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Dump Those Tapes!
Every time something
doesn't go quite right (rather
frequently for some
of us), we start berating ourselves. We can be the soul of courtesy and forgiveness to those we care
about and
then turn and savage ourselves in the most brutal fashion. How many times have you told yourself:
"I'm an absolute idiot!" What was
I thinking?" And that is just the start.
From those immediate
negative self-assessments, we dive deeper,
reinforced by old admonitions playing in our brain. We may be adults, our parents and teachers
perhaps long deceased, but their
deprecating, wounding, critical, even, at times, cruel or abusive, remarks play over and over as if
we were still
children, being scolded for "our own good."
With the help of
those judgmental tapes playing repetitively in the back of our minds, we easily move from annoyance at a
simple
mistake anyone could have made to a global view of our own ineptitude: "I always blow it . . . I
can't do anything right ... Why am
I such a failure?"
Why is it so much
harder to forgive ourselves than to
forgive those we
love? Is it because we don't love ourselves as much? Is it because we expect more of ourselves? Or is it
that we know
ourselves too well, painfully aware of our dark secret places and our internal shortcomings? We
are hard on ourselves because we
have a deep, subconscious, lifelong
belief that we don't
quite measure up.
The maggot gnawing
away at our core is made up of a long string of events starting when we first became aware of the world and began to hear the word "No!" It
continued through a childhood of
making mistake after mistake, as we all do when learning new skills, and through adulthood as we are judged by our bosses, our spouses, and our
customers. We may
face,
intermittently, the the heavy emotional jolt of being laid off, the ultimate rejection of our
self-worth.
Psychologists study
authority-child interactions in both
the home and in school. Remarkably, feedback to the child, in both environments, is more than 70%
negative with the remainder either
neutral or positive. Is it any wonder that we grow up to view ourselves as not quite good enough, mess-ups, or even total failures?
We have internalized
all of that destructive feedback and face the world with a pride and self-composure that we know is only a defensive façade, constantly
in peril of crumbling away.
How can we jettison
this baggage of years?
One strategy is to
become aware of your own internal
chatter. When
something happens and you screw up, it is an independent event: you made a mistake as humans do. Try to separate that one event from anything that has
happened in the past. One error
can be quickly dealt with and resolved. Watch as your mind starts to link that event with every other mistake you have ever made, attempting to
form a
lifelong pattern of
questionable judgments and poor
decisions.
Analyze what you are
telling yourself and watch for the give-away
absolutes: "I always . . . I never . . ."
Absolutes are
irrational and illogical; they reflect our
thinking, not
reality. Being aware of them bubbling in your mind gives you the opportunity to negate them: if you have ever, just once, been successful at something,
no matter how small, then you
cannot be, by definition, a "total" failure. Just one contrary event completely wipes out an "always" or a "never."
Increase your
consciousness of your mental processes by writing down your actions and your thoughts. Cognitive therapy uses similar (more structured)
techniques to explore your mental
processing so that you can understand what your
own mind is doing in
shaping your vision of the world and yourself.
The realization that
it is your mind, right now, which is
defining your mood
and your emotional distress, creates a wonderful opportunity. If your psychological discomfort arises out of your thinking, not out of some
long-standing immutable neurosis
nor warped brain cells, then you know you have the power to change!
This new perspective
on the world is freeing and empowering. The old recurrent critical tapes can be pushed into the dead
file where
they belong. Your present, your future, your sense of self is yours to control because your thoughts can be consciously directed.
It took years to get
you to where you are now. Vow to spend the rest of your life nurturing those sprouting positive thoughts until they blossom and fill your
entire brain.
The old tapes will have no place
left to lurk.
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Virginia Bola, PsyD
P. O. Box 30238,
Santa Ana CA 92735
(562) 862-9627
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