Self Acceptance
Self Acceptance
Self Acceptance
1
© Lisa Brown & Associates 2009. All Rights Reserved. www.thecouragetowin.com
The Ultimate Secret to Self-Mastery:
The Practice of Self-Acceptance.
…My Story
I got involved with mental toughness 16 years ago as an athlete in the sport of ringette.
I became aware that I was a mental marshmallow in my sport.
One week I was invincible; the next, my confidence came crashing down.
I never knew why, and it hurt me all the time. My insecurity reached its zenith at the 1991
National Championships, where we lost with one second left on the clock.
I think that losing (failure) hurts, but underperforming hurts more. And I knew I had
choked in the biggest game of the year for my team.
Worse, a teammate of mine scored all 5 goals for our team. Outwardly, I pretended to be
happy for her. I said, "Well done, Shauna. Way to go." Inwardly, though, I wasn’t happy for her
at all. I wanted to be a leader, but I had no idea how.
Exhausted and depressed on the plane ride home, I finally broke, letting in the
negativity I had been defending against for years.
My story has a happy ending. I went on to play for Team Canada for ten years, winning
3 World Championships. More exciting, though, was the joy and confidence I experienced in
my sport. I retired only when age forced me to, 30 years after the day I began.
This question led me to investigate the mindset of top performers. For three years, I
scoured the literature, seeking answers from the high achievers who came before me. For 13
years after that, I facilitated mental toughness seminars, carefully listening to people about
their inner game.
I wanted to know: what are the elements of mental toughness? And, Could I become
more mentally tough?
This teleseminar is the result of my 16 year exploration into the invisible mental
toughness practices of top performers. I hope you find it useful in your quest for success, love,
and happiness.
There are only four challenges: health, money, relationships, and career. Are you
winning them?
As you reflect on this question, I think you will agree that life is hard. In truth, it is a
series of problems to be solved. Here are typical problems people have shared with me:
“My wife and I have lost our passion for each other.”
“I’m a good tennis player, but I’m negative towards myself all the time.”
I’d like you to write down a problem you are facing. Just write this challenge down as
you currently perceive it. I’ll give you 32 seconds to complete this exercise.
Now let’s turn our focus to winning. Winning is moving through problems to fulfill your
deepest desires.
Here is the typical inner reaction most people have when they encounter problems.
The first reaction to a problem is learned helplessness. Once you have encountered a
setback, you have ‘learned’ that success is not possible with this person or goal. Unconsciously,
you assume that nothing you do will make a difference.1
Your assistant has missed several deadlines. You don’t trust her; you think she’ll miss deadlines no matter
what you say to her. You do her work, reducing your efficiency. [You feel helpless to get her to meet
deadlines].
You’re dating again after a divorce, but you have little hope because your last partner gradually becomes
less passionate about you, rejecting you in the end. [You feel helpless to trigger lasting attraction in
others].
You have a secure, well-paying job, but yearn for a career that fires your imagination. Gradually, you
resign yourself to your current position [You feel helpless to discover your true purpose in life].
Your husband is not as enthusiastic about childcare as you are. You sign up for an evening course, but
hesitate to tell him. [You feel helpless to gain his support].
You want to quit smoking, but every time you try, life gets stressful and you start again. [You feel helpless
to change your habit].
Learned helplessness makes you passive; giving up seems to be the most sensible
option, because reality has proven to you that you cannot win.
Once learned helplessness strikes, you are beset by negative emotions: fear, anger,
frustration, sadness, and depression. The collective name for these emotions is unhappiness.
Since our culture disapproves of unhappiness, you will tend to be ashamed of it.
Annoyed by your inability to control your negative emotions, you’ll chastise yourself for
them—and resent having to feel inadequate, rejected, or depressed. The more emotional a
person you are, the more upset you’ll get about these feelings and feel victimized by life. This
phenomenon is called self-pity.
Self-pity prevents you from winning because it tempts you to focus on your feelings
instead of the problem you are facing. You may even fall prey to viewing your depression or
anxiety as the problem instead of the original issue that produced these feelings.
