beliefs

Change Your Beliefs, Change Your Life

“Mosk” courtesy of Maciej Mizer

Our life is what our thoughts make it. Life is neither good or evil, but only a place for good and evil. ~Marcus Aurelius

A belief is something you consider to be true. You cannot decide to believe one thing this week and another, opposing thing, next week. You might think you can, but it really doesn’t work like that. I read recently that baby circus elephants are tied to a strong metal post with a heavy chain because they will try to escape and expend a lot of energy on pulling at their tether. After some time, they accept that they will not be able to escape and so stop pulling. The adult elephants are tethered to a wooden stake with a light rope: they could easily escape, but they believe they are unable to do so, and so the light tethering works as a kind of symbol of their bondage. It is clear that whether your beliefs are true or not is irrelevant. What matters is what you regard to be true. It seems to me that this is a good definition of ‘belief.’

People believe all sorts of things for all sorts of reasons. Some beliefs are trivial and others are very important, but two things are certain:

  1. Our underlying beliefs operate at a deep, subconscious level, and
  2. These underlying beliefs affect what we experience in life, including our level of success or failure in any endeavor.

Where do these beliefs come from?

Philip Larkin said ‘They f**k you up, your mum and dad.’ Which might seem a bit cruel, but then he did admit that ‘they do not mean to, but they do.’ What he’s saying, of course, is that we learn our worldview from our parents, and if our parents think that life is a struggle and that money and success don’t come easily, then this will be our ‘defaults mode,’ too. We spend many years being ‘drip fed’ these beliefs and they get embedded deep in our subconscious. It’s fine to say ‘just change your beliefs,’ but it’s not always so easy. We have picked up many limiting beliefs from parents, teachers, friends, religion (dare I say?) and society in general. Some of these beliefs are holding us back, so doesn’t it make sense that we should want to shed them?

Do we really want to get rid of these beliefs?

Actually, it’s not that simple. We can get a tremendous payback from some apparently harmful and limiting beliefs. I’m sure we all know people who seem to identify themselves as a victim, believing that they are helpless and needing someone to look after them or ‘save’ them. These people get a feeling of security (they don’t have to try to be better or take any risks because they know it’s pointless and they will fail), and they get people running around after them, looking after them.

We need to look at our beliefs and examine what kind of payback we are getting from them and so why we might not want to let go of them. Some examples of limiting beliefs might be:

  • Everyone is selfish
  • People are always trying to rip you off
  • There isn’t enough to go around so you have to grab what you can
  • You can be struck down by circumstances (illness, accident) at any time
  • It’s not my fault that my life is like this

All of these beliefs do something for us; they give us some validation or some comfort. But they are simply beliefs. Deeply engrained, to be sure, but only beliefs and so susceptible to change. Shedding these beliefs may cause some pain, but growth is often accompanied by pain, and I am confident that they pain of growth is a small price for the loss of a lifetime of limitation.

Change your beliefs and change your life

And so that brings us to the good news – you CAN change your beliefs. I suggest three steps for doing this:

  1. Identify a limiting belief (eg Things just happen. I’m not in control of my life)
  2. Cast the belief in a different way (I am in control and I consciously orchestrate my experience)
  3. Look around for evidence of this new belief. You WILL find it! After a while, this will sink in and you will start to think the new belief is ‘true.’

In a sense, I’m suggesting that you brainwash yourself. This may sound negative, but remember that you’ve already been brainwashed into negative thinking, so some reprogramming won’t hurt. Perhaps ‘condition yourself’ is a better phrase than ‘brainwash.’ It takes time, but you can do it if you really want to.

Beliefs to live by

I believe the following to be true and I see evidence of these statements around me all the time.

  • I orchestrate my own experience of life
  • Life is naturally abundant. There is enough for everyone
  • Life, when lived properly, is easy and happy
  • I don’t have to improve myself – I am already as valuable and worthwhile as anyone else
  • I can do anything if I apply myself in the right way
  • Circumstances arrange themselves and opportunities are presented for my greatest good

The tragedy of much adult life is that our vision is so limited. Like the elephant, we can walk away from our tether any time, but we often don’t because we are shackled by our false and limiting beliefs.

I want to end with a wonderful fable from Anthony de Mello, a man who really seemed to understand the human condition.

An eagle lays an egg but somehow the egg finds its way into a chicken coup. A chicken incubates the egg with all her others and when it hatches, she rears the eaglet as if it were one of her own chicks. It learns to peck the dust for food, to flap its wings and to strut around the farmyard. One day, an eagle flies by overhead. The little eagle looks up and sees this, and says to himself, ‘I wish I were an eagle – how majestic, how free, how beautiful to be like that and have such a life.’ The eagle lived like a chicken and died like a chicken, because that’s hat he thought he was.

Visit Mark at effortlessabundance.com, and check out his new book, Thirty Days to Change Your Life.

