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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 363
Shark
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OP
Shark
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 363 |
Our feature article this week is about some of the things we do to yank the rug of success out from under ourselves. Have you ever self-sabotaged your success?I've just posted the Self Development feature article for this week: Recognizing Self-Sabotage For our Self Development newsletter subscribers, here is the answer to our pearl of wisdom quiz - a. TRUEIf you'd like to learn about the newest articles on Self Development site and participate in our weekly quiz - please sign up for the free weekly newsletter. Here's the link: FREE Self Development Newsletter Thank you for reading and participating in our forum! ~Sharon
Sharon Michaels Empowering and mentoring women to greater personal and professional success.
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Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 100
Jellyfish
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Jellyfish
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 100 |
Read the article and I believe I self-sabotage.
After I've accomplished something really important or big I always seem to get sick. A cold or I'm physically exhausted - then I'm in bed for a week. I get behind and I feel like I have to play catch up. It takes all the excitement out of my accomplishment. This has happened more than once!
Has anyone else ever had that happen?
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Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 218
Shark
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Shark
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 218 |
That is so weird - reading your article I'm thinking: yep, that's me; yep, that as well; yep, yep, yep - but, in general, I'm not a negative person, or I don't think of myself as negative and don't come over as negative.
But I definitely self-sabotage.
Oh, dear...
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 14,392
BellaOnline Editor Highest Posting Power Known to Humanity
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BellaOnline Editor Highest Posting Power Known to Humanity
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 14,392 |
3. After a disappointment, do you spend days reliving the negativity of the disappointment? Do you analyze it, replay it over and over in your mind and second-guess the results?
4. If something goes wrong, do you believe it is generally your fault?
5. Do you set goals and don�t often achieve them? Those are me, all the way. I take blame, I ruminate when I should be sleeping, and I have a huge list of unaccomplished goals staggered all along the river of my life. It's depressing. Yes, i am very hard on myself (but i also feel like people expect a lot from me). To most self-saboteurs, being uncomfortable has become their comfort zone. I need to give this some serious thought. It resonates, although it's not how I would have thought I saw myself.
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Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 218
Shark
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Shark
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 218 |
Jill - we're a bit spookily similar in many ways..........?
Last edited by Susan Alison CreativityEd; 09/19/09 09:39 AM.
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 7,189
BellaOnline Editor Chimpanzee
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BellaOnline Editor Chimpanzee
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 7,189 |
Read the article and I believe I self-sabotage.
After I've accomplished something really important or big I always seem to get sick. A cold or I'm physically exhausted - then I'm in bed for a week. I get behind and I feel like I have to play catch up. It takes all the excitement out of my accomplishment. This has happened more than once!
Has anyone else ever had that happen? I just read the article, then started reading all the posts - and I keep coming back to this one. It seems to be the one that resonates the most with me. It is like we get so excited about getting something good - then our subconsious kicks in and whispers, "but you don't really deserve it, do you?" in this little voice and we start to self-doubt. So we get sick or let something else happen so that no one else will see that we might not be really able to handle the job that we just got. I remember last year I got a job with the school system being a substitute teacher. That may not sound like a big deal to a lot of people, but to me - who wants to go back to school and finish my music education degree and teach a High School choir one day - this was like a tiny taste of the future. I was really excited. I had even talked wth the choir and band directors about being their fill-ins specifically beacause I know how to direct. I broke my foot the fist week of school. Then when I got the cast off something else happened, then something, else - before I knew it, 3 months had gone by and I was off the substitute rotation list. I don't think I ever realized 'til just now reading Sharon's article that maybe part of me did this myself.
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 351
BellaOnline Editor Shark
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BellaOnline Editor Shark
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 351 |
The Top 7 Signs of Self-Sabotaging Behaviors (and what to do about them) By Dr. Robert Anthony
Having trouble reaching all your goals? Are you going for what you want, but feeling like something is blocking the way? Are you finding yourself not doing some of the things you know you should be doing? You may be a victim of sabotage --- self-sabotage. How do you know and what can you do about it? Read on and see.
1. Focusing on what is not working, not right, or missing from your life.
Problem: Notice how often you speak about and think about what is not working, not right, or missing from your life. This only attracts more of the things you don't want. Action: Ask yourself a new question: "What's going right?" or "What's working?" Begin to notice all the things, no matter how small, that are working well. Keep an evidence journal and each day write down everything that is working and you will attract more of what is working!
