Are You Willing To Be Your Own Best Friend?
Jacqueline Wales
From Fearful to Fearless: Unlocking Potential in SMB's | TEDx Speaker | Vistage Speaker | Homeward Bound Leadership Coach | Transformation Guaranteed Day One
Welcome to Fearlessly Speaking, a weekly newsletter where I share insights, learning and experience of moving beyond fear and uncertainty. If you find it helpful, or interesting, I’d love to hear from you. LinkedIn loves comments and so do I!
If this is your first time reading my newsletter you can subscribe and?learn more about me here
?
“Except for our thoughts, there is nothing absolutely in our power.”?–?Descartes
Many of us speak harshly...to ourselves.?
In fact, if you stop to ‘think’ about what you say to yourself on a daily basis you’d be shocked.
You have heard the expression “you are your own worst enemy.” That was me for a very long time.
I spent time worrying about what other people thought of me. I criticized myself when I made a mistake. ?Or sabotaged my own best intentions. Obsessed about not being good enough. And much more.
We are constantly in a state of unconscious self-criticism. We do it so naturally we don’t even know we’re doing it.
Negative self-talk is like slamming a piece of 2x4 wood up the side of your head when your inner critic takes over.
It has no benefits except to keep you in uncertainty and diminished sense of self.
It works to destroy your potential and keep you playing small.
The negative noise can be deafening and only serves to undermine your ability to function in a healthy way.
I had to change the dialogue of the harsh critic who said “you’re not good enough," and recognize the source.
When we start our life we come into this world filled with innocence. In time, we acquire the language and behaviors of those who are our custodians.
Parents, teachers, authority figures. The people who influence our earliest memories, and the beginning of our identity.
We all have that critic inside of us and I always ask, “who is doing the talking?”
I guarantee you didn’t start the conversation in your head.
I grew up in an atmosphere of fear and loathing of self, but it wasn't mine.
My father was an alcoholic and violent.?
I was told repeatedly I would never amount to much, and I believed it.
Early in my life I tried to quieten the negative noise with alcohol and drugs which almost destroyed me.
I was in AA for five years until I discovered it wasn’t about the drinking, it was about the thinking. They call it ‘stinking thinking’.
I had to make a choice. Learn how to recognize the destructive thinking and behavior and change it.
If I had not taken the advice of many nurturing supporters, I probably would be dead by now. And that’s not an exaggeration.
Growing up we are given a storehouse of words that helped describe us, our environment, the people in it, the things that mattered, the attitudes, behaviors, judgments, criticisms, prejudices, and expectations of everyone around us.?
If you were lucky, we were fed positive, life-affirming stuff, and that became the foundation for all we would become and continue to learn and absorb as you grew into maturity.
But many of us grew up hearing and digesting harsh criticism, watching behaviors that were self-destructive, and being subjected to beliefs that separated people into categories that were not true. ?
The language of our maturity may not have evolved beyond the negative messages we absorbed in childhood, and it became our way of communicating with ourselves and with each other, perpetuating the same cycles of garbage thinking.
Unfortunately, this translates into negative relationships, at work, and at home.
How many people join a company only to quit a boss who is angry, critical, unsupportive and a bully.
Negative thinking is perpetuated by thoughtless people who were in turn influenced by thoughtless people.?
领英推荐
Let's reverse that.
What would it look like if you could become your own best friend?
What would it look like if you had more self-compassion and could care for yourself like you would a friend?
How can you learn to love who you are?
You would be kinder, softer, more willing to suspend judgment and less critical of others in your orbit.
It takes a lot of critical thought and awareness to change the language within. You need to be vigilant and pay attention to reversing the statements you tell yourself.
We are all creative human beings. You are creating something every time you have a thought, open your mouth to communicate and take actions that result from those thoughts.
Thought + word + action = your reality.
You are 100% responsible for whatever manifests in your life through the choices you make.
You may feel that life is unfair, that there are other factors you have no control over. Other people dictate the direction you take. Circumstances may feel like they are out of your control.?
But think about it.
