Saturday, December 21, 2024

How to Defeat “Don’t Want” Thinking in Yourself and Others

Share


How to Defeat “Don’t Want” Thinking in Yourself and Others

Any fool knows what they don’t want.

The person you aspire to become is lost when “don’t want” dominates your thinking. Saying, “I hate being frustrated,” is disappointing compared to concentrating on things within your control.

Life is built with “Do want” actions.

Any fool knows what they don't want. AI generated image of a person in turbulence.

Three “don’t want” conversations:

There’s an avalanche of “don’t want” in the world. It’s courageous to imagine who you might become.

#1. An aspiring leader

He said he steps on people’s toes. That’s a nice way of saying he hurts people. He knows trampling on people short-circuits his career.

I asked, “If you weren’t stepping on people’s toes, what would you be like?”

He fumbled for a bit and finally said, “I don’t know.”

I said, “Imagine you did know.”

Still, language failed him.

Image of a mystical footbridge.

#2. A friend

A friend is troubled by his constant striving. Life without striving is unimaginable. But he also strives for contentment.

I asked, “If you weren’t always striving, what would you be doing?”

He said, “It feels like I’d be a failure.”

I asked, “But, what would you be doing instead of striving?”

“I’m not sure.”

The process of change begins with imagination, moves to language, and finds expression in behaviors.

#3. My hairdresser

The woman who cuts my hair doesn’t like her people-pleasing tendencies. I asked, “If you weren’t people-pleasing, what would you be doing?”

She said, “I wouldn’t care what people think.” She described what she wouldn’t do. Positive language escaped her.

3 steps to growth:

  1. Consider what you don’t want as only a beginning.
  2. Give yourself a target. Describe what you want. If you can’t imagine it, you can’t become it. I don’t mean to say that if you describe it, you will become it, but positive language precedes positive change.
  3. Distill imagination into simple behaviors.

Life languishes on “don’t want” thinking and talking.

How might leaders help people rise above the persecutions of “don’t want” thinking?

Dig deeper:

How to Use Imagination Today

How to Leverage the Power of Imagination to Develop Leaders

Research:

Positive Psychology Progress: Empirical Validation of Interventions (berkeley.edu)

The power of simulation: imagining one’s own and other’s behavior – PubMed (nih.gov)

Strategy as Simple Rules (hbr.org)

Purchase The Vagrant: The Inner Journey of Leadership. Our book gives you tools to overcome “don’t want” thinking and provides tools to explore who you aspire to become.



Source link

Read more

Local News