Ok so I have a few great things to share with you today, a couple amazing insights.
One thing that I've found this lesson has done for me is it has made me really question what I believed to be an accomplishment when it comes to goals, specifically goals with the program but it can work with other goals as well. I decided to start to write out a list of the possible other goals than the ones that I've been focusing on (Overcoming the anxiety and feeling good), which have actually lead me to feeling bad when I noticed I had not had them and was still struggling.
So here is a list of what qualifies as accomplishments when it comes to working on the program and working on any skill or task that helps with any of my goals. So I am successful when;
- I am able to think about doing something different from what I habitually do that will make my life better. (I got that one from THH, thank you by the way)
I make an attempt and try to do the activity that'll help me reach the overall goal
If I'm able to do the activity and even do it 10% correctly
If I give the best effort I can in that moment towards the goal
If I'm able to learn from the experience of trial and error
If I come back to the task after taking a break
If I'm making progress and seeing improvement in my ability to do the task/activity
If I become more comfortable and confident in my abilities to do the task or more
comfortable with the task
If I master the task where i'm doing it correctly at least 80-90% of the time
If my perception of the task is more positive than before
If I get new insights
If I am able to stay in the moment while doing the task
If I achieve the overall goal

We cannot always control the outcome, so why should our ability to succeed only be based on what the outcome is? Why not base our ability to succeed on what we do have control over? Which is the effort we put in, what we learn, our perception, our ability to progress and our ability to stay in the moment while we are doing it?
The more options there are to succeed the easier it will be to succeed and the more likely you'll want to work towards a goal and make it a reality and the more motivated and positive you'll be about the process as well....could you imagine what it would feel like if you knew success was very easy and that it was really hard not to succeed?
Also with lesson 2 it had focused on facing body symptoms...One thought that I didn't really catch until now but finally realize it has been there for a long time (in the other program run throughs even) is that because I was facing my body symptoms, that now I had no excuse but to face my limitations then, I had it, it was a big should for me....I'm starting to see that as an expectation and why its also not a realistic one.
->Right now we are still trying to get comfortable with the body symptoms, facing situations that cause an immense ammount of anxiety right now can be really overbearing...its kind of like when Dr.Fischer was talking about putting someone at the top of an escalator that has a fear of escalators and telling them to get on is not the answer, you have to have the skills first! This is a gradual process to build confidence in the skills and myself in being able to face the anxiety and if I were to do that right now, I could really be putting way too much pressure on myself, it could really discourage my efforts and even be a setback and a setup for more depression and hopelessness.
I also remember a situation way before I got the program and even knew about the anxiety where I went from being agoraphobic, I had also a few months before taking this one job, had to leave my house, leave my family and was going through alot of turmoil and pain....I took this job where I was working with hundreds of people at a ski resort, being a lift operator when I was terrified of being around people and I didn't have good coping skills and each day I had to work, I ended up being so afraid and so anxious that I ended up having cramps and deherria every day of work! I didnm't really have alot of choice at the time but I do now and facing anxiety does not have to be that scary and frightening and with building confidence in gaining the skills it would take aloooooot of the edge off! I know it does that from experience as well with other situations where I've been yelled at by someone and the anxiety spiking up for less than a minute and going away.
So the key now is just to go about my regular business and focus on the day to day anxiety and the body symptoms of that and to get comfortable with those and while I build up my confidence with that, then I can go after the more challenging things, like speaking in front of a crowd of people, going up the CN Tower, Making Videos and Putting them out there on Youtube and starting work again.
Thought replacements;
1)I slept till 1pm, I'm so lazy
Label, Mental filter
No it doesn't make me lazy, it means I went to sleep late and woke up late. I still get a great deal done on a daily basis, I'm still struggling with the sleep, its been a really long standing way of coping with extraordinary stress, it served me and now i'm starting to let it go but it will take time to change this and thats ok.
2)I should be trying harder with my limitations, my sleep, my eating habits, and staying in the moment as well.
Should, Mental Filter
I'm doing a great job as it is right now, I'm making progress and its going to take time to change these behaviors and patterns. Some of these things I've been doing for more than half my life and they aren't things that can just change overnight. Not to mention letting go of alot of these patterns that got me through some really difficult times is very scary. I'm going to be easier on myself, I'm going to allow myself to go through the process however long it takes and that'll help me to feel better and get me to where I want to go.
PS I'm working on turning the things on the accomplishment list into picture quotes as well as the 6 steps and you guys are definately welcome to print them off, cut them out, paste them on a page or something and take them with you in order to remind yourself of them and so you can have them whenever you really need them and to also anchor them in so they become second nature to you.
Mike