You say things like, “I didn’t get my promotion; I’ve lost my confidence,” and you are
more troubled by your confidence crisis than the fact that your career is faltering. Self-pity is
the equivalent of emotional quicksand. It distracts you from finding solutions that help you
win.
The next typical impulse is to try and escape the fear and despair your problem evokes
in you.
But, if negative thinking is not the cause of your problem, working on your thoughts
only provides only short term relief. This is because you are spending your energy monitoring
your thoughts instead of solving the problem in front of you. This is why therapy so often fails:
people use it to analyze their feelings and gain sympathy--not to set goals, change their
behaviour, improve their relationships, and solve life problems.
If self-help isn’t your thing, you might turn to religion. You’ll pray for strength and
entrust the problem to God, telling yourself that your problem exists ‘for a reason’ even if you
don’t know what it is yet.
Faith is empowering when you draw on it to cope with loss and confront life problems.
But, if you use faith to try and escape your pain without addressing your problems, you will
simply feel forsaken and let down.
At this juncture you’ll be tempted to try and escape your distress by convincing yourself
that your goal wasn’t important to you anyway. This is called disowning your desires. Here’s
how it shows up:
“He didn’t call, but it’s Ok. We weren’t right for each other anyway.
He’s not the man I thought he was.”
“I’m not fulfilled at work, but it’s only 9 years until the pension kicks in.”
“I don’t need a fancy wardrobe or car. Those people are missing the true meaning of
life.”
“What do I want to be? I thought I would know one day, but it never happened.”
But, your desires are still within you. Certain desires we never relinquish, no matter
what obstacles we face. In order of priority, they are:
Denying your desires weakens your commitment to them. This does not help you win,
for the hallmark of high achievers is their laser-like focus on a single goal.
We have these 5 typical inner reactions to a problem. I’d like you to do a quick inventory
of yourself regarding these reactions. Here is a quick summary of them:
Of course, If none of these reactions leads to winning, we must ask, “How should I deal
with my negativity?”
Negative feelings arrive unbidden from deep in your unconscious to warn you that your
desires are in jeopardy.
There is no need to dread anger, fear or any form of unhappiness. These feelings are
natural when we are not winning, and they are powerful tools for navigating life.
Every problem is confusing initially. When learned helplessness sets in, we find
ourselves backing away from our desires—or worse, acting in opposition to them. We wonder,
“Why am I getting in my own way?”
To win, we must restore clarity and motivation to our inner game. The first step is
discovering the exact source of our helplessness.
Just as you cannot cure scurvy unless you know it is caused by a vitamin C deficiency,
you cannot cure your learned helplessness until you discover its root cause. You do this by
harnessing the wisdom of your negative feelings.
Our negative feelings will take us to the root of our problem if we listen to them.
What is self-acceptance?
When we dislike something, our first temptation is to resist it with denial or anger.
Consider your finances, career, appearance, relationships, or emotional state. Is your attitude
towards these things one of openness or resistance?
The barrier to self-acceptance is that we are not always as we would like to be. We
desperately want to view ourselves as successful and happy, and stubbornly reject thoughts and
feelings that contradict our carefully cultivated self-image.
You may be wondering: “What if I despise something about myself or my life? How can I
accept it? And if I do accept it, am I stuck with my chronic anger / poverty / bad marriage /
depression / annoying boss / weight problem?
I believe this question stems from the fact that the word acceptance has several
definitions, including ‘to approve of.’ We think that accepting a negative condition, quality, or
feeling means to approve of it.
This is a misunderstanding of the term self-acceptance. When you accept yourself, you
do not resign yourself to your negative traits, feelings, or habits.1 You are simply opening to
your negative feelings about them.
Suppression is the technical term for pushing feelings like fear, rejection, inadequacy, or
sadness outside of our conscious awareness.
Suppression is a mental habit. When negative feelings break into our awareness, we
suppress them again and again into the unconscious mind.2
You tell yourself to ‘get over’ your feelings, not let others ‘get to you’, and that anxiety
and depression are a sign of weakness. You may even take pride in your mental discipline,
believing that mental toughness means never feeling unhappy.
