How to Confront Your Fear-Based Thoughts

fearthoughts 300x169 - How to Confront Your Fear-Based Thoughts

If you’re always thinking about how badly life is treating you, and telling whoever will stand still long enough to regret doing so about how you can’t get a fair shake, you will always feel miserable.

Ever hear anyone say, “Misery loves company?”  Being miserable doesn’t exactly attract good things to you.  Get it?  If you want to change your life for the better, start by consciously changing what you think…and what you say out loud.

It’s important that you understand that no matter how big your problem is, no matter how overwhelming a situation may seem, it is always fear-based thoughts and the negative words we speak that allow them to become uncontrollable.

So the best way to take back your control is to stop worrying and complaining about your plight, and start talking back to that voice inside your head. Or as I like to call it, The Big Mouth inside your head. The Big Mouth in your head is a continuous flow of fear-based thoughts, defensive emotions and beliefs that have been built from past experiences.

“Here we go again.”

“Why is this happening to me?”

“Why can’t I ever get a break?”

“I will never be able to handle this.”

“What’s the use?  No one cares anyway”

Sound like someone you know?   Often, the Big Mouth has become hardwired so that it doesn’t even have to live in the head anymore.  Sometimes it has a direct verbal pass out into the world.

Awareness is the first step for stifling the voice in your head and turning a compulsively negative mindset around.  Once you recognize the dismal reality you are creating for yourself, you can step back and observe where it is taking you.  If you don’t like where it is taking you (and you won’t once you understand the consequences), take comfort in the fact that you have the power to change it.  You do this by going on the offensive and counter attacking with empowering thoughts and words that instill hope, faith, confidence, courage and determination.

Whatever it is that is bringing you down, acknowledge the fear that represents it and immediately go on the offensive and talk back to your fears with a bombardment of emotionally charged words.  Don’t be afraid to really verbalize this.

If you’re worried about someone catching you talking to yourself and thinking you’re crazy, just think of the last time you looked in the mirror as you told your boss off.  Hop in the car or take a walk so you can really give this voice in your mind a piece of your mind.

“Listen, fear.  I know you’re there and I know what you are trying to do.  But it won’t work!  It can’t because I’m in control here!  I get to choose what thoughts flow through my mind!  I get to choose the words that are coming out of my mouth!  But most of all fear, there is a force within me that is bigger than anything you can throw at me!  So go ahead!  Hit me with your best shot!  One thing is certain: I will prevail!”

Do you see how empowering emotionally charged words like this can lift your spirits and propel you to move forward?  It just makes sense that the more positive your thoughts and words the more confident you will feel and the easier it will be to shift perspective and see alternative actions that are open to you. That’s what gives you hope and enables you to see a higher outcome. And that’s how you acquire a positive attitude.

 

Please feel free to share your thoughts and insights. I welcome all comments.

Steve Rizzo is the Attitude Adjuster.  You can’t attend one of his keynote speeches, seminars, or read his books and leave with the same attitude.  He’s a personal development expert, motivational business speaker, corporate-comedian and best-selling author. It’s no surprise that Steve is also a Hall Of Fame Speaker Inductee. An honor bestowed upon on fewer than 200 speakers worldwide since 1977.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes:

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>