- The Myth of Sex Equaling Intimacy — The Myths Series
- The Myth of a Self — The Myths Series
- Life is not as it is. Life is as you are. The Myths Series
- The Myth of Absolute Truth — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Right and Wrong — The Myths Series
- The Myth of the Threat of Change — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Shoulds — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Fairness — The Myths Series
- The Myth of No Consequences — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Easy — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Scarcity — The Myths Series
- The Myth of Limitations — The Myths Series
- The Myth of a Soul Mate — The Myths Series
The Myth of Limitations — outside of physical limitations, most limitations are self imposed. So, ask yourself why that’s a good plan!
Psst! Hey!
** Want more great writing designed to help YOU to shift your behaviour?
** Want to learn how to find, build or deepen your principal relationship?
** Want to know more about Zen living and being?
Much like the rest of the myths, limitations are self-imposed… and usually for no good reason.
I’m not talking about jumping off a ten story building and thinking I’m going to land safely.
I’m talking about what we tell ourselves about our relationships, our skills and talents, our bodies and our minds.
It’s so weird… we’re often criticized if we don’t lead with our limitations
Canadian culture for sure equates expressing positive statements about one’s strengths and abilities as bragging, or being “too wrapped up in yourself.” I suspect this is something that happens world-wide.
Many get nervous or judge‑y around successful people — like success is in limited quantities, and another’s success could mean less for me.
Others limit themselves so that others lower their expectations about them. After all, if we admit to how much talent and ability we have, someone might expect us to follow through.
So we shy away.
Years ago, as a kid, I learned from a very wise person that I should determine for myself who I was and who I wanted to be.
If I sat around listening to people tell me who to be and what to do, at best I’d be running from one thing to the next, trying to be everything to everyone. I learned that lesson well.
I’ve also learned that not everyone likes me, my opinion, talents, drive.
Limitations are artificial constructs. By believing in them, you get to whine along with others about how hard done by you are.
Hey! Gather up enough whiners, and you can even elect a Ford or a Trump. I guess it’s true: misery really does love company.
To believe that we are free; that we can create, achieve, and really make a difference — this is the mark of wholeness — and of life truly lived.
I would suggest that you take a moment from your reading, and note down anything that has occurred to you regarding your own limiting behaviours. Have I touched any nerves in the last few articles? What myths do you believe in?
Strange Behaviours to Notice
We are very close to talking about solutions — but first, I like to frame what doesn’t work — it’s the way my mind works, you see.
Here are several behaviours that many engage in and which lead precisely nowhere:
Blaming –
Scott Peck, in The Road Less Traveled, differentiated between neurosis and psychosis this way:
neurotics blame themselves, and psychotics blame everyone else.
He wrote that he’d rather work with a room full of neurotics than one psychotic. Why?
The neurotic is right! The stuff we have to deal with is our responsibility. We’re not to blame, but we are responsible.
Until we’ve done the same dumb thing over and over. Then, I am not above asking how many times a person has to bash into the wall before noticing it’s there.
Blaming others is a linchpin in our society. If you still listen to the news, you will daily be bombarded with the “blame flavour” of the month. Used to be the Russians. Then Iran. Of course, all the jobs are going to immigrants. On and on.
Grown up kids blame their parents for everything. “It’s not my fault. I can’t do anything about it,” is the prevalent theme.
We hear it so much that it actually sinks in. When something goes wrong, rather than turning inside and wondering how we set life up to go the way it is going, we look around for someone to point a finger at.
The problem with this is that it means that nothing will change. It won’t change because the person doing the blaming is looking for a solution outside of him or herself.
Inertia –
Inertia is choosing to stay stuck. It happens when we decide there is nothing we can do about our lives, our problems, and the world. It is a cousin to giving up (see below), but not quite so passive — you go through the motions, but never do things differently.
Cocooning is the modern equivalent of inertia. You build your home into a fortress designed to protect you from the outside world. You take up knitting.
You fill it with comfortable things, and make your connections to the outside world through media — the Net, computer e‑mail, television. You surround yourself with sound — noise. You sit in the middle of it all and tell yourself you deserve it — you work so hard.
Boredom –
Boredom is intellectual cocooning. Your brain shuts off. Life seems monotonous and dull. Which seems to be a good thing, as, again, the blame can be placed on the world for not being stimulating enough. Or, we assume that the people around us are boring. A key expression is, “We just don’t talk any more.”
