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What does it mean to have faith in yourself?

HomeForumsEmotional MasteryWhat does it mean to have faith in yourself?

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Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
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  • #71399
    Francis Ross
    Participant

    I must tell you first that “acceptance is the key.” What has happened has happened. It is in the past. There is nothing you can do to change it. You can however change your perspective of it. Chose to see the past as a learning process. The past does not have to define who you are. Accepting that it has occured wothout passing judgement on yourself will allow you to release it and move forward.

    Every moment offers you an opportunity to recreate yourself anew. The repetative tape full of self recrimination you continue to allow to run in your head only takes you down into an endless spiral of negativity and self loathing. “What you think about comes about.” “LIke energy attracts like energy.” All you achieve with self recrimination is to revert to a childhood pattern of “poor me, poor me.” and all you will achieve will to be to continue to live up to your worst expectations for yourself. It becomes easier to fail than to make the effort to succeed. Negative thinking will become a self fulfilling profesty of failure.

    So, happiness and faith in yourself are choices that you can make just as easily as the negative alternatives. Yes, you can simply chose to be happy! It is that simple! The difficulty arises in overcoming the ego and its familiar patterns.

    It is reminicent of a story about a young man addicted to living in a barell full of fecies. You see, he had been raised that way and knew no better. It felt familiar and safe. A dear friend saw him in the barell of fecies and so he took him home, gave him a wonderful bubble bath, provided a massage, some really fine new clothes and sat him down to have a talk. He told him all about how much better he would live in this fine home and of how much better he would feel about his life. People would even love to be around him and he would have friends and maybe even a relationship.

    He then announced that he was going to run out and pick up some groceries to make a tasty supper with. When he returned, quess what? The young man had found a rain barrel in the yard and filled it with water and feces and was in standing in it in the corner of the living room. Why he asked? It may not have been the best or most sane choice, but to the young man the new life felt scary and threatening and as bad as it was, the barrel was familiar and safe.

    Your choice is to recognize that we are all spiritual beings living in a human body and that our essence is love. The opposite of love is fear. If you allow your ego to run your life then you will always live in fear. The ego feels it must control all things, but that is never possible. On the other hand, if you recognize God, Spirit, a higher power or an oversoul (whatever it is that you chose to believe in) that is greater than yourself, then you will recognize that you are not in control of all things.

    So you can make a choice to turn your thougts and your actions over to Spirit in order to live in love and love yourself. Trust that you are always loved and taken care of. With that burden of needing to control the universe removed you are free to live in the present moment, mindfully and simply taking care of what is in front of you. Intuitively you will begin to know what to do in situations that used to baffle you before. You will make choices from the perspective of love and acceptance rather than fear and self loathing.

    Choose to stop the running tape of negativity in your head. You are a valued spirit of the universe just as any other and a true expression of Godliness. Choose to be happy in every moment. Connect with your God daily and feel the love and direction that is given. Humbly move forward in your beauty and light, excited by the fantasic experience and opportunity that surrounds you. You are truly a co-creator of you experience here. Trust that you are loved.

    #71408
    Yue
    Participant

    Hi Kyniska,

    Of all the things you wrote, this one sentence stood out for me:

    “But when I think about having faith in myself, it always meant to me that I wouldn’t mess things up, or at least that I would mess up way less.”

    Considering the number of decisions we make every day, it would be safe to say that everyone mess things up on a regular basis. The reason why we tend to hold ourselves to impossible standards is because of that little voice in our mind that criticizes everything we do without offering anything positive in return. It prevents us from being vulnerable to other people, undermines our achievements and tells us that it’s ok to stay miserable as long as we don’t have to risk feelings of failure and disappointment. Wouldn’t life be a lot more productive if the voice in our mind is a cheerleader instead of a judge?

    To me, having faith is about having the courage to make a mess of things, learn from it and have a laugh about it afterwards. When we make decisions, we can only go by what information is avaialble at the time and as a result, there is no such thing as the “right” decision. Instead kicking yourself for making msitakes, see them as lessons and an investment to your future self. I cannot count the number of occassions that I felt terrible in the moment but when I look back, I realised that’s exactly what I needed to move forward. If you want to silence that voice of judgement get out of your head and live in your body. Feel the sunlight on your skin, smell the fresh air and listen to the rhythm of you heart through excercises. You will find that life is a lot better when you are an active participant.

    #71424
    Kyniska
    Participant

    Thank you both for your replies. They were both really helpful and contained some lessons that I had worked out earlier in my life but forgotten about. To stop being self-pitying, to put the past where it belongs, and to actually live my life. I am kind of obsessed with getting everything “right,” and getting it right fast. I’m still not sure what believing in myself is supposed to look like, but maybe that’s not as important as picking myself up, learning from the experience, and moving on.

    #71425
    Kyniska
    Participant

    Thank you both for your replies. They were both really helpful and contained some lessons that I had worked out earlier in my life but forgotten about. To stop being self-pitying, to put the past where it belongs, and to actually live my life. I am kind of obsessed with getting everything “right,” and getting it right fast. I’m still not sure what believing in myself is supposed to look like, but maybe that’s not as important as picking myself up, learning from the experience, and moving on.

    #71430
    Kath
    Participant

    Yue, your sentence about having a cheerleader instead of a judge has really struck a chord with me. I am trying to shut up that judge right now, but there was something missing to replace him 😀

    What also works for me: If you feel these negative thoughts coming up, imagine you are Neo from Matrix and you can just catch them in the air or move away from them smoothly… 😉

    I guess life is a muddy parcours, and there is just no way through it without getting dirty. If you accept that and don’t fret over stains, slipping, running into each other or getting stuck here and there it can actually be a lot of fun!

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