If you truly want to
change your life, you must first be willing to change your mind. Donald Altman, The Mindfulness Code ©2010
You know how some people seem to be better at handling
change than others? Most of us know at least one person who has successfully made
a major change in their lives, like quitting smoking, losing weight, or even
walking away from their “Sure Thing” job. Then there are the rest of us – and
maybe you count yourself among these people —who give up the minute it gets tough.
Whether it’s a change in your job, health, family,
relationships, or life in general, transitions are an inevitable part of life.
However, most people don’t like change. For many of us, change can be difficult
or uncomfortable. This is true regardless of whether the change is forced upon
us, planned, unexpected, or self-created. Why? Because we are giving up
familiarity in exchange for the unfamiliar and unknown.
But the good news is that anyone can learn to deal more
effectively with change, and face their fears, by doing one incredibly easy
thing: choosing to change their perspective of change.
And here’s why I know this to be true.
From 2002 to 2012, I shared my life with the four-legged
love of my life, a Czechoslovakian Shepherd named Kona. He meant everything to
me. For 10 years, taking care of Kona gave my life meaning, and I couldn’t
imagine my life without him.
Until, one day, I was forced to imagine the unimaginable.
Almost from the day of his birth, Kona had health
challenges, all of which were serious but treatable. Then in 2006, Kona was
diagnosed with a life-threatening medical condition. Life expectancy rates for
dogs with Kona’s condition were bleak at best; one vet told me that the longest
any of his patients lived after the diagnosis was a meager three weeks!
The prognosis was so poor, in fact, that my vet, knowing how
I felt about Kona, tried to prepare me for what the tests indicated would
probably be Kona’s imminent and sudden death. He walked me through the steps I
needed to take in the coming weeks: everything from keeping him quiet, avoiding
excitement, and even what to do if Kona had a heart attack while we were out
walking or just playing outside, which was apparently how most of the dogs with
this condition died.
To say I was devastated doesn’t come close to describing how
I felt. And, needless to say, I barely heard a word that the vet was telling
me.
I cried for two days. I was filled with fear whenever I even
thought about Kona running up and down the basement stairs, let alone not
having Kona in my life.
And then I decided to
change how I would perceive this awful, unthinkable news: I realized I had a
choice.
I could either choose to let it negatively impact every
remaining moment I had with Kona – I could lock him in the house, never take
him for a walk again, never let him chase birds or rabbits, never leave him
alone for a single moment “just in case.” Or, I could choose to see this as a
blessing and be grateful for every moment I was going to have with him. We
could go on as we did before, chasing lots of rabbits (knowing he could never
catch them, thank heavens!), taking long walks – aware of the possible
consequences but living our lives to the fullest.
And we did, not just for three short weeks but,
miraculously, for four glorious years!
Which is not to say that I didn’t have to come up with a
plan for facing my fears and dealing with Kona’s condition realistically. I did
have to figure out what to do if Kona had a heart attack while we were away
from home. I did have to figure out who I was going to call if Kona became
incapacitated, and I needed to get him in the car and to the emergency clinic
quickly – not an easy thing to do by myself since he weighed over 100 pounds.
And I did have to think about the unthinkable: going on with
my life without Kona in my life.
But once I changed my perspective of the situation, I was
able to face the fear and come up with an action plan for moving forward no
matter what might happen.
You Say Tomato, I Say Tomahto
The
remarkable thing is we have a choice every day regarding the attitude we will
embrace for that day. We cannot change our past. We cannot change the fact that
people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only
thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude. I
am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% how I react to it. And
so it is with you. We are in charge of our attitudes. Charles Swindoll,
Founder, Insight for Living
We all know that the three most important words in real
estate are location, location, location. In
learning to deal with change more effectively and without fear, the three most
important words are attitude, attitude, attitude. You can change your
perspective of an event as well as how you feel about having to respond to it.
Take, for example, writing your own obituary rather than
leaving that for someone else. You can approach your end-of-life preparations
with dread or thinking it’s morbid. Or, you can see it as an opportunity to
sing your own praises, to get your house in order, or to just know that you can
do something as painful as thinking about your own or someone else’s mortality
without being crushed by the knowledge.
We have a choice
every day regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot
change the inevitable, the unexpected, or the unthinkable. But we CAN change
how we approach and deal with anything that might throw us off course or keep
us from living a life in our best and highest interests.
Change Your Thoughts? Change Your Life!
“We cannot change
anything if we cannot change our thinking.” Santosh Kalwar, Quote Me Everyday
Within each of us is a soul-deep knowledge of our passions,
our values, our desires, and our yearnings, all of which are waiting to be
born. And yet, all too often, our current thoughts and beliefs limit our
ability to imagine new horizons, to see our present circumstances or our future
in new ways, and to give birth to our true selves.
But you CAN learn to release your limiting thoughts,
beliefs, assumptions, and attitudes. The key is to give yourself permission to acknowledge
your current thought patterns, belief systems, feelings, and fears; challenge
your existing assumptions and attitudes that no longer serve you; and explore
ways to transform your limiting thoughts and beliefs into limitless
possibilities!
Giving yourself permission to see your thoughts in a new way
and then to create new thoughts based on your own personal truths will empower you
to identify, accept, and embrace change in all areas of your life – spiritual,
physical, mental, emotional. And while you might not be able to change an unwanted
hardship, you will be able to more readily accept and engage the difficulties
of life.
I believe that when we give ourselves permission to rethink,
to consider other possibilities, we crack open a door to our Higher Selves –
and our Higher Selves, recognizing that the door has been cracked open, wedge a
crowbar in to make sure that we consider a different way ahead. You only need
to be willing in order to move in a new direction!
Interested in learning more about Thought Healing? Check out
my website at www.cracksinconsciousness.com to see how I use this powerful technique in helping others transform their
lives!
And watch for the publication of my new book, “I’ve Been
Down Here Before But This Time I Know The Way Out,” in early summer 2015 to
read more incredible stories about people who changed their lives by merely
changing their thinking! The book will be available on my Author page on Amazon
at amazon.com/author/mcdowellgraham. Don’t miss
it!
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