Developing a Better You

Category: Mind (Page 17 of 50)

The Power of Saying NO

As a busy summer travel schedule combines with multiple deadlines for my upcoming debut book series (MONSTERIOUS, publishing May 2023), I find myself in need of this reminder—it’s okay to say NO. I wrote a post on this topic a year ago, and it became one of the most popular on my site. I’m sharing it again in case you need this message as much as I do on your journey toward Becoming Yourself.

I obviously touched a nerve.

Recently, I was looking for something to post on Instagram. The small piece of pink paper my wife taped to our bathroom mirror caught my eye.

I took a quick photo and posted it with the following caption:

“We have this copy of a letter from Charlotte’s Web author E. B. White taped to our mirror to remind us of two things: 1. It’s okay to say no to even “good” opportunities and 2. We don’t have to explain why.”

Over the next few days, it racked up 20 times more likes than one of my posts normally receives, along with passionate comments. I was floored.

So what was it about this letter that resonated so deeply with so many? I think the answers lie in the caption:

1. It’s okay to say no to even “good” opportunities.

What greater recognition of your status and accomplishments than to be asked by a sitting president to serve on a national board in your field? What greater opportunity or honor? And yet author E. B. White greeted that offer with a seemingly casual, “Nah, I’m good.” His example gives the rest of us a deep sense of permission to say no to opportunities of far less prestige. 

2. We don’t have to explain why.

“I must decline, for secret reasons.” How brilliant is that? Most of us live in a society where we feel immense pressure to make excuses or provide rationalizations for saying no to unsolicited requests for our time and energy. E. B. White’s response flips that notion on its head. He simply states, “No thanks, and I’m under no obligation to tell you why.” What an incredibly freeing example of unapologetically owning one’s own life and schedule.

I’m doing my best to incorporate the lessons of this simple letter into my own life. I know that my dream of becoming a published author isn’t going to happen unless I say a polite but firm “NO” to all kinds of “good” or “worthy” opportunities that other people put in front of me. The good really is the enemy of the best.

So how about you? Do you struggle to say no? Do you feel that constant pressure to explain yourself? Clarify what’s most important to you. Keep your eyes locked on your dreams. Be quick with a polite but firm “no” to “good” opportunities that get in the way of the best. If you do, you’ll have a richer, more satisfying life, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

Originally published June 19, 2021.

Find Peace Through Emotional Management

“So what brings you here today?” the therapist asked me.

I was seventeen and in full emotional burnout. Multiple therapy sessions helped me uncover an unhealthy cocktail of my sensitive nature, a self-inflicted pressure not to disappoint my parents, a deep misunderstanding of what God was asking of me, and an honest desire to help people. Combined, those elements led me to a dark place.

That experience was the beginning of a lifelong struggle with emotional management. How do I embrace my sensitivity and serve others while letting go of faulty expectations and setting appropriate boundaries? That’s a balance I’ve wrestled with for thirty-six years, but now I have tools that make managing my emotional health much easier. I’ve written about some of them previously, including benevolent detachment, sabbath, and Rule of Life.

Photo by Domingo Alvarez E on Unsplash

Recently, I learned of a concept I’m now trying to implement—choosing your emotions. Many of us think of emotions as uncontrolled responses to external stimulus or circumstance. But as the old adage reminds us, while we can’t control much of what happens to us in life, we can control how we respond to it. I’m coming to understand that not only refers to our actions but also our emotions. 

Cynthia Bourgeault, an episcopal priest and teacher emerita at the Center for Action and Contemplation, puts it this way:

In the psychological climate of our own times, our emotions are almost always considered to be virtually identical with our personal authenticity, and the more freely they flow, the more we are seen to be honest and “in touch.” A person who gravitates to a mental mode of operation is criticized for being “in his head”; when feeling dominates, we proclaim with approval that such a person is “in his heart.”