The idea that we banish feelings from our consciousness was popularized by psychiatrist
Sigmund Freud in the early 1900’s. Using hypnosis, Freud discovered that some of his patients’
symptoms were caused by suppressed feelings. When the patients brought these feeling into
consciousness and experienced them, their physical maladies disappeared.3
Suppression temporarily helps us function and avoid emotional pain, but it has self-
defeating side effects. They include mild depression, addictions, overreactions, lack of empathy,
low confidence, and self-sabotage.
The moment you suppress a strong negative feeling, you become mildly depressed.
Sometimes the depression is quite noticeable; other times, it is a subtle shift. This is because the only
way we can avoid negative feelings is to mute our entire feeling function, resulting in mild
depression. Suppression is a defense mechanism against fear, anger, and sadness.4
By suppressing, we elude a conscious experience of our pain. However, we do not have the
luxury of being able to suppress only negative feelings. This is how the feeling function works. We
either get to experience both positive and negative feelings, or our feeling function is muted. Once
our feeling function is now muted, we cannot access a high energy, motivated state of mind.
Reflect on your own life experiences for a moment. Recall the last time you had a major
conflict with someone that did not get resolved immediately.
Once the conflict was resolved, however, it’s likely that all your positive feelings came
rushing back…and you were so happy the conflict was over.
An intelligent young graduate student named Maggie attended my seminar with the
goal of finishing her thesis, due in 32 days. She had been procrastinating on it for weeks.
Maggie thought her problem was lack of discipline. She kept making up writing
schedules and trying to adhere to them, which only motivated her for a day or two.
I asked Maggie to close her eyes and imagine writing her thesis. After a few moments
she reported feeling ‘uncomfortable.’
Maggie opened her eyes and smiled. She had finally uncovered the source of her
helplessness: her thesis topic was too broad. That same day, she scheduled a meeting with her
supervisor to negotiate a narrower topic.
Like most people, Stephen began his relationship with money from a place of lack.
Other than investing in a monthly RRSP, he rarely thought about his investments.
At 51, Stephen woke up to a harsh reality. After 10 years of losing money listening to
his financial advisor say, ‘This is a long-term investment’, he knew something had to change.
Over the course of the weekend, Stephen was surprised to discover that confronting his
inner wealth demons was exactly what he needed. For the first time in his life, he acknowledged
his feelings of helplessness around money, which stemmed directly from his financial illiteracy.
Stephen left the seminar determined to elevate his knowledge about mortgages,
investments, and personal financial planning. He had finally shaken the de-motivation around
finances that had followed him for years.
Mild depression is the most common reason for underachievement in life, because it
erodes our desire to act. Depression is a low energy condition because we are channeling our
energy into suppressing feelings, not solving our problems.5
Self-acceptance is the way out of mild depression. The key is to turn inward and
experience the feelings that are trying to break into your conscious awareness. Instead of
panicking about mild depression and assuming you are mentally ill, you can open to all your
feelings—the good and the bad. This will not only remove the depression: it will reveal why you
shut down emotionally in the first place.
As you do so, you infuse your life with unceasing energy. You invest your energy into solving
your challenges, rather than avoiding them with suppression.
Want to test this idea? For one week, cut out everything you habitually use to stay sane:
coffee, soda pop, sugar, alcohol, cigarettes, shopping, naps, TV—and do not use substitutes. It
may surprise you just how anxious or depressed you feel without these addictions.
Note: a caveat – taken by themselves, many these activities are fine. It is when we use
them to suppress—and when they become compulsive—do they qualify as addictions.
An addiction can also perpetuate itself by creating new symptoms. For example, high
doses of aspirin can create ‘rebound’ headaches that make us want aspirin. Caffeine wreaks
havoc with our adrenal system, fatiguing us and creating a craving for more caffeine.
When you have an addiction and are deprived of it, the symptoms are painful and
sometimes unbearable. Not only is your body screaming for the substance, negative feelings or
symptoms of illness (or both) are breaking into your awareness. This pain frequently lures you
back to the addictive substance or behavior, beginning the destructive cycle anew.7
Gail didn’t drink, but she used food like a drug. She loved ice cream, chocolate, and
other treats, and often would organize her day around eating.
