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How Stressed Out Are YOU?
by: Dr. David Thomas
Are you feeling stressed out? Too many things to do, too little
time? One more thing added to the To-Do list and you feel like you’ll
explode?
Whoa there, no exploding allowed! You can handle it—just listen
in.
Listen? To what?
To your self-talk. Not yourself talk, but your SELF-TALK. Listen
in to the demands you’re making of your time, but more importantly
listen in to how you’re saying them and what you’re
saying.
Many of us don’t pay particular attention to what we’re
saying to ourselves. We’ve never been taught the importance
of how damaging it can be to us nor have we been shown that we can
use it to feel much better. You can literally un-stress yourself
by using your own self-talk.
Listen in for –need-, -have-to-, -must-, type statements that
you make to yourself.
“First I need to drop the kids off, then I have-to go to the
grocery store, then I need to stop at the bank, then I have-to get
home and work on those taxes before having to go back out and pick
up the kids.”
You’ve just created a lot of demands on yourself. And yes,
in order for your life to continue like you want, you would prefer
to do all those things just like that. But you don’t NEED
to, HAVE-TO or MUST.
By using demanding statements on yourself, you open up a lot of
opportunities to say irrational things to yourself that create stress.
When you use demanding statements, you then create a scenario of
“what-if” in your head. And when the “what-if’s”
back-up, then watch out stress level!
“What if I don’t get it done, what if I don’t
get there in time to get the kids, what if this, what if that.”
This is when you really go into stress mode!
Asking such open-ended questions is the origin much of your stress.
You often answer with “that would be awful, that would be
terrible” which compounds the stressful feelings even more.
Since awful and terrible are labels way beyond bad, (actually labels
that are beyond definition) you’ve created a situation in
your head that ends up with you saying to yourself “…and
I couldn’t stand it if that happened,” or “…I
couldn’t stand feeling that way!”
It’s indeed a vicious cycle of thinking that is common to
all of us. Fortunately, once you know how, you can think your way
out of these situations as quickly as you got in.
So where do you start?
First, flag such have-to, must, need-to statements in your head.
Then replace the needs, musts and have-tos with preferences, desires,
and wants.
Then when something doesn’t go according to your desires,
reduce the awfuls and terribles to simply, bad. Then rest-assure
yourself that you can stand it.
What if you don’t make it to the bank? What if you’re
late picking up the kids?? Well, it’s not what you wanted,
it may indeed even have consequences which may be bad, but in the
overall scheme of things it isn’t awful and you CAN stand
it.
A great deal of stress is caused from within by this “I-can’t-stand-it-it
is.”
Remember: whenever you hear yourself saying “need-to, have-to,
got-to, etc” replace it with want-to or would like to. Substitute
needs with desires; musts with preferences.
And remind yourself that awful things will not happen if your desires
are not met. You may not like the results if things don’t
go your way, but you can indeed stand the feelings. It may not be
good if things don’t fall into place like you want, but the
world will continue to spin and you will be able to handle it.
It takes some practice. Don’t expect it to happen for you
like magic. Pay attention to your self-talk, listen for the what-if
statements, flag the must and need statements. Dispute them with
wants and desires. Do it vigorously. With time it will become second
nature, and you’ll notice the lack of stress in your life.
About the author:
Dr. David L. Thomas, LMHC
Dr. Thomas is a mental health counselor and psychotherapist. He
has helped literally thousands of people over the past 21 years
overcome stress, depression, anxiety, anger, substance abuse, relationship
problems, and more. This article is posted at http://www.stressgroup.com
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