in life because of who you were during different stages and at different times.  If you want to be happy, it’s simple, be happy (sweat is dripping off my forehead in a very cold living room).  If you want to attract, be attractive.  You have everything you need.  Use it or lose it.  Be careful what you practice.  You will get good at it regardless of whether it’s good or bad.  Practice being amazing and you will be good at being amazing.  Never fear being amazing.  Inspire others to be the same; everyone IS amazing.  Bring yourself to the present.  Repeat often.

Bike time 1h 15m.  I can wedge my way through discomfort.  
So can you.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Final Cut



A while back I had the idea of writing about becoming a product of your environment.  I think the idea came from the following quote, "before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure you are not, in fact, just surrounded by assholes."  ~W. Gibson 


This is what the dictionary says:
adaptation [ˌædəpˈteɪʃən ˌædæp-]
n
1. the act or process of adapting or the state of being adapted; adjustment
2. something that is produced by adapting something else
3. something that is changed or modified to suit new conditions or needs

I think it’s definition three that proves this theory … we change depending on our surroundings.  That’s it; I am stacking my team.

Try Out List:

Ben Harper
Steven Covey
You’re Not Good Enough Lady
Baron Baptiste
Jim Collins
Confused Girl
Chrissie Wellington
Anxious Girl
Michael Franti
Gandhi
WhackAMole

Ben Harper:  Charismatic artist who’s song lyrics inspire me that we can change the world. 



Steven Covey: Author of The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.  By applying these 7 Habits, you WILL be more successful.  I think it’s a proven fact, and if you disagree, I dare you to prove it.


You’re Not Good Enough Lady:  She lives in your head.  She’s the one that makes you think you are what she says you are.  She often appears in the form of an older person who believes to have you pegged.  She may or may not have been a former teacher.


Baron Baptiste:  Author of Journey into Power.  Have you ever met a person that makes you rethink everything?  I highly recommend a dose of Baron to anyone and everyone.  He’s no superhuman, but a real-live dude that knows what he does, and does what he knows.  I love those people.



Jim Collins:  Author of Good to Great.  I have very little interest in corporate America.  Jim Collins writes about the traits that made good companies, great companies.  If you take Jims advice and apply it on a micro-level, you too can go from good to great.


Confused Girl:  She lives with You’re Not Good Enough Girl.  She carries her portable home-made road blocks everywhere she goes and when you are making forward progress she appears with one of her creations.  She has the potential to kibosh you’re plans.


Chrissie Wellington:  4 time Ironman World Champion.  Chrissie Wellington has a smile on her face all the time.  Her enthusiasm for sport combined with her humility and positive attitude are always present.


Anxious Girl:  Anxious Girl doesn’t live a real life.  She is usually living in the future.  She spends her time inventing stories where she is a damsel in distress.  In her stories, she faces struggle, she is week and she is very needy.  Don’t try talking to Anxious Girl unless you just need to hear yourself speak.  She is all about herself.



Michael Franti: He’s a 10.



Gandhi:  He led India to independence and was a pioneer of non-violence.  He said, "An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind."  Gandhi was assassinated in 1948. 



WhackAMole:  WhackAMole is a game.  The objective is to bonk little moles on the head with they pop out of their hole.  They pop up in an unpredictable pattern, and it’s impossible to get them all.  It is proven, that if you suck at WhackAMole that you might experience difficulty in life.  The moles represent that little mole in your head that is often called self-doubt.  He appears when you least expect it, and unless you whack him (like WhackAMole) he has the potential to stop you from being amazing. 




Final Team:

Ben Harper
Steven Covey
You’re Not Good Enough Lady
Baron Baptiste
Jim Collins
Confused Girl
Chrissie Wellington
Anxious Girl
Michael Franti
Gandhi
WhackAMole

Anyone else find that these other four keep on trying out?