I asked Gail to keep a food diary. The first thing Gail noticed was that some days, she
was not compulsive about food; but other days, the idea of skipping her treats was unbearable.
I suggested that on her ‘bad’ days, Gail put off eating sugar for 30 minutes and journal
instead.
After a few weeks, Gail finally admitted that there was something missing with Alan
that was difficult to put into words. After a few more weeks, Gail forced herself to acknowledge
that Alan was not always responsive to her.
When Gail spoke, Alan was often distracted (but he’d pretend to be listening so as not
to incur her wrath). He’d watch sports when she talked about an issue that was upsetting her,
or forget to do little things around the house.
When Alan was attentive and affectionate, Gail would relax and not need treats. When
he wasn’t, she would eat comfort foods throughout the day.
Gail had finally spotted the core of her helplessness: her inability to connect with Alan
consistently. Gail was an emotionally intelligent woman who took great pains to not blame. She
knew Alan was a wonderful husband, albeit with a lesser need for intimacy than her. She
wondered: “How can I create more connectedness with Alan?”
Gail spent much time researching for the answers to her questions. As she found them,
her marriage improved and her eating habits smoothed out. She no longer felt trapped in food
obsession, and she blossomed in a new fitness program.
It goes without saying that addictions are incompatible with high achievement in work
and love. Addictions lower our consciousness about all problems. We stay confused and
unhappy, unable to solve the challenges that plague us.
Exercise: Are you indulging in addictions that may be keeping you from addressing problems?
Briefly describe them.
By opening to your feelings, you can nip addictions in their infancy. Do not chastise
yourself for your addictive urges; instead, get curious about them. Relate to them as a sign that
you are suppressing an important feeling, and explore it. You will soon discover the unfulfilled
desires your soul is crying out for.
If you do not experience negativity when it arises, these feelings build in your
unconscious and surface later in unexpected ways. When this happens, it’s hard to deal with
the situation rationally.
In overreactions, suppressed negative feelings from the past are breaking into your
conscious awareness. Since you did not experience these feelings fully at the time, they are
surfacing now.
When I mention the past, I do not necessarily mean your childhood. You may be
reacting to an event that happened days, hours, or moments earlier. Common overreactions
include:
Choking (suppressed fear of failure). When performing under pressure, you find
yourself overwhelmed with anxiety. Your suppressed fear of failure is projected onto
this one event, producing extreme nerves.
Random crankiness or violence (general suppression). When you are cranky and
lash out for no apparent reason, your suppressed feelings are being displaced onto an
unrelated situation. Road rage, abuse of pets, and office bullies all fall into this category.
The extreme example? The macho man in a bar who takes offence to another guy’s
glance by saying, “Are you lookin’ at me?” and starts swinging.
Roger came to see me after he broke up with his girlfriend over… her dog. One day, his
girlfriend mentioned that she didn’t like the way he had spoken to her dog. Roger looked at her,
walked out of her house, and never talked to her again.
It didn’t take long to discover the real origin of Roger’s hurt. 14 years earlier, his wife
left him, giving him no explanation. Although many years had passed, the slightest criticism
from a woman triggered his suppressed rejection, causing him to abandon the relationship.
I challenged Roger to go deeper into his feelings of rejection over his marriage. This was
very difficult for him, because he was heavily defended against these feelings. Roger
desperately wanted to believe that his ex had been completely irrational.
Roger bolstered his courage and went deeper into the feelings of rejection. Gradually, he
recalled how he had verbally bullied his wife during arguments, and how she had cringed in fear
and pain.
Finally, over 15 years after his divorce, Roger stopped insisting he had no part in
creating it. He admitted his worst fear: helplessness to sustain a woman’s passion due to his
chronic anger. At long last, Roger was ready to work on his temper.
Naturally, you want to believe that you are a reasonable person; if you are not educated
about suppression, you will assume that your feelings are legitimate responses to an insensitive
world, not overreactions. Your lack of consciousness leaves you feeling victimized and
immersed in self-pity—not bolstered by personal accountability.
