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How To Stop The Drama That’s Keeping You Stuck By Marlene Chism It happens
without notice. You realize you’re lost in the fog. You feel unhappy and you
start to search. The issue itself doesn’t matter as much as the universal
feeling of being uncomfortable in your skin or feeling out of alignment. This
feeling happens at midlife. It happens when you are at a cross roads or a
life transition, or it happens when you are trying to build a business and
you enter that black pit of confusion as you hire one guru after another to
help rescue you from the drama. If any of this applies to you, here are five
ways to stop the drama that’s keeping you stuck. Distinguish “the drama”
from “your drama.” The Drama is the gap between
what you actually have and what you really want. “The drama” is also the gap
between who you actually are and who you really want to be. You are here, but
you want to be there. You are single but you want to be married, or you
wanted the promotion but got looked over again. You live in LA but you want
to live in New York. You have a bachelor’s degree but you want a master’s
degree and so on. The drama is nothing more than the gap that represents the
distance between what you have and what you want. Once you distinguish “the
drama” from “your drama” you can turn what was perceived as a failure into an
opportunity for personal growth and emotional intelligence. Ask
yourself this question: “Where would I be without my drama?”
We often use our personal
“dramas” to make excuses for where we are instead of looking for solutions to
move forward. For example, I met a young man at the grocery store who said
that he would love to be a fireman but he couldn’t afford to go to college to
get the required two-year degree therefore he was stuck in a job he didn’t
like and he perceived himself as a failure. The only failure he is really
experiencing is getting stuck in his drama, which is his reaction to where he
is versus where he wants to be. If he were to ask the question, “Where would
I be without my drama?” he would find his solution and move forward. There
are many solutions, which can be found by making other choices. Get a loan.
Get a grant. Go part time. Save some money. Get a roommate. The only time we
fail is when we give up. Once you ask this question you can recover from
failure. At the very least you will spend less time and energy on the
perceived failure. Make
a new commitment
Ask yourself what you are
really committed to. Are you committed to your drama or are you committed to
happiness? Once you get clear on your commitment you can overcome any
obstacle. You do this by filling in the blank “I am committed to_________.”
Then you watch every thing you say and every thing you do to see if your
actions and words line up with what you say you are committed to. We reveal
our commitments through our choices, whether we give voice to our commitments
or not. Here’s an example: If you say
you are committed to having a loving marriage, but allow your spouse to abuse
you then the real truth is you are not committed to a loving relationship at
all. Your actions show that you are secretly committed to making sure not to
rock the boat. Or perhaps your real commitment is to making sure you don’t
make your partner mad, or you are unconsciously committed to sacrificing
yourself so you can stay married at all costs. However, the commitment to
“stay married” is different than the commitment to build a loving
relationship. The requirements are different for those two commitments. The
choices you make will tell you what you are truly committed to. Much of the time we make an unconscious
commitment that involves changing other people. We can’t change other people
but once we get clear on our own commitment people often change anyway. The
one with the strongest commitment rules the relationship and this is the
easiest way to take full responsibility for any failure to turn it around for
a positive outcome. Use
the “what if” technique
If you are still feeling stuck
after working through the first three exercises, try the “what if” technique.
If you can suspend judgment for just one hour you can literally change your
destiny. If you believe in the “law of attraction” you must know that how you
feel determines what you get. So the objective is to make yourself feel
better about any failure you are experiencing. You must quit judging and
instead reach for possibilities. You do this by saying “what if…” then you
look for the positive aspects. Examples include ·What if there is a purpose in
what just happened? ·What if this had to happen so
that something really big could happen later? ·What am I supposed to learn? ·What if I laugh about this
five years from now? ·What if I find a way to share
this so other people can find comfort? Once you find the
possibilities you start the flow and turn your failure into a huge
opportunity for growth and success. Regain
your power
When you are feeling lost or
confused you have lost your power to choose. If you want to be successful
simply take full responsibility for your life. The way you do this is to
realize that all of life is made up of little choices. Yes, there are
circumstances that happen to you, but in the end it is your choices that give
you power or drain your energy. You gain power through making conscious
choices and you lose power when you react out of an ingrained pattern or when
you react because of some trigger that you haven’t learned how to control.
The best way to see if someone is in a victim pattern of thinking is when you
ask the question, “What are your choices,” and they answer, “I don’t have
any.” Responsibility is the recognition of choice. Real power comes in the
ability to choose. As long as one is ruled by unconscious reaction there is
no freedom to choose. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright
by Marlene Chism Marlene Chism helps people
stop the drama and reach their potential. Go to http://www.stopyourdrama.com
to learn more. Marlene can be reached for interview by calling
1.888.434.9085. |
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