In the Wisdom tradition, this would be a serious misuse of the term heart. Far from revealing the heart, Wisdom teaches that the emotions are in fact the primary culprits that obscure and confuse it. The real mark of personal authenticity is not how intensely we can express our feelings but how honestly we can look at where they’re coming from and spot the elements of clinging, manipulation, and personal agendas that make up so much of what we experience as our emotional life today. . . . (CAC Daily Meditation June 22, 2022)

Cynthia Bourgeault

In the podcast Achieve Your Goals, Hal Elrod shares a technique he learned in a high pressure sales job. When an important sale would fall through, he’d allow himself to feel the disappointment, anger, and frustration for five minutes, then let it go and choose to be happy and hopeful. He then expanded that practice to choosing the emotion that best served him in every situation, be that joy, peace, confidence, anger, hopefulness, courage, or energy. My early attempts with this technique have been mixed, but I’ve seen enough success to believe in its potential.

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

Effective emotional management helps me avoid drifting along in passive response mode, allowing me to be aware of my emotional reactions to external stimuli, and actively choose my response. I look at my emotions as objectively as I can, determining where they came from and if they are serving me. I try to “feel the feels,” but not be controlled by them. Learning to embrace the full range of my emotions without letting them define me, then choosing a healthy emotional response, is an ongoing journey.

How’s your emotional health these days? Are you buffeted by uncontrolled responses to whatever life throws at you? Acknowledge and experience your emotions. Examine them. Identify what’s driving your feelings. Then try to choose the emotions that serve you well. If you do, you’ll find a more peaceful life and take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

The Life-Changing Power of Solitude

There is a simple, free, powerful tool of personal development that most of us avoid:

Solitude.

How do you react to that word? What other words or images come to your mind? Loneliness, boredom, useless, longing? Do you picture yourself on a desert island or an isolated mountaintop or in a crowded room full of strangers who ignore you? 

You may live by yourself and experience being alone on a regular basis. Many of us went through forced isolation during the Covid-19 pandemic. But how often do we use our time alone to experience real solitude? When we distract ourselves with television, email and social media, we aren’t really experiencing solitude, at least not in the personal development sense. There’s nothing wrong with any of those things, but they’re generally not transformative.

The type of solitude I’m talking about is being alone with yourself. Your thoughts. Your regrets. Your hopes and dreams. Your reflections on life. On who you’ve become and who you want to be. That type of mental and emotional exercise can be uncomfortable at times, which is why it’s often avoided. Distracting ourselves is far easier.

But wonderful things can happen in solitude. New insights. Renewed hope. Self-forgiveness. Clearer perspectives. And for those of us with a spiritual bent, we can find a deeper connection with God, the universe, Love or whatever we may call our higher power. My daily time of solitude in our bedroom closet for meditation and prayer is the cornerstone of my spiritual, emotional and mental wellbeing.

Author and Harvard professor Henri Nouwen beautifully described the power of solitude: 

“A life without a lonely place, that is, a life without a quiet center, easily becomes destructive. When we cling to the results of our actions as our only way of self-identification, then we become possessive and defensive and tend to look at our fellow human beings more as enemies to be kept at a distance than as friends with whom we share the gifts of life.

In solitude we can slowly unmask the illusion of our possessiveness and discover in the center of our own self that we are not what we can conquer, but what is given to us. In solitude we can listen to the voice of him who spoke to us before we could speak a word, who healed us before we could make any gesture to help, who set us free long before we could free others, and who loved us long before we could give love to anyone. It is in this solitude that we discover that being is more important than having, and that we are worth more than the results of our efforts. In solitude we discover that our life is not a possession to be defended, but a gift to be shared. It’s there we recognize that the healing words we speak are not just our own, but are given to us; that the love we can express is part of a greater love; and the new life we bring forth is not a property to cling to, but a gift to be received.”

henri nouwen

Have you experienced real solitude lately? Do you feel the need? Make the time today. Get alone. Breathe deep. Quiet your mind. Let your thoughts come. See what bubbles up. Process it honestly. You may find unexpected treasures, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

Text excerpts taken from “You are the Beloved” by Henri J.M. Nouwen, © 2017 by The Henri Nouwen Legacy Trust. Published by Convergent Books.

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