Unrecognized overreactions can make you fearful and spiteful, not to mention
defensive. This mindset creates tension in your relationships; in the extreme, you feel alone
and alienated much of the time.
There is much unconsciousness in the world, and people do transgress against us.
Sometimes, the person who has hurt you is acting distant or hostile in an effort to
communicate something important.
However, you do not need to buy into your overreactions by blaming. If you embrace
the core feelings in your overreactions using self-acceptance, your feelings will lessen in
intensity. You will understand how your past is impacting you; you will re-gain emotional
control and be able to address the situation appropriately.
When you have empathy, you easily imagine what another person is feeling and form a
genuine connection with him. Empathy makes you want to alleviate the suffering of others,
also known as compassion.8
When you are disconnected from your own emotions, you do not want to be empathic.
Empathy activates your feeling function and brings forth your own suppressed fears and
sadness. Here are classic signs of lack of empathy:
Self-absorption: boredom or disconnection when others talk about themselves; need to hog the
spotlight in conversation.
Insensitivity: discomfort when others are emotional; forcing people to display a ‘stiff upper lip’
during trauma.
Excessive dominance: command and control decision-making; refusing to listen when others are
upset with you; inability to apologize.
Aggressiveness: criticizing, yelling, making hurtful comments or jokes that cause others shame.
Chad sought my help to try and bring his marriage back to life. He said he no longer felt
any passion for his wife, and doubted it could be re-kindled.
Compounding matters was the fact that Chad had felt tremendous passion for a woman he had
had an affair with years earlier.
Initially, Chad scoffed at the notion of inner work. He just wanted me to tell him what
to say to his wife to improve the marriage.
I did not relent. Instead, I kept asking Chad to visualize a time he felt connected to his
wife. After many attempts in which he felt numb, Chad began to soften and weep.
Chad finally touched the sadness in his heart about betraying his wife. This led him to
experience true empathy for her for the first time in years. Aloud, he wondered:
Chad finally admitted his helplessness over re-gaining his wife’s trust:
“I put myself in her shoes and I don’t know how one could get over that kind of betrayal. I have
been so stupid to think it should be just brushed aside and forgotten.” He left my office to
begin the long process of earning his wife’s forgiveness.
Nick was frustrated at work. His boss, the president, had an aggressive, command-and-
control style. Because he lacked an engineering background, the boss would attack Nick’s ideas
to see how strongly he would defend them. It was his way of testing Nick’s ideas without
revealing his own deficiencies.
Nick decided to explore his feelings of anger and frustration towards his boss using the
practice of self-acceptance. Almost immediately, he recognized the source of his helplessness:
he felt unable to gain the president’s approval. Nick finally let in the shame and fear this failure
was generating in him.
By experiencing his own feelings, Nick softened towards his boss. He began to empathize
with his boss’s feelings of fear and frustration, realizing that the president only acted this way
when he felt helpless to get the information he needed. Gradually, Nick stopped arguing, and
responded with patience instead.
Before too long, Nick was astonished to see his boss soften back and begin to listen to his
ideas with respect – something he never would have thought possible three months earlier.
The more suppressed you are, the more narcissistic you are in relationships. Your
narcissism might be the extraverted kind, where you crave the spotlight in conversation,
dominate others by getting your way, or are basically unconcerned with the feelings of others.
Or, your narcissism might be the introverted kind, where you are exquisitely sensitive to
rejection and assume peoples’ actions are about you. You are easily hurt and prone to shyness.
It is difficult for you to accept others, because you feel hurt by them often.
In both types of narcissism, you unconsciously view other people as an extension of you,
not as having a separate existence of their own. This is due to a lack of empathy on your part.
Being narcissistic in creates tremendous stress in relationships, because people want you
to nurture and accept them, yet these are difficult for you to do.
By experiencing your feelings instead of suppressing them, you dramatically increase your
ability to connect using empathy. Empathy is the basis for success in leadership, marriage,
sales, and parenting. You develop an affinity for all people, because you understand their
struggles are the same as your own. You radiate benevolence.
