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How Do You Motivate Yourself: With Love or Fear?

“The heart is like a garden: it can grow compassion or fear, resentment or love. What seeds will you plant there?” ~ Jack Kornfield

My whole life has been a story of discipline. I started exercising and eating healthier in eighth grade. I planned out my studies meticulously so I would finish school assignments exactly on time. I always arrived five minutes early for any appointment or meeting. Disciplined.

When I began my yoga studies in earnest at the age of twenty-two, I applied the same disciplined nature to my yoga practice. I had extensive practice plans and had scheduled in all the parts I should be doing: pranayama and meditation at dawn, asana practice after work with standing poses on Monday, hip openers on Tuesday, etc.

People would comment about how disciplined I was. I just smiled, knowingly, because I knew what I was doing was “good” and they could learn something from my organized way of living. Yep, a little self-righteousness, too!

Then one day, about fifteen years ago, while I was contemplating the yogic term tapas (self-discipline), I had an awakening: my discipline, everything, all that I did (including exercise, eating well, rigidity around how I used my time), came from fear, not love.

It wasn’t focused on all the wonderful benefits I received through discipline but what I would lose if I didn’t do it.

If I didn’t exercise, I wouldn’t have my exercise high all day. If I didn’t eat perfectly, I would gain weight. If I didn’t do my practice, I would lose my state of consciousness.

So much fear! I knew I wanted it to change. I didn’t want this level of fear in my life, especially around my spiritual life whose very essence was love.

I was planting seeds with my practice, as Jack Kornfield’s quote said: “The heart is like a garden: it can grow compassion or fear, resentment or love. What seeds will you plant there?”

I wanted to be planting seeds of love.

While choosing to make a change in our life because we are afraid of something at least gets us going (quitting smoking because of the fear of dying, working on being on time at work because of the fear of being fired, beginning meditation after a heart attack), we ultimately want to shift from fear to love, from what we don’t want to what we do want.

Focusing on what we don’t want simply continues to plant fear in our hearts. Focusing on what we do want, and that we deserve what we want, plants seed of compassion and love.

So, what did I do? I quit everything. I quit my entire practice—including eating well, exercising, being rigid with my schedule—and entered into a study of discipline. Two discoveries would forever change my perspective.

The first reflection came from the word tapas, itself. Roughly translated, it means “inner fire” and refers to the inner fire to know ourselves, the desire; and we learn about ourselves through our yoga practice, our study of life, and everything we do for ourselves.

I like to also think of it as the inner fire to feel good, to be doing what we really want to be doing, to love our life.

We can use this “inner fire” to inspire us to be disciplined with whatever we want to do, to continue our actions even when we feel resistance. (You know, the preference to sleep in rather than get up to exercise, to eat junk food rather than prepare something healthy, to grab for a cigarette rather than not.)

The desire drives us to want to learn more and is stronger than the resistance when we stroke it. And we stroke it by focusing on what we want, getting excited about what our action will help us feel.

The second transformational nugget was the word “discipline” itself. The word comes from the Latin root “disciplina” and means “instruction given, teaching, learning, knowledge.” Think in terms of a disciple learning at the foot of a master.

Again, our discipline to do our own practice helps us to learn about ourselves, it is a teacher for us, our master, so to speak.

Knowing I wanted my practice to be based on love, not fear, to be planting seeds of love from it, I continued to hold myself back from practicing.

The fear bubbled to the surface. I feared I would lose “everything” for quite some time. But then, a deeper desire began to percolate up. A curiosity about a certain pose and how it would feel, a curiosity about a breath, a new meditation I felt a niggling to try. 

I felt an inner excitement to get to my mat, and I finally did.

Self-discipline is tricky for many of us. In my work, I rarely come upon anyone who says that what they do for themselves is deeply satisfying and they feel they do enough. Most of us feel we need to do more, we aren’t disciplined enough.

The judgment itself comes from fear. Let me say that another way, if you are judging yourself for not having enough self-discipline, you are basing your practice on fear.

So how do you change the focus?

Instead, return to why you do what you do. Why do you do yoga, exercise, eat well, or do anything else you feel you would like to be more disciplined around? What brought you to it in the first place? Sometimes along the way, we lose site of our deeper purpose.

