As we get older it is harder for some of us to get motivated, we have to shape and create our own goals. This is easy for the self starters among us, but harder for those who have depended on others throughout their life to give them a sense of what needs to be done.
Motivation is a funny, complex thing. The thing that motivates one person is always different from that of another even though they are working for the same thing. And while people can motivate other people, they can only do so to a certain degree. At the end of the day, you still have to work out a way to get yourself moving. But when everything looks bleak and all you want to do is to surrender, from where do you muster the will to go on?
Motivation is a funny, complex thing. The thing that motivates one person is always different from that of another even though they are working for the same thing. And while people can motivate other people, they can only do so to a certain degree. At the end of the day, you still have to work out a way to get yourself moving. But when everything looks bleak and all you want to do is to surrender, from where do you muster the will to go on?
Begin with winning the battle in your head.
The battle always starts in the head. One part of your brain
tells you to move, work, and strive for what you are working for. The other
part tells you that it is foolish. It is always easier to listen to the latter,
because it is more convenient, less taxing, and easier to do. The former forces
you to act and work. All things equal, people always choose the less
inconvenient, easy way out. But this isn’t always the better choice. In fact,
it is never a good choice.
What separates very effective people from those who are not
is their ability to always make the right choices most of the time, even if
these choices are the hardest to make. They know how the game works and they
try to beat it every single time. Exhausting, yes, but it is also gratifying.
There is always a sense of satisfaction in defeating your worst enemy –
yourself.
But how do you win the battle that goes on inside your head?
Understand your thoughts and how they affect your emotions
and your will power. Negative thoughts can easily kill your sense of purpose.
It comes in many forms – lack of self-confidence, general negativity, lack of
belief in others, procrastination and the list goes on. Each of these has the
power to convince you to throw in the towel and accept that you can't carry on.
Identifying each of your negative thoughts is the first step to winning
yourself back from a defeatist attitude.
It is not simple feat, though. It takes time before one can
shut out the voice in the head that says 'give up, give in'. And sometimes,
even when you have already succeeded in neutralizing your negative thoughts, it
is still easy to give up at the first sign of a speed bump. After all, it gives
you time to rest from the unending struggle to achieve whatever it is you are
pursuing, even for just a moment. But don’t buy that. That short period of rest
can turn to days, weeks, months, years, ultimately paralyzing you from taking
action and living a full life. That's the characteristic of discouragement. It
offers you immediate gratification without securing anything in return.
Try to gain positive momentum every time, instead of
succumbing back into a demoralized attitude. Every time, even if that means you
have to start the battle in your head all over again.
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