You also dramatically lower your fear of rejection; people gravitate towards you because
they sense your compassion and goodwill.
Exercise: Is there anyone you find it difficult to empathize with? What feelings would being
more empathic trigger in you?
You suppress your confidence. It is within you, and it always will be. It’s just that we
don’t have the luxury of being able to suppress only negative emotions. When you mute your
feeling function to avoid emotional pain, it is difficult to connect to your confidence, joy, and
pride.
Here’s how to works. To perceive emotions, we compare them. Here are some common
opposite pairs:
Suppress negative feelings, and you suppress positive feelings. Suppress fear, and we
suppress confidence. Suppress sadness, and we suppress joy. Suppress shame, and we suppress
pride.9
Despite his talent, Scotty was plagued by a lack of personal confidence. He knew that
management was grooming him for senior positions, but he just couldn’t summon the
confidence to apply for any of them. On weekends, Scotty passed the time by dreaming of
becoming a rich entrepreneur or Hollywood producer.
By the time Scotty found his way to my seminar, he was in despair about his career.
He’d stayed in his job 8 years longer than he wanted, paralyzed to make a change.
Scott knew his confidence was low, but he had no idea why. He decided to open to his
feelings of inadequacy. What were they trying to tell him?
Scott recalled the last time he felt a strong fear of failure. “It was when my boss pointed
out errors in the budget. I don’t know how to use an excel spreadsheet, and math was never my
strong suit, so I hadn’t properly scrutinized it,” Scotty confessed.
I asked Scott to specifically list all the areas that evoked inadequacy in him. He was
surprised to discover they were all technical: reading financial statements, using computer
software programs, and assessing blueprints.
In the spring of 2001, my team was on the verge of a major victory in ringette.
We were playing our arch-rivals, Edmonton, for the Provincial title. They had been
winning since 1999, and it was as close as any sporting event could be.
I had been cut from the National team the previous summer, which led me to doubt my
ability for a few months. I decided to come back the following season and extract some revenge.
I was nervous. At 34 years old, I was the veteran on the team—a player my teammates
might look to for some courage.
Every time I said this, I relaxed more. I scored a goal on the first shift, and my team
went on to win the Provincial final and the National Championship. When my name was called
to receive the first team all-star award at the Nationals, my coach leaned over and whispered in
my ear, “No one deserves this more.”
I guess it is OK to be afraid.
Confidence is central to long-term success. When you lack confidence in any area, you
avoid risks and become paralyzed with self-doubt. Eventually, your inaction erodes your
confidence more, leading to a vicious cycle of underachievement.
When you accept that inadequacy, doubt, and failure are a natural part of life, and open
to them, you learn what you don’t know (and what you don’t know you don’t know). This sets
the stage for learning, which boosts your confidence dramatically.
Exercise: What specific areas of your problem do you wish to re-access confidence in? What do
you need to learn in order to raise your confidence?
Have you ever visualized success only to become nervous about performing? (Confidence awakens
suppressed performance anxiety).
Have you ever given an excellent performance only to feel let down the next day?
(Adequacy awakens suppressed fear of inadequacy).
Have your eyes ever filled with tears upon receiving a sweet card?
(Joy of connection awakens suppressed sadness).
These experiences are genuinely confusing. Why are positive experiences so often
followed by negative feelings?
I’ve explained that when we suppress, we suppress both positive and negative emotions.
The only way to push negative feelings away is to mute our feeling function.
But, when we succeed, we experience an intense rush of positive feelings: pride, success,
love, and confidence. Suddenly, our feeling function comes alive, and all our feelings come
rushing back into consciousness …including the suppressed negative ones we are holding.
The more suppressed you are, the more suppressed you want to stay. Unconsciously,
you will avoid extraordinary feats in love and work because they open your emotional
floodgates.
You may long for success, but you can only tolerate it in small doses. Your ability to
receive is blocked, because your feeling function is muted.
You are comfortable at a certain level of income, but as soon as you exceed it, you spend--or
give—money away. You see this as a virtue: “I guess I’m just not very materialistic.”
