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Have you ever noticed that the older you get, the fewer friends you
have, the fewer new things you experience, and the
fewer risks you take?
The result? Less ecstasy!
In actuality, it doesn't make sense. Instead of
expanding as you grow, you shrink.
When you can relate to this scenario, it is high time for personal
transformation.
Unless, of course you like the way it is!
"Don't talk to strangers!"
Most of us who grew up in the city, have heard this sentence before.
Our parents wanted to protect us, and planted into our consciousness the fear of strangers.
Let us fast forward to "the now".
You might be in your twenties, thirties, forties or older.
Do you find it difficult to create new friendships, new relationships?
If so, do you realize that you are still afraid of strangers?
An old belief that was necessary for your survival many years
ago became a major hindrance to your joy, fulfillment and growth today.
Once in a while you probably buy a new pair of shoes.
After a while, even the best shoes wear out. What do
you do?
You throw away the old shoes and buy a new pair.
But what do you do when your beliefs, opinions and points of
view, wear off and do not support you anymore?
You hold them closer to your heart and do your best to defend
them thus keeping them alive.
This unreasonable attitude is called righteousness.
There is a simple equation in human psychology, which states
that the more righteous you are the more you suffer.
Now choose!
Transformation happens when you choose to question your beliefs,
opinions and point of view.
It is that simple!
Most of us grew up with an immense assortment of rigid, inflexible,
and permanent concepts. We learned them at home, in
school, and within our society and culture.
We were taught that maintaining strong beliefs, opinions and points of
view makes one a powerful, reliable, grounded, serious, and intelligent
person.
Well, is that so?
Let's imagine that you have to cross a river. You look everywhere, until
finally you find a boat. Happily you row the boat to the other shore.
There, you find a desert, which you need to cross, in order to get to your
destination. You put the boat on your shoulders and start crossing the
desert.
Smart ha?
As funny as it sound, this is how we regularly deal with issues in our
lives.
We find a belief, a concept, a principal that works for us in a certain
situation. And then we try to forcefully apply it to any other situation
coming our way. When it doesn't work, therefore becoming a burden on our
shoulders, we don't even question it.
Instead, we blame the desert, the sun or the government, but we never
question our need of the boat.
One of our limiting beliefs is that it takes time to change,
or that it is a process.
Let's get clear about it.
Change is gradual (growing old). Transformation
happens in an instant (growing up).
Change is local and temporary (losing weight). Transformation is wider and
permanent (becoming healthy).
Change is in the outside circumstances (avoiding fearful situations). Transformation is in the inner world, which creates the
outer circumstances (transforming fear into excitement).
You cannot create transformation, only the conditions for it
to occur.
You need to question your concepts and be open to the answers.
Allow whatever answer that comes, to be there.
On the surface it appears that there is no risk in questioning your old beliefs, opinions and points of view.
If after questioning them, they seem to support you, then reclaim
them. This time they are yours (not your parents',
teachers', society's, church's, etc...)
If they are not supporting you then dropping them becomes an
enormous advantage. A gift to yourself.
But if it is that simple, why is it that we usually need a major
crisis (heart attack, divorce, accident) in order to do
it?
There is one risk!
The risk of discovering that for a longer or shorter while, we held onto
concepts that were false. Meaning, we made a
mistake. Which we translate as 'I am stupid.' And we don't like to admit that? Do we?
For some people this realization comes with the old monopoly
metaphor: "it is like going back to square
number one!"
My reply? "It is better than spending the rest of your life
in jail!"
Article by: Nisandeh Neta, founder of
Open Circles, an international center for personal-growth and
leadership.
Visit http://www.opencircles.nl
to learn more about how you can make a difference, through living
your dreams.
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