Bring your attention back to that deeper purpose. Put your love into it.

While I wish I could say the fear was eradicated for me, never to return, I must admit it does return. I can say that when it surfaces I now have new tools to handle it. I am better able to see it for what it is and return to the state of love quickly.

Ironically, I realize that my fear-based discipline did teach me something about myself and led me to a life with more love.

About Laura Erdman-Luntz

Laura Erdman-Luntz, MA, E-RYT(500), Yoga Educator, Life Coach, and Author, has been teaching yoga and life coaching for over 20 years. Join Laura in January 2014 for #31DaysOfYoga, a free, tribal event encouraging a daily yoga practice during the entire month. Come to Bali with her in February!

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Feyyaz

Laura, thanks for the great article. A couple of months ago I had the same experience with exercising. I always wanted to exercise out of fear of losing my muscle/form. But after a few reflections (and stopping for a few weeks) I realized that I actually enjoy exercising and do it for the love of the great feeling 🙂

eduardomartinez

Great article!… many fears, many ways… I think judgment is a key word…

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

Eduardo, Completely agree! And judgment is so based in fear…

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

Wow! That is a similar experience. It is wonderful to do it out of love, isn’t it? So much more rewarding. Good for you!

lv2terp

Great message to really identify if a task or practice is set in fear or love. I really like this perspective…”if you are judging yourself for not having enough self-discipline, you are basing your practice on fear. ” 🙂

Joseph Dabon

Sorry, you will surely get me wrong. I love my children and I do what I do to express that love. That is motivation from love. I am running out of money. I am trying all I can to finish the ebook I am writing hoping to earn something from it, I am motivated to finish that book out of fear of running out of money. The problem with creating mindsets is that we will end up with like a horse with blinders. We cannot see alternatives or options to live our life by. Without options, what purpose is there to live?

Talya Price

Very good article.

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

Thank you!

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

Thank you! So glad you enjoyed it.

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

I apologize, I am not exactly sure what your comment means. Do you feel that putting your attention on love is a mindset that keeps you from seeing options?

I can understand how the fear of not being able to provide for your family takes over all of your thoughts, it is all consuming.

My best to you as you work through this challenge in your life.

Leslie

Thank you for your post! I just had an epiphany recently that this life and marriage my husband and I have created is one of discipline. I have always been disciplined. Friends and family would say you are too perfect! The discipline that we have is one to ensure that we feel good physically and mentally. But I do know that we are broken, and the discipline is not all about love, but fear as well. Thank you for your words to share with my husband so we can reflect on why we do what we do! I’m also going to try out your 31 days of yoga.

Donna

Amazing and true 🙂

Joseph Dabon

That’s more like it. People are way too varied to be categorized. Like they say, different strokes for different folks.

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

Leslie, What a lovely insight for you. I am so glad you are going to participate in the 31Days. Keep in touch. Would love to hear what happens!
L

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

🙂

Jasmin1993

I love love love this article, great piece! Really rings true for me right now, I feel it’s just helped me have an awakening of my own. I’ve been struggling lately to stick to anything and have been so frustrated with myself as to why. This has made me see that it’s because so many of my actions and choices in my life are fear based. I don’t want that anymore! So thank you for helping me understand 🙂

Yoga Laura Erdman-Luntz

🙂 You are so welcome, my dear.

Nirmal Kaur

how do you move from fear to love?

Katie Pitsis

What a fantastic article!!!!!!!!! Awesome job, thanks so much for sharing! You are amazing!

Mike

To go back to your spiritual essence (which is the eternal “I am”) that is the part of you that never changes. It is the stillness in you that observes your life experiences through your senses. It is love itself.

Steve Boose

I stumbled across this blog entry to research a sermon on “fear” for my congregation. Christians are being beaten over the head with “fear” these days – the fear of the “other”, the fear of losing rights and privileges, the fear that living the life that Jesus modeled will lead to scorn and dismissal. I think you’re very right in saying that overcoming fear often requires us to first lay it down, meditate/pray about it, and seek to understand *what* we fear and *why* we are afraid of it. Thank you for your words, and I hope you don’t mind if I use some of them in my lesson for this coming Sunday.