Money evokes feelings of security, which triggers suppressed feelings of lack. Uncomfortable
with these feelings, you quickly divest yourself of the money.
Romantic love
You enjoy dating, but as soon as the relationship gets really serious, you lose your attraction
to the person and want out. You think, “It will be different when I find my soul mate.”
You enjoy a wonderful connection to your spouse, but frequent love-making makes you
uncomfortable, and you avoid it. You assuage your guilt by thinking, “I prefer quality to
quantity.”
Connectedness evokes feelings of love, which triggers suppressed fear of loss. You quickly reject
the source of the love to regain your equilibrium.
You convene a series of meetings that your boss raves about. When he invites you to apply for
senior management, you decline, thinking, “I don’t want people to expect that kind of
performance all the time.”
You’ve amassed 28 points in the first half of your basketball final game. Suddenly, you lose
your motivation to score. “Let my teammates shine,” you tell yourself as you pass the ball.
Success brings up suppressed feelings of inadequacy. Annoyed, you avoid opportunities for major
accomplishments.
Security triggers suppressed performance anxiety, and you feel irritated at having to feel
this way after having already won.
Exercise: Do you slow down the pace of success? Are there any positive experiences you
struggle to handle?
You can see that opening to your feelings instead of accepting them will give you
immense benefit…here is a brief overview of these benefits:
Resist an energetic force, and it will intensify. When it comes to energy, ‘what you resist
persists.’
When you silence your feelings by suppressing them, your body intensifies them to gain
your attention. Put a lid on hot water, and it will boil. Resist your desire for chocolate, and you
want it more. Tell yourself to sleep (resist your impulse to stay up), and you lay awake.
This is why it is dangerous to suppress any feeling long-term. When your desires are in
jeopardy, your body wants you to know so you can evolve and succeed. Your unhappiness will
build until you listen to what it is telling you—
All too often, we look to others for compassion and neglect the most potent source: our
inner self.
Above all else, on the same grim conditions, you must remain a friend to yourself. It is a
tremendous relief to let go of our cultivated self-image and experience our feelings freely,
without censorship or commentary. Self-acceptance is both the most gratifying, rewarding
form of self-nurturing.
Sometimes, you are faced with loss, and winning is simply not possible. In these cases,
self-acceptance does not set the stage for success. It sets the stage for healing.
At summer ringette camp, we took the youngest group rollerblading. The youngest
girl, a 5-year-old named Lyndsay, soon realized that none of the rollerblades fit her. Her
lip started to quiver when she realized she wouldn’t be able to go.
About this time, her mother showed up with another baby in her arms. Her
mother was clearly tired; when she saw Lyndsay crying, she became impatient.
“Lyndsay, stop crying,” she said in exasperation. Lyndsay’s crying turned into hysterical
sobs. The mother lost her patience completely: “If you keep this up, I’m going to take you home
and not bring you back tomorrow.”
The little girl sat down and paused. After a few moments, she looked up at her
mother and said, “I just want to cry a little.”
She was only 5, but she got it. The crying IS the healing.
Healing is a passive activity that occurs in the silence of awareness. When winning isn’t
possible, you cannot try to heal yourself with vigorous action; you can only put your mental
attention on your feelings and quiet them with compassion.
a) you stop expecting this person to be any different than he has been in the past
b) you experience your sadness, loss, or disappointment when this person acts in ways you
do not like
However: accepting another person does not mean that you passively accept selfishness,
rudeness or hostility. You still ask for what you want in the relationship; in fact, facing the
reality of this person helps you be assertive in a healthy way.
Invoking Self-Acceptance
Here are 4 mental toughness exercises I have used with thousands of people to cultivate
self-acceptance.
Write down your worst fears about the relationship, career, or financial problem you are
facing. This simple exercise will reveal the unconscious learned helplessness you are holding
about your problem.
This exercise will re-train your mind in self-acceptance with respect to your problem.
Write 5-10 different endings to this sentence every day for 2 weeks, not including weekends.
