Making Changes
Maybe you have determined what you’ve been tolerating and putting up with in your life and you’re not going to do it anymore. You are so tired of it. It’s draining you and your energy.
You’ve identified that you need to make a change in your life, now what? The good news is that have gained awareness of the need for a change.
Awareness & Why Change is Needed
Awareness, itself, is not enough. You want to make sure you understand the reasons why the change is needed. I get it. It’s tough. It’s painful to realize you’ve been tolerating things that don’t serve you or help you be at your best.
It’s important to ask yourself why change is needed or why you put up with it. There are usually some juicy reasons for it. Some of them may even have been unconscious to you. Maybe there’s a limited belief behind it?
Excavating the why is helpful in that in knowing these reasons will help you to overcome resistance when making the change feels hard. Just as important is identifying the risks of not changing.
For example, a client of mine was unhappy with the direction her life was going. She was feeling very stuck. She felt stuck in an unhappy relationship, stuck in a job that didn’t challenge her and was not feeling good about herself.
When she started to figure out what she was tolerating. She identified that she was putting her partner’s needs above her own. She was putting all of the responsibilities on her own shoulders and allowing her needs to be put by the wayside. She was feeling resentful and exhausted.
She believed that it was her responsibility to make other’s happy and if she did that then she would be happy. She didn’t feel that she mattered. She believed that her needs weren’t important, she realized that she was in survival mode. She knew she couldn’t keep going down this path.
Risk of Not Changing
She identified the risks of not changing as lonely in an unhappy relationship, gaining weight, more stress and either heading down the road to depression or worse heart disease. She was tired of feeling invisible and living life as a doormat.
The question I asked her was so if we’re going to change this and turn things around, what would the change be or the outcome you desire for yourself?
This is important to overcome resistance that often comes with change. Taking time to examine the why you need to change and the risk of not changing is needed to help motivate you as you go through the change.
She spoke of being in better health. Having a job, she loves and a relationship where she was visible, and her needs were being met. These items aren’t small things, but you can’t just wave a magic wand and make it happen. There was some work to be done.
Define the Change
She started with wanting to be in better health. So, I asked her, if you were to be in better health what would be some of the things you would be doing? What does it look like? What would you be doing? Why is this important to you?
Identify Goals & Small Actions
She identified small actions such as no longer eating fast food and planning meals. Quit drinking diet coke and replace it with water. Walking between buildings for meetings instead of driving to the other building.
Make the Commitment & Take Action
She made a commitment to the change and to taking the actions needed to achieve her desired outcome. When she may have slipped or had a bad day, she would acknowledge it, practice self-compassion and recommit to her goal and take the actions. She didn’t try to do everything at once. She was strategic and she worked her plan and took the actions needed. She met her desired goals.
What’s your definition of success?
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