2. Being stuck in fear:
Problem: Do you worry a lot about the future and what is going to happen or might happen? Are you thinking about your fears so much that you are paralyzed and take no action because of fear of what might occur?
Action: It is time to put your focus on the present. We can't control or predict the future or other people's behaviors. All we can control is our own, right here, right now. Ask yourself the question "What is the worst thing that could happen?" Then, let go and know that rarely do the scenarios we create in our heads occur. Take a moment to put things into perspective by writing down the things you can not change, the things you want to change, and accept that the Universe, God, Spirit, whatever you call it will take care of the rest. It always does!
3. Feeling you have no value:
Problem: Do you forget all your accomplishments and lack pride in who you are and what you have accomplished? If you obsess about the past or your lack of success or lack of achievement, then you'll be stuck in noticing how much you lack as a person. If you often criticize yourself or can't accept compliments, it's a definite sign that you have fallen into this trap.
Action: You can choose to notice what you do that is good and the things you can be proud of, no matter how small they may seem. Each day keep a log of what you are grateful for about YOU. When you hear your mind chattering about what you haven't done right or well, turn down the volume and turn up the volume to hear the voice that knows the TRUTH about who you are and how you add value to the world. Acknowledge yourself for at least 5 things each and every day that you did well. Each day, compliment yourself on something you did that you feel good about. Notice your small successes and accept the compliments others give you. 4. Comparing yourself to others:
Problem: Do you constantly compare yourself to others and then feel badly when compared to them? Comparison doesn't motivate us to do more or be better, instead it makes us feel we'll never be good enough and we aren't right now.
Action: Write out the 5 qualities you like best about yourself. Then write out what you value most in your life. When you go to a place of comparison, notice how similar you are with the other person vs. what is different. Begin to create a list of adjectives that describe you - at least 25 positive words about your greatness. Whenever you notice yourself in a comparison mode, think of some of the adjectives that describe YOU.
5. Self-Sabotage : getting what you want and then losing it.
Problem: Do you not believe that you deserve to have what you want? When you get what you want, why do you often lose it or mess it up? What is the true story underneath - maybe that you think aren't good enough to have it?
Action: List all the things you have accomplished that faded away. Simply notice these things, but don't place any judgment on the fact they disappeared. How did they bring you satisfaction? How did they make you feel? What is the limiting belief that you have that tells you inside why you can't have what you want? Be quiet, be still and listen to it. Write down how you felt when you had what you wanted. Write down how you feel now, without it. Then write a "bridge belief": A very, very small belief that feels a little bit better than what you now feel. Each week, create a new bridge belief, not matter how small, that you can really believe. By using these bridges as stepping-stones, you'll shift your limiting beliefs slowly and be on the other side of the bridge and able to maintain it because you will have a new belief inside of you.
6. You chase away relationships.
Problem: Do you always feel something is missing in your relationships or find fault with the other person? Perhaps you are afraid of intimacy. Underneath this is usually a fear of abandonment or exposure that causes you to distance yourself from others.
Action: Create a list of the qualities you value in a relationship and the qualities you want to attract in your partners. Express what you want and don't want to the other person and allow them to express the same to you. Create time to acknowledge the other person on a regular basis. Notice when you feel afraid. Don't try to push the feelings away. Know that the feelings are there and that is fine. Then, in that moment, focus on what feels good about the relationship.
7. Having no purpose.
Problem: Do you feel you have no purpose in life? We all have some purpose for being on the planet and it is time to notice yours.
Action: Write down all the things that are important to you; the things you want to create in your life. Then write out what you want to contribute to the world. From your writing, create a statement of purpose for yourself that you can read each and every day. Then stop worrying about not knowing your purpose and start creating what you desire now. It doesn't matter what you want in the future. So start creating something you want in your life NOW. This action will ultimately put you in alignment and bring you closer to your overall purpose.
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 16,487
Highest Posting Power Known to Humanity
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Highest Posting Power Known to Humanity
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 16,487 |
Yes. By either my lack of self-esteem or starting something by thinking I would not succeed. Also sometimes I freak out when I realise that I am succeeding and it's like I panic and then I make a mess of what I am doing.
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