Do not be alarmed if you see repetition in your endings; simply continue this exercise.
At the end of two weeks, re-do the first exercise. You will be surprised to find that you
have brought new layers of helplessness into conscious view.
Three days per week for the next three weeks, set aside 15 minutes per day to open to
your feelings using the following exercise.
I have separated these exercises into three categories: career, relationships, and
finances.
Career/Work
Sit in a quiet space where you will not be disturbed. Close your eyes and relax. Focus on your
breathing. Breathe slowly and deeply. Once you are relaxed, go back to a performance in
your mind at work when you felt confident, valued, powerful, and significant. Re-run
this scene in your mind. Allow the feeling to grow stronger as an energetic experience. Re-
access the positive energy you had at that time. Continue this for at least 10 minutes. If
negative feelings surface, explore them by trying to make them stronger as an energetic
experience. Try to sustain the negative feelings for at least 10-15 minutes.
Finances
Sit in a quiet space where you will not be disturbed. Close your eyes and relax. Focus on your
breathing. Breathe slowly and deeply. Once you are relaxed, go back to time in your life
when you felt financially powerful and abundant. Re-run this scene in your mind. Allow
the feeling to grow stronger as an energetic experience. Re-access the positive energy you had
at that time. Continue this for at least 10 minutes. If negative feelings surface, explore them by
trying to make them stronger as an energetic experience. Try to sustain the negative feelings
for at least 10-15 minutes.
At the end of every session, write a brief description of the negative emotions you
brought into conscious view. Put a name to each one and ask yourself again: “What am I feeling
helpless about?”
Write an essay on your strengths in the area of life you are struggling in: sport,
relationships, leadership, career, or money. For example, if you are having problems
supervising an employee, write an essay detailing your strengths as a leader.
When first opening to your feelings, you may feel despair or sadness about events from
your past – insensitive parents, unrequited love, or career disappointments.
Because you are new to self-acceptance—and still conditioned to admonish yourself for
negativity—you may wonder, “What is the point of dredging up my feelings about the past?”
By opening to your feelings, you protect yourself from the side effects of suppression
(depression, addictions, overreactions, lack of empathy, self-sabotage, and low confidence).
Rather than let your unconscious negativity control your life, you have brought it into
consciousness to guide you out of your helplessness.
Most negative feelings are not overwhelming, nor do they last very long. If you find that
your feelings are extraordinarily strong, it is likely you are resisting them and feeling sorry for
yourself. This is fine, as long as you do not stay in this stage too long.
If your feelings persist despite the fact that you are experiencing them and understand
their source, then it is likely that you are still in the throes of a major relationship, career, or
financial problem, and this challenge is creating emotional pain in you. As you learn how to
solve your problem, these painful feelings will subside.
Do not let the simplicity of self-acceptance fool you. This practice will allow you to
nurture yourself on a level that is unprecedented. Though self-acceptance, you will eliminate
confusion in your emotional life and move through challenges at lightening speed.
Summary
1. All problems are confusing at first, particularly when our actions and goals do not
match. When this happens, we can be sure our unconscious mind is not aligned with our
conscious mind.
2. To win, we must make our helplessness conscious so we can discover its source.
3. Self-acceptance is the ability to experience yourself just as you are. This includes your
thoughts, feelings, and results.
5. We are usually not aware of suppression; we are aware only of its side effects.
6. The side effects of suppression include mild depression and de-motivation, addictions,
overreactions, low confidence, lack of empathy and self-sabotage. None of them is
conducive to high achievement.
7. The benefits of self-acceptance are personal transformation, peace of mind, the capacity
for love, self-nurturing, and the ability to win.
Footnotes
1,2,5,6,9
Ruskan, John. Emotional Clearing, 2000.
3
Freud, Sigmund. The Interpretation of Dreams, 1899.
4
Berger, Jan. Emotional Fitness, 1990.
7
Trudeau, Kevin. Natural Cures They Don’t Want You to Know About, 2004.
3
Laut, Phil. Money is My Friend, 1978.
8
His Holiness the Dalai Lama. The Art of Happiness, 1998.