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Today I'll be talking about your internal monologue and why you need to
affirm yourself. I'm dr. Tracey Marks a psychiatrist and I
talk about mental health education and self-improvement.
If this is up your alley, click Subscribe. In psychotherapy the therapist is
supposed to be neutral and make herself as much of a blank slate as possible. the
reason for this is that when you're presented with a blank slate, your
reaction is based on your temperament your personality and your own inner self
talk. Let me give you an example. Suppose you send someone an email pitching an
idea that you really hope they like. you're all excited at what you put in
the email and you're just waiting to hear back from them but you don't
immediately hear back. An entire day passes or maybe even a couple of days
and what's your automatic thought. this is a situation where you've put yourself
out there you've made yourself vulnerable and you're not getting any
response. In other words the blank slate. Person A may think, hmm I wonder if my
email went to her spam folder. That's giving the situation the benefit of the
doubt. Person B may think, I wonder if she hates my idea and she's just trying to
figure out a way to tell me. This is a negative assumption. Person C may say,
I totally made myself look stupid in this email and now I've ruined my
chances to get through to this person. That's an even more negative response. So
where do you fall? Do you automatically think negatively or positively? We all
have blind spots. In a car, the wider the blind spot, the more dangerous the
vehicle. Introspection allows you to narrow your blind spot. You won't be able
to get rid of it the blind spot completely, but the narrower the better.
here's another concept. Projection is a defense mechanism whereby we assume
others believe the negative thoughts we have about ourselves.
This is one of the ways that you can wallow in low self-esteem. When you have
a head full of negative thoughts, you don't need other people to judge you. You
have judged yourself and believe that the other person is the one who came up
with the idea. Here's an example: let's say I tell Joe how busy I've been lately
and how I'd love to take a vacation. Joe looks at me with a smirk and says yeah
that'd be nice. I think what was that smirk all about? He
must think I'm trying to get out of work and thatI'm lazy. Now the truth, is Joe
smirked because he could relate to my desire to go on vacation. he's been
working tons of hours and he'd like a vacation.
that's what Joe's really thinking but I projected my own thoughts on to Joe. Now
let's look at my thoughts. I know how hard Joe's been working and I also know
that I haven't been working as hard. In fact, I just give enough to get through
the day and then I'm ready to go home and now here I am ready to go on
vacation. I don't deserve a vacation so in reality I'm the one who believes that
I've been lazy at work but I believe that Joe is the one who thinks I'm lazy
and what's the evidence for this? His smirk. So what's the problem with this?
Well, it's problematic on a couple of levels.
One, I've assigned negative thoughts to Joe that he doesn't have and I can build
up negative feelings about him and resentments that he doesn't deserve,
because they're based on false information.The second problem ties
directly into the issue of affirming yourself. So it's time to lean in here.
When you project negative feelings onto others, you set yourself up for needing
them to affirm you and build you up. Projection reinforces your negative
thoughts. How do you recognize this in yourself?
Well let me deconstruct the thing with Joe a little bit more. In my interaction
with Joe, the real problem is that I feel guilty for not putting in as many hours
as Joe and my other colleagues. Rather than look down on Joe for
thinking that I'm lazy. First I have to recognize the feeling and the trigger
here is that I believe that I know what Joe is thinking. And that's mistake
number one. Unless you believe in the paranormal,
it's safe to assume that you cannot read people's minds with accuracy. So if you
tend to be a mind reader, recognize that when you hear yourself say "I'm sure he
thinks this..." and just fill in the blanks with whatever, that is that's a red flag
that you're probably projecting. So okay that's one step, identify that you're
projecting. The next step is to flesh out the negative automatic thoughts and
replace them with positive ones, but you have to recognize your real pain point.
So in this case, I could say to myself oh I'm not lazy, I'm a hard worker but
that's not gonna have much impact. Because it might not be true number one
and it's too superficial. My real pain point is that I feel guilty for not
working hard lately and the way to affirm myself is statements like "my
worth is is not - my worth in my job is not defined by how much I've worked lately.
I contribute to the team. They still find me valuable, furthermore Joe doesn't have
time to keep tabs on me. He's got his own life. Those are the things that could
help me kind of blot out the assumptions and negative thoughts that I
have that that I'm putting on to Joe. You have to be able to affirm yourself
internally. Needing other people to affirm you makes you too vulnerable and
dependent on others for validation. Other people have their own needs and they can't
always lift you up and rescue you from your negative thoughts about yourself.
This is not to say that external validation isn't good. Compliments and
recognition are great and they feel great, but they can't be required for you
to feel whole and complete. What are some other ways you could recognize your
negative self-talk? A more general approach is to pause
whenever you have a negative emotion. Think to yourself, what's the emotion
connected to? Is it something someone said or did or is it something that
someone didn't say or do? Thinking about your negative emotions can help you
deconstruct what you're really saying to yourself. Being able to affirm yourself
is important for building up your self-esteem, but neediness also has a
negative impact on how people interact with you. It's exhausting to be around
someone who's needy. Have you ever interacted with someone
who's easily upset so you always have to walk on eggshells and tiptoe around what
you say? You don't want to be that person. This kind of behavior pushes people away.
Then if your negative self-talk is that you don't deserve to be loved anyway or
you don't deserve anything good to happen to you, when you lose support it
reinforces your core beliefs and the cycle just repeats itself. But the truth
is, you drove the people away with your own behavior. But if you boost yourself
up from within and don't need others to do it for you, then you attract people to
you and it becomes safe and comfortable to be around you.
This would be the person who can say almost you can say almost anything to
them and they never seem phased. And it feels good to be around a person like
that and if that's how you are, people will want to be around you. So I've
talked about two ways to identify your need to affirm yourself: notice when
you're projecting or mind reading and examining your negative emotions. Let me
close by saying that all of what I said is not just for the person who's
depressed and has no friends. We all have a negative tape that runs in our heads
when the time is right and we all have soft spots that can trigger us to react
negatively. So this exercise of affirming yourself can help you completely over
haull your negative thoughts or simply tweak and refine yourself so that you
can become more and more content in at peace. Thanks for watching. You made it
all the way through. I plan to have some videos or video affirmations to give you
some talking points that you can use with yourself to increase your positive
self-talk. So stay tuned for that