Mar 252019
 

Getting a handle on your self-talk is a big step toward making positive changes in your life. The next step is affirmations. Don’t roll your eyes. I know you have probably come across the same dross I’ve seen regarding affirmations and you have probably given the practice a shot before now. If your experience with it was anything like mine, it left you a bit flat. It wasn’t worthless but it wasn’t worth the hype.

Affirmations are not supposed to be just feel-good platitudes. They are deliberate self-talk with a specific purpose and focus. With affirmations you are making promises to yourself, stated in the present tense, to bring those promises into reality. As a tool for goal achievement or self-improvement, affirmations are very useful as part of a bigger plan.

To be most effective affirmations need to be specific, positive, and they need to be stated in the present tense. The first time you do it will feel like you are lying to yourself. I am not currently lean, strong, and healthy. Why am I saying that I am? What you are doing is setting an intention for a reality you want to inhabit. One day you will say “I am lean, strong, and healthy” and it will be true. Saying it today, tomorrow, the next day, and so on, puts you in line with that future reality and bringing it into your present moment.

If instead you said “I’m going to be lean, strong, and healthy.” you would never get there because that statement is always in the future from the time you are saying it. You can never get to the future. You can only go from the present to another present.

It also needs to be positive, as in the affirmative. You say “I am lean, strong, and healthy” not “I am not fat, not weak, and not unhealthy.” The positive statements are more specific and focused on what you want. The “I am not” statements only specify what is not going to happen. They are not focused on what you want to bring into your life. They are not enough information so they are not helpful. If I ask you what you want for dinner and you say “not fish” you gave me information but didn’t really tell me what you want. It works like that.

Think of something you really wanted in the past that you eventually achieved or acquired. When you thought about it and took it seriously as a goal, you would picture yourself owning and using the thing, or enjoying the accomplishment. You really wanted that car and would picture yourself driving down the highway in that car. That was a present tense visualization you used. The same thing happened when you imagined earning your diploma, mastering a yoga pose, or getting married. You could picture yourself doing or having these things and that picture in your head was a present tense picture. Affirmations are the verbal equivalent of that visualization. “I am driving a blue, BMW Z4 Convertible” is the affirmation that describes the present tense image in your mind of driving that convertible.

To be effective, affirmations need to be repeated every day. When you say them every day, when you write them in your journal every day, you set your intention every day. You sharpen your focus every day. You effectively say “This is the destination I’m headed for and this is what it will exactly be.”

When you say them you need to feel them too. Feeling it while you say it makes work better. You embody the energy of the affirmed circumstance you want and that brings it to life. Do that every day.

Affirmations work best if they build on each other. “I am lean, strong, and healthy.” is awesome by itself, but there is a lot that goes along with that reality. What do you need to do to be lean, strong, and healthy? State that completely and in the present tense. Start with the main thing you want and as you come to understand what it really means to be that, you will see what else you need to be doing to support that reality.

Start with “I am lean, strong, and healthy.” After a few days you will realize that to be lean, strong, and healthy requires certain habits you don’t currently possess. Make those into affirmations, make them specific, and stack them with the first one.
“I am lean, strong, and healthy.”
“I get eight hours of restful sleep each night.”
“I do yoga for an hour, three days a week.”
Get the idea?

Begin with one goal. Start with one statement. What do you want your life to be six months from now? a year from now? State it positively, specifically, and in the present tense. Feel it. If you have never had this experience or thing then feel what you think it will feel like to be or have this thing. Really experience the being of it for a moment while you recite your affirmations. Do this every morning. Do this every evening. After a few days you may find yourself adding detail to your statements or adding new statements to your list. That’s fine. Keep going. You will build it up over time and spend about ten minutes or so each time you do this practice. It doesn’t need to be longer than that.

Affirmations move your energy and focus. They remind you of the life you want to have and person you want to be. They train your thinking, and shift your mindset from where you began to where you want to be. You begin to think and behave like a person who is lean, strong, and healthy. You get a better idea of what that means and what does and does not support that life. You see more choices and make decisions that support you in ways you didn’t before.

As you recite and embody these statements over the days and weeks, you will find yourself seeing opportunities to take action that line up with direction you want to go. Do it. Affirmations alone don’t change your behaviors and habits. You have to do that yourself. This takes time. One day, you will recite your affirmations and they will be true statements of your life in that moment.

