Let me share
three quick stories and some life-changing lessons with you…
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This
morning at a train stop near the hospital, a man and his three young
kids got on. The kids were loud and completely out of control,
running from one end of the train car to the other. An annoyed
passenger sitting next to me looked over at the man and asked, “Is
there a reason you’re letting your kids go nuts right now?” The man
looked up with tears in his eyes and said, “The doc just told me
their mother isn’t going to make it. Sorry, I’m just trying to think
before we all sit down at home to talk about this.”
-
Two of my
ex-coworkers actually laughed at me last year when I told them I
dreamed of opening my own hair salon. When I spoke with you and
Angel on a coaching call that same day, Angel said something like,
“We’ve known quite a few people who went after their dreams and
succeeded. One thing they all had in common was they got laughed at
in the process.” That advice really pushed me forward. And I’m proud
to say I opened my salon almost six months ago, and business is
really taking off. But to think I almost didn’t do it … I almost
took my ex-coworkers’ negativity to heart!
-
Today one
of my regular customers, a really grumpy elderly man who has been
eating in our diner every morning for the better part of five years,
left me $1,000 in cash for his $7 breakfast. Alongside the cash he
left a small note that read, “Thank you, Christine. I know I haven’t
been the brightest smile in your life, but your smile and hospitable
service over the years gave me something to look forward to every
morning after my wife passed away. I wanted to say thank you. I’m
moving eight hours down the road this afternoon to live with my son
and his family. May the rest of your life be magical.”
These stories
have been transcribed with permission from coaching sessions we’ve
recently conducted with three of our course students. And if there’s one
thing these students’ stories have it common, it’s the importance of not
taking things too personally.
The father on
the train wasn’t deliberately trying to annoy other passengers—he was
thinking through one of the hardest realities of his life. Those ex-coworkers
weren’t really laughing heartlessly—they were simply acting from within
the boundaries of their own limited visions. And that grumpy elderly
customer was just a humble, heartbroken man. In each story, the
subject’s words and actions were all about THEM, not others. And while
the people around them might take their annoying, naysaying, grumpy
behavior personally, there’s nothing personal about it. Think about it…
How often
have you taken things too personally?
If you’re
anything like the rest of us—and that’s OK—it’s probably been quite
often.
But why?
Why do we
always take things personally?
There are
quite a few viable and valid answers to the question of why we take
things personally. But the one Angel and I have found to be most common
through a decade of one-on-one coaching with our course students is the
tendency we all have of putting ourselves at the center, and seeing
everything—every event, conversation, circumstance, etc.—from the
viewpoint of how it relates to us. And this can have all kinds of
adverse effects, from feeling hurt when other people are rude, to
feeling sorry for ourselves when things don’t go as planned, to doubting
ourselves when we aren’t perfect.
Of course, we
are not really at the center of everything. That’s not how the world
works. It just sometimes seems that way to us. Let’s take a quick look
at a few examples…
Someone
storms into the room in a bad mood, huffing and puffing, and addresses
us in a very rude way. Immediately we think to ourselves, “What’s going
on here? I don’t deserve to be treated like this. They should know
better!” And we are left agitated, offended, and angry. But the truth is
the other person’s behavior has very little to do with us. They got mad
at something outside the room, and now they’re reactively venting their
frustrations. We just happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
This reality doesn’t justify their rude behavior, but it needs to be
consciously acknowledged so we don’t waste all our mental energy
positioning ourselves at the center of the situation and taking
everything personally.
Now, let’s
assume for a moment that a person’s actions actually do seem to relate
to us directly—we inadvertently did something that annoyed someone, and
now they’re reacting very rudely to us. A situation like this might seem
personal, but is it really? Is the magnitude of their rude reaction all
about us and the one thing we did to trigger them? No, probably not.
It’s mostly just a statement about the other person’s reactions,
snap-judgments, anger issues, and expectations of the universe. Again,
we’re just a small piece of a much longer story.