People are reduced to objects. People are judged on their ability to amuse us. People become disposable, as we look for a charge. Yet, at our depth, we know we’ll not find it. Boredom excludes the possibility of change.
Giving Up –
This is the end of the trail, just short of clinical depression. At this point, one assumes not only that nothing will change, but also that nothing can change.
Society seems to be sliding down a slippery slope to oblivion. Causes that seemed important now seem to be irrelevant. Relationships seem meaningless. Conversation is stilted, with no affect. There is no purpose.
The Way Out
Well, enough of the rant about what doesn’t work.
Remember, no matter how “bad” things are, the only way your life will change is if you do.
Despite all the whining about “It’s difficult — it’s challenging.” Of course it is! Waiting for “things to change” for externals to cooperate, for others to get their act together is a monumental waste of time. Things are as they are, others are as they are, and none of that is under your control.
What is under your control is how you live your life.
So, let’s look at some things you can do, right now, to begin to shift yourself off of dead centre.
1. It begins with language
OK, language is key. And that’s not just semantics, he says with a grin.
Examples of silly language:
- “How can I get ahead? This situation is putting so much pressure on me, and the deadline is stressing me out. I’m in pain, and that’s shutting me down and depriving me of enjoyment.”
- “My husband is an idiot! All he ever does is misbehave, and that makes me angry. And when he makes me angry, I have no choice but to yell at him, cut him off, and demand that he change.”
- “My kid misbehaved, so I yelled at her. What else could I do? I have to teach her right and wrong.”
Now, I hear variations of these all the time. In each case, such language comes from “ego,” which is invested in 2 things:
- blaming externals, and
- keeping you stuck (and therefore predictable, as your ego hates change.)
The beginning of exiting this drama is to change your language so as to dis-empower your ego.
Zen, by the way, is not about eliminating the ego. It’s about learning how it works, so that you can stop doing its bidding. The ego no longer is able to pull the wool over your eyes, and you stop living under its illusions.
So,
- “I am choosing to see my life as I always do when I feel stuck. I am putting intense pressure on myself, and blaming the situation. I am spending so much time blaming the situation that I’m behind on a deadline, and I’m stressing myself over this. I’m dredging up painful memories that support my belief that something is happening to me, shutting myself down, and doing everything I can to deprive myself of enjoyment.“
Then, “So, I’ll have a big breath, let go of the stories for a minute, and do a bit of work on the project.” - “My husband is not behaving according to my fantasy, and I am making myself quite angry that he won’t live his life the way I want him to. I use anger to try to manipulate him into doing what I want, and if anger doesn’t work, I up the ante by refusing to have sex with him. Rather than work on my own life and issues, I make it “all about him,” and continually demand that he spend his life making things better for me. I never, however, consider doing the same for him.“
Then, “So, I’ll have a deep breath and tell my husband how I am upsetting myself, and then let him know what I will choose to do next.” - My kid is a kid, and kids say and do ‘kid-things.’ Sometimes she doesn’t pay close attention, and stuff happens. My ego gets involved, and I lash out and yell.“
Then, “So, I’ll have a breath, and rather than yell at her, I choose to invite her to notice what she’s doing, and to come up with an alternative.”
2. Drop the “but… it’s hard!”
This really is a follow-on for the above point.
The norm with behavioural shifting is for the ego to cleverly list off all the reasons why the shift will be either
a) hard,
b) take a long time, or
c) require someone else to do something first.
So, listen to that ego voice with compassion, have a breath, and shift something.
Remember, you learned everything you’ve learned by actually doing something. Now, we’re working on learning and enacting new behaviours to counteract what you’ve learned that does not work. This means, quite simply, that persistence, without whining, is the only way through the silliness.
3. Stop making excuses
Similarly, you’ll need to notice how quickly you excuse continuing to enact ways of doing your life that you say you want to shift. Again, notice how quickly you blame either the behaviour of others or “genetics.”
This is your crafty little ego, setting you up to stay stuck.
After all, if someone else has to do something first, then you excuse yourself, and sit back and wait.
Same with genetics, only “more so.” If you think you can’t control your temper or your complaining, or whatever, because that’s what mom or dad did, again, you’re stuck, only this time, permanently. It’s convenient to try this, and with it comes the explicit or implied, “That’s just the way I am — you’ll just have to put up with it” gambit. When I try this, Darbella just laughs at me.
Stop making excuses, make another choice, and do it.
Right now. Pretty soon, all that “genetic blockage” baloney will be a distant memory.