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the
perils of justifying yourself
Me,
you, or someone you know:
I dont want
to do it anymore. Im
going to
Fill in the blank: Quit,
sell it, leave, cancel,
give it away, walk, resign.
That
practical voice inside your
head, well-intentioned friends,
your granny: Now,
why would you do that?!
Its
(fill in
the blank) good money, a
great opportunity, youve
worked so hard, what will
you do without it? Cant
you work it out?"
And
you bite the hook. In fact,
your psyches been
hanging on it for quite
sometime, gnawing on 101
good, practical, and perfectly
reasonable reasons why you
have the right to make the
decision that youre
making. You know, rationalizing.
Well how about this rationale:
It
doesnt feel right.
Stay
there for a few seconds.
Its a very powerful
place to be. Its elegant.
Its clear. Declared
feelings have sonic reach.
And...
it can be very uncomfortable.
Like the truth can often
be before it sets you free.
I
recently left a gig because
it just didnt feel
right. I struggled with
all of the yes, no, make
adjustments, suck it up,
expand your perspective,
get more creative kind
of options. A few
people thought I was nuts
to walk away. Great exposure,
cachet, extra money
All true. The facts
usually are.
I
made the tastiest Excuse
Sandwich about why it didnt
work for me. I need
to find a baby sitter, it
interrupts my week, its
not what I signed up for,
I need a haircut, I dont
like so and so or such and
such, I need to focus on
All absolutely true.
And in the grand scheme,
in the greater gestalt of
what I'm capable of, totally
lame and absolutely surmountable.
If
something felt right, Id
drive all night in a push-up
bra to get there. When it
really feels right, you
go out of your way. When
something feels right, you
put inconveniences in their
place.
THE
CORROSIVE EFFECTS OF OVER-JUSTIFYING
YOUR FEELINGS
JUSTIFYING YOUR FEELINGS:
-
automatically puts you
on the defense.
When youre on the
defense, you burn more
energy. Rationalization
can be incredibly inefficient.
- over-complicates
things.
- perpetuates
cleverness.
Clever is not a good word
in my personal dictionary.
It rhymes with slick,
manipulative, covert.
When youre trying
to rationalize something
that is very often amorphous
and insular youll
reach for smooth answers
that you think people
- or your subconscious
- want to hear. And that
makes you a salesman.
- depresses
your essential self. The
more you load rationale
onto your feelings, the
more padding you create
between you and your most
powerful, unlimited resource.
If you make a habit of
keeping your instincts
at bay, that tend to stay
at bay.
- makes
you look and feel like
a victim. In an effort
to prove and protect,
you make up reasons that
appear to be more important
than your refutable instinct.
You whine. You nit pick
the situation. You start
sounding like the whimp
you dont want to
be - instead of the hero
that you essentially are.
When the passion is there,
so is the solution. No
problem looks insurmountable
when youre turned
on.
Of
course, sometimes your greatness
demands that you explain
your reasons in no uncertain
terms. Taking the time to
explain yourself can be
a fantastically creative
act. If thats whats
called for, then explain
how you feel.
Hold
the excuses. Stand by your
heart. Make it matter.M
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