And likewise,
when someone else rejects us, ignores us, doesn’t call us when they said
they would, doesn’t show they care, etc. … these reactions have much
less to do with us than they have to do with the other person’s history
of personal issues.
But because
we see everything through a lens of how it affects us—a lens that does a
poor job of seeing the bigger picture—we tend to react to everyone
else’s actions and words as if they are a personal judgment or statement
about us. Thus, other people’s anger makes us angry. Other people’s lack
of respect makes us feel unworthy. Other people’s unhappiness makes us
unhappy. And so it goes.
If you’re
nodding your head to any of this, it’s time to…
Remind
yourself of the truth!
What other
people say and do, and the attitude they carry, rarely has anything to
do with you. People’s reactions and behaviors are about their
perspectives, wounds and experiences. Whether people treat you like
you’re amazing, or act like you’re the worst, again, is more about them
and how they are viewing the world at a given moment in time.
Now, I’m
certainly not suggesting we should completely ignore all the feedback
and insight we receive from others. I’m simply saying that a significant
percentage of the emotional pain, disappointment and sadness in our
lives comes directly from our tendency to take things too personally.
In most
cases, it’s far more beneficial and healthy to let go of other people’s
beliefs and behaviors and to operate with your own intuition and wisdom
as your guide.
And that
takes practice. Lots and lots of practice.
The key is in
reminding yourself to gracefully deflect the senseless negativity around
you. When you sense negativity coming at you, give it a small push back
with a thought like, “That remark (or gesture) is not really about me,
it’s about you.” Remember that all people have emotional issues they’re
dealing with (just like you), and it makes them defiant, rude, and
downright thoughtless sometimes. They are doing the best they can, or
they’re not even aware of their issues. In any case, you can learn not
to interpret their behaviors as personal attacks, and instead see them
as non-personal encounters (like a dog barking in the distance, or a
bumblebee buzzing by) that you can either respond to gracefully, or not
respond to at all.
But again,
this doesn’t come naturally—NOT taking things personally is a skill to
be honed.
To help you
practice, I recommend storing the following reminders in an easily
accessible location (perhaps by bookmarking this article in your smart
phone), and then reading (and re-reading) them whenever you catch
yourself taking things personally.
01.
Calmness is a
superpower. The ability to not overreact or take things personally keeps
your mind clear and your heart at peace.
02.
Even when it
seems personal, rarely do people do things because of you, they do
things because of them.
03.
You may not
be able control all the things people say and do to you, but you can
decide not to be reduced by them.
04.
There is a
huge amount of freedom that comes to you when you detach from other
people’s beliefs and behaviors. The way people treat you is their
problem, how you react is yours. (Angel and I discuss this further in
the “Self-Love” chapter of our book.)
05.
Oftentimes
people do things and say things because they’ve been conditioned to, not
because they consciously want to.
06.
You can’t
control how people receive your energy. Whatever someone interprets, or
projects onto you, is at least partially an issue or problem that they
themselves are dealing with.
07.
Take
constructive criticism seriously, but not personally. Weigh what you
hear from others against what you know in your heart to be true.
08.
If you’re
willing to view the behavior of other people as indicative of their
relationship with themselves, then you will inevitably take things less
personally.
09.
If you truly
wish to improve your self-confidence, self-esteem, and self-worth, stop
allowing other people to be responsible for them. Stop allowing other
people to dominate your emotions. (Angel and I build powerful
self-confidence rituals with our students in the “Love and
Relationships” module of Getting Back to Happy.)
10.
All the
hardest, coldest people you meet were once as soft as a baby. And that’s
the tragedy of living. So when people are rude, be kind, be mindful, be
your best. Give those around you the “break” that you hope the world
will give you on your own “bad day” and you will never, ever regret it.
Your turn…
Before you
go, let me ask you a quick question:
And how might
reminding yourself of it, daily, stop you from taking things personally?