We make a choice, conscious or unconsciously, to allow those people or circumstances into our life, and we have a choice as to how we want to respond to them.?
When you change your language, you change your behavior, and you change your life.
“Language matters because whoever controls the words controls the conversation.” – Erica Yong
Key questions to ask:
If you do not take the time to define who you are, there are plenty of others waiting in line to do it for you.?
Your self-language defines the way you see yourself, and the way you choose to live.
Learning how to soften the language in your head and communicate the truth of who you are is a challenge, but one that is worth the price of admission to the world of self-awareness.
After thousands of hours of therapy, coaching, mentorship, and self-improvement, I understand transformational change intimately. It’s the sole reason I write the books, guide my clients to greater satisfaction with self, and continue to explore the depths of human behavior.
Change is never easy, but when you are willing to confront your thinking, you are on the path to greater self-awareness.
Are you ready to take on the challenge of true self-awareness and nurture yourself to new levels of being. Take ownership of your amazing skills and talents this year? Be more confident in your choices, claim more authority at work and create greater success across all dimensions of your career and life?
EVENTS and PROGRAMS 2023
RETREAT: ?An Exclusive Premiere Retreat April 1 - 5, 2025 California Wine Country.?A unique and exclusive small group experience for women leaders. Designed to challenge and nurture you to new levels of awareness. Transform the fear and uncertainty that interferes with your success, and develop the courage to take greater ownership and authority of your life and career.
TRANSFORMATIONAL STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS: ?A virtual and deeply immersive self-development program designed to help individuals broaden their understanding of who they are, what they are capable of becoming, and move beyond the limitations that are currently holding them back from fulfilling greater potential.
COACHING PROGRAM: ?If you want a completely immersive transformational program to elevate and accelerate your career and life to the next level and beyond so you can ensure the future you want...this is for you.
If you found this useful:
SHARE?with your network
LEAVE A COMMENT?(LinkedIn loves a good conversation)
FOLLOW OR CONNECT?(I love connecting to new people)
??VP @Sony Pics Agile Center of Excellence ??Author:"PLOT TWIST: Script Your Career, Direct Your Purpose..."2025 ??Chair, Women in Tech: Hollywood ?? Board Member: Warrior Films ?? Fellow @Institute of Coaching, Harvard
1 年Super insightful article, Jacqueline Wales. I meet so many people who feel that the negative self-talk is what creates their success. NO WAY! Beating oneself up is mentally and emotionally destructive. Thanks for writing this, great reminder of meta cognition. ??????
Owner & Founder at Effortless LLC
1 年Jacqueline Wales great article! We recently started using the "ANTS" metaphor in our home - Automatic Negative Thoughts. When one of us starts talking negatively about ourselves or an activity we ask, "Do you want ants?" It is incredible how frequently we catch ourselves automatically going to the negative.
Learning & Development Strategist, Speaker, & Facilitator | HBR & Fast Co. Contributor | I help organizations develop employees' competencies and mindsets to improve performance, productivity, engagement, & retention.
1 年Love this Jacqueline Wales! So many times I have to remind myself NOT to have both sides of a conversation with myself--which is just another version of that negative self-talk. "Oh that probably wouldn't work out...that person wouldn't be interested in xyz...they would probably say no if I asked for xyz...." I tell my kids this all the time and have to remember to remind myself!
"Transform your health as a leader so you can live your best life" | Transform Your Health | Elevate Your Leadership | CEO and Founder @ ProAttitudes, LLC | MS, RD, CDN
1 年Wow Jacqueline, that's really inspiring. It definitely resonates with me - I often catch myself in a negative self-talk spiral and it can be hard to break free from the cycle of criticism! Thanks for sharing your insights on how we can learn to be our own best friend. Looking forward to reading more! Language is the key. It's how we define our reality, using words. You are so right, when you say we need to confront our thinking and it all starts with self awareness.
Advocate for Adult Learning and Workforce Development | Building Strong Educational Programs and Community Partnerships
1 年Self-talk is such an important topic to examine as many of us work towards new goals in 2023!