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  • http://www.2knowmyself.com Farouk

    yeah ur right mark, the root cause of all pain are negative beliefs. thankss for the post

  • http://www.peopleskillsdecoded.com Eduard @ People Skills Decoded

    Changing beliefs is one of my favorite topics, and one of my favorite activities, with myself or my clients. SO you can tell I enjoyed reading this :)

  • Pol

    A good article. Sometimes we have negative beliefs that we have developed, that affect our lives and that we have not even verbalised and may not consciously be aware of. It is only when some asks us or we ask ourselves “why did you do or say that?” that we become aware of them.

  • http://www.worldofselfimprovement.com World of Self Improvement

    I actually think that if you can grasp this single concept, then much of the other self-help information available will feel very secondary.

    If you can conquer your own mind, you can conquer anything. It is a little ironic that our biggest self limits are caused by the same part of us that at times desires more from us.

    Cheers for the article, I enjoyed it!

    Sam

  • http://thisoldbrain.net Mike Kirkeberg

    And it started out so well. It would be nice if you could replace old thoughts and beliefs with new ones, but alas, research shows that the more you attempt to change any thought, especially an ingrained thought, the stronger the old one gets.
    There is an old saying that says something like you can’t think your way out of something that you behaved your way into.
    If you just lets thoughts be, let beliefs be, and start with acting the way you want to act (according to what is important to you) chances are pretty good that the thoughts will change on their own.

  • Liz

    Great article and I agree with everything, except the statement “I don’t have to improve myself”. While the second part of this statement is true “I am as worthwhile as anyone else” that doesn’t mean that we can’t improve ourselves everyday. Just my thoughts!

  • Kunna

    I really enjoyed reading your article. Negative beliefs cripple our minds and act as barriers for our actions.

    Anyways Cheers for the article…It was awesome

  • http://www.liveboldandbloom.com CoachBarrie

    Love, love, love this post! Every fear we have is based on a thought or belief. If you can change the thought, your life can be entirely different. I know this first hand. I recently turned fifty and have been a special needs computer user for years. I thought I was too old to learn this strange computer world, especially blogging and social media. But happily something helped me shed that belief and now I am blogging and twittering and all kinds of stuff I never thought I’d do. Insignificant to many, but mind-blowing and life changing to me!

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  • http://meahq.com Ryan

    Beliefs are important as they will define your perspective and perspective will define where you end up. Most of us tend to follow the same logic but because we all start from different places we follow the logic to end up in different places.

    So how do you find the right perspective? It is simple, reflection. All you have to do is spend time thinking about where you are starting. Too many people don’t do this and instead focus only on where they are headed.

  • http://enlightr.com Craig Thomas

    Nice post and image. I’ve got a hold of my beliefs and I attempt to tell other people they can can their beliefs but some people are so completely ‘stuck’ it’s hard to help them see any sort of light.

    • http://effortlessabundance.com Mark Harrison

      There’s only one thing you can change – yourself.

  • Ramesh Raghuvanshi

    Beliefs Are fixedup in childhood and you can not change them.No one can change his destiny .Accept your fate not only accept but love it.All pop psychological articles humbug don’t believe them.They written by credulous people.

    • http://www.livingwords.net Doug Cartwright

      Ramesh, your beliefs are showing! The trouble with unhelpful beliefs is that when you believe them to be true, they are true for you! That doesn’t make them objectively true.
      I’ve spent 16 years learning how to change beliefs and it’s technically easy but practically difficult. However, there is a lot of pop psychology out there. Like the idea that all your beliefs are formed in childhood and you cannot change them.

      Ramesh, why don’t you read about Jesus. He taught that He can help anyone change through the power of the Holy Spirit.

      Anyway, I will pray for you. Don’t give up.

      Doug

  • http://sandyxuan.com sandy

    there’s a common belief of changing belief, changing life is supposed to be not easy. but sometimes, when we are “condtioned” in opener mind set, we can so enjoy the shifting process :)

    i found when i think sth as tough, it’s usually not the thing itself is that hugely tough, it’s my over-thoughts, my fears that actually make things tougher than it should be.

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  • http://www.gain-self-confidence.com/ Terri

    I have watched eagles leave their chicken coup. It is certainly not easy and may begin by reading this article.

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  • Wagersmith

    So true. I realized that my chicken coop had taught me that being openly joyful was undignified, that the only way to get love from family members is to subordinate yourself so its not worth it, that if people treated me like dirt as a child that’s what I deserved, that no one really cares what I want so I better be a battering ram if I want to get my interests satisfied, that people don’t deserve to be respected unless they achieve what my dad happened to value, that to empathize with someone was to be weak. Through a lot of deliberation, and the use of a few psychotherapeutic techniques, I’ve done the emotional work to change each one of these beliefs. Good riddance, chicken coop!

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