A Publication of KIDPOWER TEENPOWER FULLPOWER International
Written by Irene van der Zande
© Copyright
2004 All rights reserved. www.kidpower.org
PROTECTING OURSELVES FROM NEGATIVE BELIEFS
As dozens of self help books tell us, our belief in ourselves as
valuable, powerful, competent people is essential to our emotional
safety and can help us to get more of what we want in our lives.
Unfortunately, like pollution, which can challenge our physical
health, the negative attitudes and comments of others and the
destructive things we tell ourselves can undermine our sense of who
we are.
The impact of negative beliefs is certainly true when it comes to
personal and emotional safety. People stay in destructive situations
because they believe that they do not have the right to leave.
People do not speak up when something bothers them because they are
afraid of hurting someone's feelings or making the person mad. Boys
believe that they cannot walk away when someone insults them because
doing so would make them look weak. Girls believe that they must fit
a narrow definition of beauty to feel good about how they look.
Women let men rape them because they believe that they are
helpless...or that the attack was somehow their fault.
Often our awareness of our negative beliefs comes in the form of
telling ourselves and others things like: "I am no good at
....... writing, public speaking, math, fundraising, or
cooking." or "No one likes me because I am ..... too shy,
wimpy, unattractive, clumsy, stupid, pretty, smart, or
outspoken." or "I really hate ...... planning ahead,
confronting people, or getting angry." or "I am not the
kind of person who can ...... make a scene, stop myself from getting
out of control when I'm upset, or ask for help." Fill in the
blanks for yourselves. We all have them.
It is okay to choose to believe that we are no good at something,
too anything, hate everything, or not the kind of person who can do
whatever--as long as we realize that we ARE making a choice. For
example, it is okay to decide that you can't cook. Actually, this
belief might serve you well if you can get other people to do the
cooking. And you can make a new choice if this belief stops you from
doing something you may need or want to do--like eating good food.
It is important to remember that there is a difference between a
belief and a fact. The fact is that I am shorter than most adults I
work with. No amount of believing is going to make me taller.
However, if I decide to believe my height makes me helpless or
unattractive, then I am not doing justice to myself.
It is also true that I am physically dyslexic. It takes me a long
time to learn new physical skills because I get easily confused. For
this reason, I used to believe that it was impossible for me to
teach anyone self defense. As long as I held onto this belief, it
was true. However, I finally learned that the challenge of
overcoming my own difficulties in learning made me a much better
teacher.
We can take the power out of negative beliefs by saying them
aloud and finding ways to look at them differently. One of the most
powerful practices we have in KIDPOWER is teaching people to throw
hurtful words that they say to themselves or others into an
imaginary garbage can and replacing these words with an affirmation.
We started doing this practice just with children but found that we
were using it ourselves, as instructors, and now teach the KIDPOWER
garbage can to everyone.
Sometimes simply looking at a belief from another point of view
can make it not a problem anymore. In a recent workshop for
professionals working with developmentally delayed young people, we
practiced protecting ourselves from words that hurt by catching them
in the air with our hands, throwing them into a REAL garbage can,
and then saying something good to ourselves aloud while physically
taking the good words in.
We had the participants tell us the actual words their folk hear
like "Retard...dummy...freak....weirdo....special
ed...useless...lazy..."
One teacher asked, "One of my students with Down's Syndrome
says kids call her, 'The slowest ant in school.' What can she tell
herself to take the place of that?"
"Well," I suggested, "She might say,
'When...you...go...slow...., you...see ...A LOT!'"
In our next session, the teacher said that her student just
beamed and started laughing with this answer. She kept saying over
and over, "When...you...go...SLOW...., you...SEE ...A
LOT!"
Then this girl did some creative thinking of her own, and said,
"When.. you..go...TOO...FAST...., you...can...MISS....
EVERYTHING!"
This is a truth that, in our hectic lives, ALL of us would do
well to remember.
So slow down and think about which of your beliefs are serving
you well and which are not. If a belief or a label or a hurtful word
is bothering you or stopping you from doing things that will make
your life better, take the time to figure out how to change the
negative belief, give yourself a more positive label, and throw away
the hurtful words.
©
Copyright 2004
A publication of KIDPOWER TEENPOWER FULLPOWER International
www.kidpower.org
831-426-4407
Permission to reproduce granted with copyright notice and contact
information
at beginning and end of each article used. All rights reserved.
|