Wart Ointment Wholesale
Into the Weird Adult Video Emporium
The Colon Care Co-Op
If you visited the East West Market in Vancouver and used one of the store’s plastic bags, you would have walked away with bags that had these and other embarrassing titles printed on them. In fact, the store owner, David Kwan, hoped to truly shame patrons of his store to get them to start bringing their own bags. Did this work?
Would you be so embarrassed to walk away with one of these bags that you would remember to bring a cloth bag to the store next time?
If you’re anything like hundreds of others who started to frequent the store, you wouldn’t. Instead of pushing customers away from plastic bags, this strategy caused many more to come to the store to get a weird bag. They even ponied up the pay five-cent fee to get them. Of course, this result was entirely the opposite of what of what Kwan had hoped to achieve. When it comes to finding our own beliefs, we face a similar challenge.
Our beliefs are often the opposite of what we think is true
I know this sounds strange. If we believe something, certainly we would think it’s true. But often, we struggle to get in touch with a belief because of what we think we should believe. We have a belief about the correct belief to hold. And we might think we hold the “right” belief even though deep down we believe the opposite.
When Morty worked with corporate clients years ago, he found that many managers micromanaged their direct reports. When he asked them what they believed about managing people, they would repeat the accepted wisdom – A manager should empower employees.
But if that’s what they believed, why did they do the exact opposite?
They would tell employees what to do. They would check up on them to see if they were doing what they’d been asked to do. They would solve problems for them. This isn’t the behavior of an empowering manager. But this begs the question if people don’t know what they really believe, how do we find out?
One way to know if we have a limiting belief is to look at our behavior
We might know that we are intelligent and capable, but if we’re putting off challenging activities, we might have beliefs that cause us to doubt ourselves. We might know that we’re important, but we might still have beliefs that have us feel less than others.
Another way to know if you have a limiting belief is to say the words out loud. Say out loud, “I’m a monkey,” then say, “I’m a table,” and next, say, “I’m a house.” What did you notice? Did those statements feel true? Were you able to just notice if you believed them or not?
Now try on a few other statements
Say, “I’m not good enough,” “Mistakes and failure are bad,” and “I’m not important.” How does saying these statements compare to saying the others? If they feel different, what does that difference tell you? If you noticed a sense of recognition, a sense of truth, a nodding of the head, or an emotional response, then it’s likely you have one of these beliefs.
The first exercises in the Lefkoe Method Training 1 are all about developing awareness of what it’s like to have a belief or not have a belief
We play around with all sorts of phrases, such as “Lava is not dangerous” and “People can fly by flapping their arms.” It’s a lot of fun. And it’s fun with a purpose. The students get very deeply that all day long, we are confronted with statements we believe or disbelieve, and this awareness is the first step to mastering the belief elimination process.
In the course, students get in touch with dozens of beliefs and eliminate them
As a result, they experience big changes in their lives. But if you found a few beliefs while reading this article, how can you get rid of them? Fortunately, you can get rid of some of the beliefs mentioned above with our free belief elimination program found at www.recreateyourlife.com/free
You’ll get access to videos that will guide you through the process of discovering how you formed the belief and help you make distinctions that free you from it. Your belief transforms from a statement that feels true on an emotional level to something that feels abstract, empty, and even silly. You start the process by saying the belief out loud, and at the end, you say it again to notice how it feels. But every so often, a visitor has a concern about repeating these negative phrases.
They ask, “But if I say a limiting belief out loud, won’t that cause me to start believing it?”
So far, we haven’t seen that. With our clients, we find that saying the belief out loud feels bad at first, but after it’s eliminated, they might say it several times to see if it’s really gone. The more they repeat the belief after eliminating it, the more they notice how empty it feels.
This reminds me of David Kwan’s store and those bags he gave his customers with the awful phrases
Why weren’t people embarrassed to have them? It’s probably because they knew they didn’t really go to the Weird Adult Video Store or the Colon Care Co-Op. So the phrases were funny instead of shameful. And when a belief is eliminated, the effect is a similar transformation of meaning. You now know and truly feel that the belief isn’t true, so it no longer concerns you.
To sum up:
- It can be hard to get in touch with our limiting beliefs because we often have ideas about what we should believe
- Our emotions and behavior are both indicators we have limiting beliefs
- Our reaction to saying the words of a belief is another way we can notice a belief
- Saying a belief over and over after it’s gone won’t make you believe it. Instead, it helps you notice that it is gone.
How to eliminate 19 beliefs that limit confidence
Why are people afraid to do new things? Why do they sometimes feel like impostors? Why aren’t they able to just assume they will figure out how to make things work?
The answer is limiting beliefs. Specifically, self-beliefs.
When you have a limiting belief about yourself, it’s hard to escape. You are with your “self” all day long. But when you change a self-belief what happens? The invisible barrier in your way seems to vanish.
Announcing Natural Confidence: A way to eliminate self-doubt
The Natural Confidence program isn’t a rah, rah cheerleader saying, “you can do it.” We know that kind of message doesn’t lead to lasting change. Instead, it helps you unlearn the beliefs that keep you from knowing that you’ll find a way to reach your goals and overcome problems. When that happens, you experience the freedom to act. You can get Natural Confidence here and see the many success stories from people who tried the program. Go to www.NaturalConfidenceProgram.com.