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Mar 112019
 

What do you say when you talk to yourself? Do you know? Or is there constant commentary running in your head that has been there so long you don’t even consciously notice it? Spring is a good time to start cleaning this up too.


Our self-talk is a combination of many factors. It might sound like a parent, even use his/her phrases, but it is not just a result of their input. The culture you were raised in, the friends you had and have, and the values you soak in your whole life. You filter this through your unique brain and it informs the things you place importance on and the things you judge and praise about yourself, out loud and in your own head.


We have all said things out loud that we wish we hadn’t but it’s the ‘in your own head’ conversation that can cause the most trouble. Everything you do in your life originates with a thought. Every action you take and decision you make is a thought first. If those thoughts are negative or defeatist you stop yourself before you even begin. So what can you do about this?


You need awareness of what you’re currently thinking about yourself so you can catch and stop the self-talk if it’s unhelpful, or deliberately focus on those things you think that are helping you. For positive results in your real world you want to cultivate the helpful thoughts and eliminate the others. You already know when, during your average day, your thoughts unspool while you’re busy doing something else. During a shower, commuting to work, or any other activity you do frequently that doesn’t require your undivided attention. It’s during these times that you can allow it to wander but pay attention to what you are thinking. If you catch yourself suddenly feeling sad, angry, jealous, stop and scroll back through the thoughts you had before the feeling hit. Once you are aware of what you’re saying you will catch it more readily and be able to stop yourself in your tracks.


Then you will need a helpful replacement for the unhelpful thoughts. Whatever is working against you has to go. Spin what you’ve been saying so it’s more helpful. Take a negative and reframe it, changing the context of the thought or the focus of it to a more positive one. You can tell the difference in how the thoughts feel and that can guide you. Keep the self-talk in the first person as in ‘I am…’ or ‘I feel…’ If you still aren’t sure whether you’re on the right track, say it out loud. Would you say this phrase to a person you love? Would they feel better after hearing it? Do you?

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Mar 042019
 
This is much prettier than anything in my garden right now

March in New York is a mess. Winter and Spring play tug-o-war throughout the month. The temperatures climb into the high thirties but it’s snowing or it snows during the colder nights and melts by noon. The upside is my walkway and driveway, clear themselves. The downside is the unpaved ground is either mud or frozen mud and you can never be completely sure which until you’ve stepped on it … or in it.


During Winter the trees are bare, the grass looks dead, and the sky is mostly overcast. Everything is a dull brownish gray. Now, with the lengthening days, color is slowly creeping back in and it’s always such a joy to see the first buds poke their heads up.

I find myself feeling the urge to purge. It happens every year about this time. The promise of warmer days, of sunshine and open windows, makes me want to clear out my house and start fresh.


Several of my friends have felt the same itch to clean and organize and they have gone deep with the Konmari Method. That is so not me. I have no quarrel with Ms. Kondo. I’m a different kind of person. The very thought of piling up all my clothes in one spot makes me so anxious I can’t imagine actually doing it. Faced with a pile of stuff from all over the house, I would probably never start.

What works for me is a compartmentalized approach. I’ve been clearing and organizing my way around my kitchen. I started by the entry door and on the first day did the first shelf on my right. Then I stopped. That’s the important part of not getting overwhelmed: stop at a predetermined place. Tell yourself what you are going to do, then do it, and then stop.


It’s easy to get caught up in the momentum and plow through shelf after shelf. I’ve done that. If you have too you know what happens. You run out of steam before you’ve finished and frequently have left yourself a mess. This is what keeps you from starting again. You think the job is going to eat your life and leave you with a mess. Don’t do that to yourself.


Pick a job that has boundaries or set boundaries. One cabinet, one shelf, or one hour’s work, and stick to that. Once that cabinet or shelf, are done or that hour is up, stop working. The next day do the next one thing. You will be surprised how much you can get done in an hour and you will feel so much better about doing it again when you don’t let the job eat up all your energy and time.


We’re getting some stupid March snow again and then it will be warm, then cold, then rain and who knows what else. I will be spending part of each day in March, prepping for spring, one shelf at a time. If the Konmari craze doesn’t spark joy*, maybe the way I do things will work for you.

*I do like her spark joy angle. It can be quite useful when letting things go.

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