On a drive down the Great Ocean Road in Australia, my girlfriend said to
me “Tim, I notice that you create unpleasant names for drivers that do
silly things on the road or don’t drive how you would like them to.”
This realization was something that I never knew I did. Over the next
few days, I began analyzing what I said to drivers while driving by myself. I
realized that the language I used was harsh and unfair. It turns out, the
self-talk in my head was negative and harsh most of the time.
I’d figured out that actually, my self-talk is driving me crazy.
“If you could hear
out loud what most people say in their head it would sound like a crazy
person’s thoughts”
For pretty much everyone, the self-talk in our head is driving us crazy.
The self-talk in our heads is responsible for so many of our failures and why
we think the way we do. Until we change what we say to
ourselves in our head, we’ll continue to trip over these
internal conversations.
Here’s how to
change the self-talk in your head:
Become aware of the
conversation.
What triggered a change in my own self-talk was this encounter with my
girlfriend realizing that I was being unfair and rude to drivers. Even with all
of the self-improvement I do, the books I read and my obsession with
psychology, I still missed what I was saying to myself.
Until you become aware of just how crazy your self-talk is, you won’t be
able to change it.
What I found difficult was that when I heard my own
self-talk for what it was, I was very disappointed.
The language I
used and the negativity I expressed in my head towards others was completely
out of alignment with everything I did in the real world.
I was saying things that I would never dare say in real life. Once you
become aware of the conversation you are having in your head, what I found
useful is to be compassionate with yourself. Don’t become angry or critical of
your own thoughts.
It sucks to learn what you really say to yourself and I know it’s tough. The
best part is that every aspect of your life can be changed. Your crazy
self-talk is no different. Becoming aware is the first step to battling this
demon in your head.
Is your self-talk negative most of the time?
Ask yourself this question. Like me, you’ll probably realize a lot of
your self-talk is negative. This is your survival brain trying to protect you
from the dangers of the big bad world that you face every day.
If your self-talk is mostly negative, then this will 100% affect your
results in life and how you see the world. To stop your self-talk
driving you crazy, you need to change the conversation in your head. This
will not happen overnight.
You’ll need to slowly become aware of the conversation in your head and
then begin to add more positive self-talk. Question the old self-talk in your
head and expose it for the damage it’s doing to you. The best self-talk is a
compassionate conversation.
Be kind to yourself and others when you judge them in your head. Think
about what really could be going on in the lives of people you are being
critical of in your head.When you do something in the real world and your
negative self-talk talks that action down, tell yourself “I’m doing the
best I can at this moment in time.”
Change the conversation from the adult talking down to the child, to the
adult speaking with his or her’s greatest idol. Become a coach to yourself and
make the conversation about how you try very hard and how you’re getting better
every single day.
Tell yourself that where you are today is so much better than where you
were say a few years ago. You’ve come so far and you still have so much more
growth to go.
“By simply changing
the characters in your head, I’ve found that manifesting positive self-talk
will come into these inner conversations with yourself slowly”
Talk to yourself the way
you would talk to your hero.
The conversation can be changed in your head when you imagine that you
are talking to your hero in life. You wouldn’t talk negatively or swear
at your hero, now would you?
I’m guessing probably not. So, if you treat the
conversation in your head the same way you would a conversation with your hero,
you’ll be more disciplined at what you say to yourself.
Create new inputs.
Everything that goes into your head helps to shape the conversation. If
you saturate your head with bad news from the TV, negative friends and
colleagues, and a poor quality social media newsfeed, your head will think
these inputs are real and use bits of these inputs in the conversations you
have in your head.
The language, level of negativity and point of view your mind uses when
creating a conversation in your head partly comes from all of the media and
inputs your brain is given. “Garbage in, garbage out” as they
say.
Try filling your brain
with more positivity. I’ve
done this for the last five years and it’s helped to shape a new conversation
in my head. The best input I have found is books. There’s something about the
words on a page that ingrains a new conversation in your head and changes your
self-talk.
I try to read at least two positive books a month about people that are
doing the extraordinary. I try to pick up what my heroes say in their head and
what their self-talk is.
“You can learn so
much about your hero’s self-talk through the books that tell the story of their
life”
The conversation in your
head requires discipline.
I say this in almost every single blog post I write. Discipline is a
fundamental pillar of any change you want to make in your life. The self-talk
in your head is no different. If the self-talk in your head is driving you
crazy like mine did, you have to bring a new level of discipline into the fold.
When your mind starts saying dreadful things to yourself, don’t let your
mind get away with it. Hold yourself accountable and insist on stopping
negative self-talk when you witness it. Allowing the negative
conversations to continue will hijack everything you are trying to create in
life.
Your life is directed by the conversation in your head so make it a damn
good one.
Break the pattern in the
moment.
When you hear negative self-talk, the quickest hack you can use is to
break the pattern. Interrupt the conversation in your head. Think about what
you want the conversation to be instead. Don’t let the pattern keep running.
Think of your negative self-talk like an old vinyl record from the
1980’s. Pick up that negative self-talk record of material and scratch it with
a screwdriver until it doesn’t play anymore. Do whatever you can to interrupt
the pattern of your negative self-talk.
How my self-talk story
ends.
It doesn’t. I’m still battling my negative self-talk. I will never have
the conversation in my head be perfect and that’s okay. The aim of the game is
to sway the conversation and at the very least, be aware of what you’re saying.
From the moment my girlfriend pointed out my negative self-talk through
my driving behavior, I’ve used one hack to change the self-talk that’s driving
me crazy:
Change the conversation in your head about the
people around you to, “How can I be kind to this human being?”
That one question has given me a different focus that has helped to
change the conversation in my head. The self-talk I have about my own actions
and performance has become one of compassion like I said earlier. It’s about
how I can be kinder to myself.
Changing the focus of my self-talk has been a fantastic way to rethink
my inner dialogue that has driven me crazy for as long as I’ve been alive.
I’d love to see your own self-talk be transformed as well and I believe
it can be based on what I’ve witnessed in my life. Kill the negative self-talk!
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