Inner peace begins the moment you take a deep breath and choose not to
allow another person or event to control your thoughts.
For the
longest time I had tunnel vision and expected life to be a certain way.
I studied my failures until I lost sight of my successes. I surrendered
my dreams to feel a sense of comfort. I crafted limiting beliefs and
shielded myself from love and happiness by refusing to put myself out
there. And as I did all of this, I sat back and wondered why life was so
miserable.
Obviously, I
was very lost.
I began to
turn things around about a decade ago when my stubborn habits led me
into a chaotic argument with Angel. As we both stared at each other
through tears, she said, “Marc, you are the enemy—your enemy. It’s your
choices. I can’t sympathize any longer. You can choose differently if
you want to, but you have to want to. Please, want to!” And after some
extensive soul-searching, lots of reading, a little sabbatical, and
continuous support from a loving wife and a few close friends, I learned
to choose differently and eventually found myself again.
I tell you
this because I know you struggle with similar inner demons—occasionally
we all do. Sometimes our thoughts and routine choices are our biggest
enemies. Which is why I want to remind you to beware of…
1. Your
expectation of constant contentment.
Nothing in
life is constant. There is neither absolute happiness nor absolute
sadness. There are only the changes in our moods that continuously
oscillate between these two extremes.
At any given
moment we are comparing how we currently feel to how we felt at another
time—comparing one level of our contentment to another. In this way,
those of us who have felt great sadness are best able to feel heightened
feelings of happiness after we emotionally heal. In other words,
happiness and sadness need each other. One reinforces the other. Humans
must know misery to identify times of elation.
The key is to
focus on the good. May you live each moment of your life consciously,
and realize that all the happiness you seek is present if you are
prepared to notice it. If you are willing to appreciate that this moment
is far better than it could have been, you will enjoy it more for what
it truly is. (Angel and I discuss this in more detail in the Happiness
and Growth chapters of the NEW edition of 1,000 Little Things Happy,
Successful People Do Differently.)
2. Your
obsession with examining personal failures.
Imagine being
enrolled in five college classes in which you achieved one A, two B’s
and two C’s. Would you concentrate on the A or the C’s? Would you berate
yourself for falling short in the C classes? Or would you capitalize on
your obvious interest and aptitude in the subject matter of the A class?
I hope you realize the value of the latter.
Every morning
when you wake up, think of three things that are going well in your life
at the moment. As you fall asleep every night, fill your mind with an
appreciation for all the small things that went well during the day.
Examine your successes.
Give the
power of your thinking to the positive influences in your life, and they
will grow stronger and more influential every day. Remind yourself often
of what works well and why, and you’ll naturally find ways to make lots
of other things work well too. The most efficient way to enjoy more
success in life is not to obsess yourself with what hasn’t worked in the
past, but instead to extend and expand upon the success you already
know.
3. Your urge
to surrender to the draw of comfort.
The most
common and destructive addiction in the world is the draw of comfort.
Why pursue growth when you already have 400 television channels and a
recliner? Just pass the chip dip and lose yourself in a trance. WRONG!
That’s not living—that’s existing. Living is about learning and growing
through excitement and discomfort.
Life is
filled with questions, many of which don’t have an obvious or immediate
answer. It’s your willingness to ask these questions, and your courage
to march confidently into the unknown in search of the answers, that
gives life it’s meaning.
In the end,
you can spend your life feeling sorry for yourself, cowering in the
comfort of your routines, wondering why there are so many problems out
in the real world, or you can be thankful that you are strong enough to
endure them. It just depends on your mindset. The obvious first step,
though, is convincing yourself to step out of your comfort zone.
4. Your
self-limiting beliefs.
You do not
suffer from your beliefs. You suffer from your disbeliefs. If you have
no hope inside of you, it’s not because there is no hope, it’s because
you don’t believe there is.
Since the
mind drives the body, it’s the way you think that eventually makes the
dreams you dream possible or impossible. Your reality is simply a
reflection of your thoughts and the way you routinely contemplate what
you know to be true. All too often you literally do not know any better
than good enough. Sometimes you have to try to do what you think you
can’t do, so you realize that you actually CAN.
It all starts
on the inside. You control your thoughts. The only person who can hold
you down is YOU.
5. Your
resistance to being vulnerable.
Love is
vulnerability. Happiness is vulnerability. The risk of being vulnerable
is the price of opening yourself to beauty and opportunity.
Being
vulnerable is not about showing the parts of you that are polished; it’s
about revealing the unpolished parts you would rather keep hidden from
the world. It’s about looking out into the world with an honest, open
heart and saying, “This is me. Take me or leave me.”
It’s hard to
consciously choose vulnerability. Why? Because the stakes are high. If
you reveal your authentic self, there is the possibility that you will
be misunderstood, judged, or even rejected. The fear of these things is
so powerful that you put on an armored mask to protect yourself. But, of
course, this only perpetuates the pain you are trying to avoid.
The truth is
nothing worthwhile in this world is a safe bet. Since love and happiness
are born out of your willingness to be vulnerable—to be open to
something wonderful that could be taken away from you—when you hide from
your vulnerability, you automatically hide from everything in life worth
attaining. (Read Daring Greatly.)
6. Your
expectations of how things are supposed to be.
There’s this
fantasy in your head about how you think things are supposed to be. This
fantasy blinds you from reality and prevents you from appreciating the
genuine goodness that exists in your life.
The solution?
Simple: Drop the needless expectations. Appreciate what is. Hope for the
best, but expect less.
You have to
accept reality instead of fighting it. Don’t let what you expected to
happen blind you from all the good things that are happening. When you
stop expecting people and things to be perfectly the way you had
imagined, you can enjoy them for who and what they truly are.
Your turn…
Today, do
your best to leverage the reminders above. The overarching goal is to
gradually change your response to what you can’t control. To grow so
strong on the inside that nothing on the outside can affect your inner
wellness without your conscious permission.
And, please
leave Angel and me a comment below and let us know what you think of
this post. Your feedback is important to us.