Often we stand in our own way of achieving and receiving what we most want. This happens when we believe that what we most want is only available in a bundled up fashion with something we don’t want at all. So we take one step in the direction of our dream and then we get scared because we feel as if we are also moving closer to a nightmare. With this kind of self sabotaging behaviour we hamper our own success.
Take Jody (not her real name), one of my life coaching clients, who wanted to overcome procrastination and become more successful in her career. Every time she made some progress, got more organized, became more focused, she noticed how she would slip in other ways as if she was trying to sabotage her own progress. Jody became curious about this self sabotaging behaviour pattern and realized that even though she really wanted to be more successful in her career, she didn’t like the image of what success looked like in her field. All the so-called successful professionals in her field seemed arrogant, aggressive and distant. Jody realized that deep down she didn’t want to be successful out of a fear that she too might become arrogant, aggressive and distant.
During a life coaching call, I asked Jody to stretch both of her hands out in front of her body and imagine she were holding success in her right hand and arrogance in her left hand. I asked her to notice the sensations in her hands and notice how they were different from each other. She said that she felt light and warm in her right hand as if her hand was warmed by rays of sunshine. In her left hand, she felt as if she was holding a heavy piece of coal surrounded by heavy brown smoke.
Through this physical experience, Jody was able to see the difference between the two realities that she had mixed together as one in her mind. Even though success and arrogance seemed to appear together a lot of the time in her field of work, they were really two distinctly different things. I asked Jody to write down her vision of success using the sensation of success she had felt in her right hand.
Once she opened herself to the possibility that success was possible without arrogance, Jody started noticing more and more successful people in her field who weren’t arrogant at all. It was as if a veil had lifted and her eyes were open to see this part of reality for the first time. Jody was able to let go of her self sabotaging behaviour as she embraced her new perspective of success.
Just like Jody, you can let go of self sabotaging behaviour:
- Where in your life might you be sabotaging your own success? What kind of qualities do you have mixed up in your mind? Here are a few popular pairs:
Success ~ Loneliness
Beauty ~ Vanity
Forgiveness ~ Injustice
Self-care ~ Selfishness - Identify the realities or qualities that you have collapsed into one in your mind. This belief is the root of your self sabotaging behaviour.
- Stretch out both of your hands and imagine you are holding one quality in each of your hands.
- Notice what each of the qualities feels like in your hand and notice the difference between the content of your hands.
- Then write down your vision of the quality you want to attract into your life using the sensation you felt as inspiration.
- Throughout the next days and weeks notice how this quality shows up in your life.
Enjoy your new-found freedom from your old self sabotaging behaviour.
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I came here from ICF at LinkedIn.
I really like your idea of telling her to hold success and arrogance in her hands. It’s a brilliant way to let people realize whether whatever they are holding are two separate things or sides of the same coin.
Thank you, Bengt!
I am glad to hear my idea inspired you.
Warmly,
Julia :)
What a simple, lovely exercise to resolve the inner conflict that leads to self-sabotage. Thank you, Julia!
Thank you, Claire!
Great to know that you received so much value from this article. It makes my day!
Warmly,
Julia :)