1) Take Ownership Of Your Emotions
If you're going to work towards happiness, you will need to know who controls
your happiness. Its a fairly common belief that a person can make
another person feel bad. She made me angry. He upset
her. He really pissed the boss off this time.
I am going to challenge this idea and propose that...
You can not, in any way, ever, MAKE someone feel anything.
When I have talked to people about this idea, they inevitably bring up
the time when someone had upset them or made them angry. They say to me, they
caused my anger for if they had not been there, and said what they did,
I would not have been angry.
I can understand cause and effect in the physical world. I push the pencil
and it rolls. I drop a glass and it shatters. But cause and effect dont
translate very well into the emotional world.
When someone says something to you, are the words going
directly into your brain and switching on your "I'm upset" lever?
When someone gives you the evil eye, are they shooting laser beams
into your
brain pushing your afraid button? When someone makes an unfavorable
comment about your hair and you become offended, are they sending
invisible "offend
waves" causing your response? No, of course not. How can words, sent
out as sound waves and picked up by your ears then translate into
an emotional response? Is there nothing between those sound waves
and your response?
I think people have difficulty understand this concept of responsibility
for their emotions because they make no distinction between influence and
control.
There is a difference between the terms influence and control. Influence
has the potential to impact. It's indirect. Control has a direct effect
on a result. Lets look at one example and see how influence and control
play out.
Terry is Marks wife. Theyre having some financial difficulties
and make an agreement to hold off on major purchases until theyre
out of debt. One day while shopping, Terry sees a watch she loves and purchases
it for $350.00. When Mark sees the credit card bill, he explodes in anger. How
could you?!?, he screams at Terry, you know we're in debt!
What caused Marks anger? Was it their financial situation? The credit
card company? Terrys purchase? The watch? All of the above?
In this particular case, none of them. Mark believes
a good
husband provides
well for his family. When the bill for the watch came due, he almost
instantly felt bad about himself for not being able to afford such
things for her.
His belief about what it means to be a good husband gave Terry's
action a particular meaning, i.e.: he's not a good husband because
he can't afford the watch. He looks for the cause of his feeling
bad and sees Terry.
He becomes angry at her for making him
feel this way.
Terry, their financial situation, the credit card bill, were all influences on
Marks belief about what it means to be a good husband. This is worth
repeating. People and circumstances can have INFLUENCES on our beliefs.
(The perverbial "He pushed my button.") But YOU have direct CONTROL
over what you believe. Who controls what Mark believes? Who else
could it be, but Mark. If Mark is the steward of his beliefs, then
he has the
power to examine and change those beliefs if he so chooses.
Outside stimuli like people and events can have influence (triggers) on
our beliefs but its you and you alone that give meaning to those
influences. No one can make you feel anything. Sure, they have influence.
But its you alone that controls your beliefs.
Still not convinced? Lets change Marks beliefs about what
it means to be a good husband and see what happens.
Mark no longer believes he has to provide well for his wife to think of
himself as a good husband. (He has a list of other things, but providing
well isn't one of them.) It's no longer a prerequisite. Theyre in
the same situation, struggling financially, and Terry has purchased the
expensive watch. Mark sees the bill.
He doesnt become angry because he doesnt question his value
as a husband, but he is curious what happened since he and Terry had agreed
to hold off on major purchases. He asks Terry about the bill. As it turns
out, Terry had been feeling the desire for some type of luxury in her life.
Shes been scrimping and saving for three months now and wanted to
treat herself. She agrees shes broken their agreement, apologizes
and they discuss her feeling deprived. They decide that they will treat
themselves to one nice dinner out a month to celebrate their financial
restraint.
Mark changed his belief and by changing the belief, he changed his emotional
response. Terry and her purchase were only influences on Mark. Those
influences were powerless when the belief was changed. If Terry and
her purchase were
the cause of Marks anger, then he would have become angry regardless
of his changed belief.
- The good news is no one can make you feel unhappy.
- The really good news is you can not make anyone else unhappy.
- And the really, REALLY good news is you can make yourself happy
by adjusting the beliefs that cause your
misery.
Claim your beliefs, feelings and actions as your own. Take back the reins
of ownership, responsibility, and consequential control that comes with
ownership. Let's take that outstretched finger weve been pointing
at every one else, and turn it back towards ourselves. Not in blame, guilt
or judgment, but for answers and growth.
We who lived in concentration
camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting
others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have
been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that
everything can be taken away from a man but one thing: the
last of the human freedoms - to choose one's attitude in
any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.
-- Victor Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning
2) Deliberate Intent

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