Yeah, it’s not. I’m
finding it much easier to stay positive about others than to stay positive
about myself. Why? Why isn’t it an automatic thing to give
myself as much credit as the people around me? I know I’m not alone – there are probably millions of blog posts and
magazine articles and self-help books that talk about how hard we are,
especially women, on ourselves. I’ve
been able to feel annoyance, even anger, with others and rewrite my narrative
on the fly. “That person who darted out into traffic directly in front of my
moving vehicle? They must have somewhere
really urgent to go, or they simply haven’t had the same experiences I’ve had
with the power of motor vehicles..." instead of, well, you can imagine what my
thoughts and words might have been before taking this pledge. When it comes to me? Not so easy.
I actually had something of a crisis of mind on day 4…I
realized that, without negative things to say about myself, my internal dialog
was silent. I’d ended up mute inside my
head! Not a good feeling, and realizing
that feeling this silence meant that I’d been running a non-stop negative
dialog in my head before didn’t feel good, either. After a rough weekend I came up with a
plan…I’d get a little notebook and write down positive things about myself when
I thought of them so I’d have something to refer to when things got all silent
in my head.
Will you take this pledge – even part of it? Look at this as part of your health &
wellness plan. Working out your internal
dialog generator might be just as important as building up cardiovascular
fitness, don’t you think?
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