• jjmdarkeagle

    Excellent post! Very helpful and I like the insights. One thing I feel compelled to point out is the mis-attribution of the quote at the bottom: it’s actually Marianne Williamson, from her book A Return to Love. It’s actually quite often attributed to President Mandela; here’s a link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marianne_Williamson#A_Return_to_Love
    Keep up the good work, and thanks for the new concepts!

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    You are right. Mandela used it in his address so it does speak from him — at least this is what is reported by the wire services. This is the way I understand it. And in this article my intention is to bring forth a notion of the heroic forces that live within us. Marianne Williamson is certainly the speech writer and Mandela embodies the aspect of the internal dialog that gives voice to the light of empowerment that, we as human beings, have the capacity to bring into the world. I have had people speak this quote from knowing it was from both of these people. When voiced by Mandela in client’s minds, it opened the possibility of identifying it within themselves. When attributed to Williamson, so such connection was made. Thanks for adding greater depth.
    Rande

  • Ethan

    Wasn’t the inauguration in 1994 when Apartheid ended?

  • http://www.ideaswithakick.com Ideas With A Kick

    Great idea to write about the internal dialogue. I think it’s the most relevant manifestation of our thinking patterns and beliefs. Change that and you truly change your entire life.

    This is why in my life and with my clients, I use a lot of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, as it focuses a lot on changing the internal dialog and it provides some poweful techniques.

    Eduard

  • Jill

    Awesome post–thank you! I’ll read it again later and share it with some friends. Thanks & Happy Halloween!

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    My, there are some smart, detailed folk out there. My mistake.
    Rande

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    I used to be a CBT based therapist. Then…. For me, CBT does not go far enough. The Internal Dialog becomes a gateway that helps people to tune into the historical internal dialog going on in the mind. And it is more than debating a critical voice. It is also a place where we find many more “voices” that live within us. It is in being able to awaken (become aware of) these powerful aspects of self and give them “voice” on the stage of the self that transformation of the self moves beyond controlling negative thinking and into the design of your life.

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Thank you JIll. There are skills and tools that we all need to develop to become the observer of the internal dialog, rather than a mindless participant in the creation of your life. Awakening to it and learning to observe the internal dialog represents the door to transformation of the self.
    Rande

  • http://www.LikeSoup.com Jim Campbell

    Wow!!! What a well thought out and well written article. Thank you for this. It provided a breakthrough for me. I’ve often wondered what was meant by being able to love ourselves. I wasn’t quite able to get my mind around the concept. Rande, your article made me realize that to be willing to look at ourselves in the mirror for long periods of time and often is a terrific way to practice loving ourselves.

    Thanks again,
    LikeSoup

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Jim
    You are welcome. I am honored that something I’ve done is a catylst for your growth. You actually touch on an area that was not directly attended to in this article — loving yourself. As a person begins to separate his or her identity from their internal dialog, a much richer possibility of our being emerges. Not only can we begin to forgive ourselves for being blindly fooled by all the deception that runs around in our mind, but also that we are children of creation longing for itself. Awakening this aspect of our nature and living in this gift, opens an enormous door for us to design what we bring forth into the world. And it is out of this love, this amazing gift of life, that we bring the light that dwells within us into this world.
    Thank you for sharing your journey — Rande

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Hello Jill
    I’m interested in your comments. I also reccommend that you and your friends also look at the video that is accessible on the home page of http://www.randehowell.com. It will expand the notion of Internal Dialog to include awakening the Inner Champions dwelling in the Stage of the Self. Then, I’d love to hear your comments.
    Rande

  • http://www.loveblug.com Derek @ LoveBlug

    Thanks for the suggestions. I especially like your description of how we are not the sum total of our thoughts.

    My experience is that, although I was a fan of self-improvement for over a decade, I could never think myself into better thinking. I had to act/live my way into better thinking. The key ingredients have been consistent changes in my behavior patterns and…dun dun dunnnnnnnn….time.

  • http://www.alternaview.com Sibyl – alternaview

    Wow…this is a good one. What a great post. Your statement that we have a choice and can control this inner dialogue and design our life with motivation, skill development and discipline is poignant. It is so true and breaks what at times can seem to be an extraordinary task into digestible pieces. I would say that controlling the inner dialogue is by no means something that is simple and easy. It is something we do have to work at and continually practice. As you said, we just have to be disciplined and committed. Thanks for the great post.

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Derek — You are right. We can not think ourselves into change. If that were the case, diets and changing other embedded habits would be successful. Thinking from a neuro-biological point of view is actually a behavior. It is what neuron “do” in a similar way that muscle cells expand and contract. What is important is what part of you is in control of the “thinking” that goes on in your mind.

    By interrupting the emotional thought process, we begin to see that there is a whole host of characters living within us. It is up to us to awaken and “feed” the parts of us that we bring forth into the world.

    Rande

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Sybil — Yes. It is a discipline that we gain more and more competence in as we practice. First we have to wake up to what has been controlling the creation of our lives and recognize that it has only been one particular way that the person could be organized. As our mastery grows, the organization of the self evolves. And what that reorganziation of the self brings into the world is closer and closer to knowing the purpose, meaning, and joy that is possible for each of us.
    Rande

  • Mike

    EXACTLY how does one start up this process of identifying the internal dialog and taking control of it? Are there examples, processes etc. I mean i get the idea and theme, however I’d appreciate practical steps that one can take to attain control over the internal dialogue.

  • http://www.randehowell.com Rande Howell

    Mike

    We’ll try a crude example first. Try to be silent for a moment. Listen to the “noise” going on in your mind. Some are able to discern the “voices” within the noise, others think that the noise is only their thoughts, and others simply hear a murmur.

    As you learn to slow the thinking down, you will discover that the thoughts are driven by certain voices within you. This is the internal dialogue.

    Getting a grip on it takes learning how to distinguish the members of the self. In my work, I teach people to awaken the Observer (the part of you that witnesses the thoughts as separate from you) and begin to discern what is beneath thought.

    It’s a learning process and not a magical solution. You develop the Observing Self and begin to understand the conversations that control your perception of the world and begin to enlarge the internal dialogue to include much more powerful aspects of the self. I teach this process to traders so that they do not trade from their fear, self doubt, or grandiosity. Instead they learn to trade from more powerful parts of the self not controlled by their fears. It’s interesting and, in trading, in black and white.

    To move from crude to deeper, go to my website http://www.randehowell.com and explore. There is a ton of info there for your reading.

    Let me know if this helps.

    Rande

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  • Bob

    Thanks for the insight on this neglected subject. I will check out your website momentarily!
    You don’t need to post this, it’s just for the sake of correctness: the last word of paragraph 10-propheCY is the noun, propheSY is the verb. :-)

  • Colin G Smith

    Great article!

    I agree internal dialogue has a very powerful influence on the way we filter reality. We are often unaware of what our self talk is because it operates unconsciously.

    In other words it has become a habit. And far to often it’s a critical voice!

    So becoming aware of our internal dialogue can be a really useful exercise. And it has been discovered that changing the tonality of one’s internal dialogue can be a simple and effective way to soften the impact of ‘critical voices.’

    I cover this method of changing the structure of inner self talk in my Squidoo Lens: your internal dialogue

    All the best, Colin

  • Whatever

    How do you read an article written by someone who uses the word “busying” and “busyness”?

  • poppa smurff

    i’ve causually read many self help mind expanding books etc. over the years. the internal dialogue ie: talking to yourself, running mental movies, pipe dreaming and the such is so common. actually trying to stop it is hard but not impossible. prepare to be blown away.

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