Happy New Year - As If!



“As the year comes to an end, don’t look back on yesterday’s disappointments. Look ahead to God’s promise yet to unfold.”
Buky Ojelabi

New Year’s Eve is upon us.  Dare I count the years that it was a feeding frenzy up until the magical clock strikes twelve moment of bursting into a new diet that was sure to bring forth the fit slender body I so yearned for and all my problems would be solved.  You know the drill – the chowing down on all of the forbidden goodness of Christmas goodie leftovers for this sugar infused last supper is never to be experienced again.  Self promises solidify that this time it really counts because, after all, the beginning of a brand new year is the holy grail symbol of a brand new you.  Sadly, by January 3rd it’s all blown and plans for yet another grandiose new beginning is premeditated.  The only thing to come out of this diet dance was every time I didn’t show up for me I lost trust in myself.  If you can’t trust yourself you’re doomed.  I am now approaching this New Year's midnight moment completely differently.  This is the first year I’m not plotting my last meal and am actually thinking about something other than a number on the scale.  The question I ponder this week is what are my resolutions for the new year and how can I make sure they stick?  

Statistics show that 42% of people make resolutions at the new year but only 9% keep them.  That means only 9 out of 100 people actually follow through on their goals and self promises.  It's time to get real!  It’s time we say good-bye to letting ourselves down!  It’s time we have our own back!  Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “The only person you are destined to become is the person you decide to be.”  Who do you want to be? What do you really want? More importantly, how do you want to feel?  We often want something because of how we think it will make us feel.  If we fail to focus on that, we’ll get that thing, that job, that number on the scale and we’ll realize that nothing else changed and we are still feeling the same way, still yearning for something more.  I realized this is true from the last time I lost a significant amount of weight.  Something was still missing because I didn’t work on the inside.  This year my approach to resolution time is to think differently. 

We need to create what we want but we also need to feel the way we want to feel.  If you are scared, insecure and overweight, you can lose weight only to become a thin, scared and insecure person who will sabotage all progress.  Perhaps what you really want is to feel confident, healthy and energetic.  If you want to reduce debt and build your savings, perhaps what you really want is to feel safe and secure.  I’ve learned that if I don’t change the way I feel, when I get to what I think the goal is, I won’t feel any different.  Then what?  This year I’m trying something new.  I am focusing on what it is I want to feel and make the conscious choice to feel that way now.  Outside things don’t create our feelings, it’s our thoughts about them that do.  When you make the choice to feel better now, you’ll make better choices to create the life you want.  Obtaining material things, saving money or even losing weight cannot change our thoughts.  Only we can on.  It’s an inside job.

But how do we do this?  It’s not through positive affirmations.  Professor Peter Herman did a study at Carleton University in Canada and found that making positive affirmations about yourself, that you really don’t believe, doesn’t work and can actually damage your self-esteem.  The study also revealed resolutions fail because of the cause and effect relationship.  This happens when people think losing weight, exercising more or getting out of debt will change their life and when it doesn't they are catapulted back to old behaviors.  A group of brain scientists, Antonio Damasio, Joseph LeDoux and Stephen Hayes did a study using MRI’s and discovered that a new way of thinking can change your habitual behavior.  New neural pathways are literally formed when you chose new thoughts about how you feel about something. This conscious choice creates new brain waves which leads to new actions that can lead to successfully accomplishing your goals.   

This week instead of plotting my last supper of the forbidden food groups I decided to take this new approach into the new year and pretend that everything I want to happen already has.  I’m choosing to feel the way I want to feel and act as if I’ve already achieved my goals.  It does sort of feel like a “fake it till you make it” mentality but, to be honest, it feels pretty good.  Stepping into faith is turning the saying “I’ll see it when I believe it” into the premise behind Wayne Dyer’s book, “You’ll See it When You Believe it.”  I realize that saying I have faith and truly stepping out in faith are two different things.  I also realize that not stepping out in faith we hold ourselves back and limit what is possible.  It’s a choice to live with strong faith in the things not seen, not proven and not a guarantee.  It’s time to tap into the power of the possible.  It's time to step into God's promise that if I do the work, He'll take care of the results.  Wayne Dyer said, “The more you see yourself as what you’d like to become, and act as if what you want is already there, the more you’ll activate those forces that will collaborate to transform your dream into reality.” 

“How to make anything happen… 
Act as if it already has, and never look back."
Mike Dooley

Contemplating the quest to create these resolutions I pretend it is already the end of this new year upon us.  What do I want to celebrate this time next year?  Who did I become?  What did I create?  What did I experience?  What do I feel?  I pretend I’m already that person.  My resolution is to be that person and act as if all of these things already happened and choose to feel how I want to feel.  The action now is to make a plan and do the things that this person will do.  All I have to do is show up and keep my promises to myself. 

If I am already that person who is thin and healthy then I eat healthy and go to the gym because I feel confident, fit and secure in my own skin.  If I am already that person who is a published author then I make a plan to work on my book by scheduling a set time to write each day and plan to complete a set number of pages each week because I feel accomplished and I know I am helping to inspire others.  If I am already that person who is… the sky is the limit; all we need to do is dream. 

Acting as if is taking a step in faith.  The body will follow where the mind leads.  Kathy Delaney-Smith, the head women’s basketball coach at Harvard University since 1982, used the power of “acting as if” to become one of the most successful coaches in the past thirty years.   She has more wins than any coach in Ivy League history capturing 11 league titles and finishing in the top three in standings for 14 straight years.  Her belief is that performance is at least 80% mental.  She claims you act as if you are already the champion you want to be.  You act as if practice is fun.  You act as if when you fall down it doesn’t hurt and you get right back up and into the game.  She admits that when she was originally hired as the local high school basketball coach, nearly 30 years ago, she had no experience but acting as if she was a skilled coach they won game after game. 

She also used the power of her mind and her thoughts to act as if she were healthy and strong as she successfully battled through a life-threatening bout of breast cancer. Her story, strength, and attitude are inspiring and courageous. She feels that the human nervous system can’t tell the difference between a real event and an imagined event.  She was determined to act as if she was a cancer survivor and she became one.

Reading about Kathy’s story this week caused me to reflect on this concept of acting as if and the impact of truly believing I have the power to create my own reality.  I’ve thought about this concept before but part of me would pretend to act as if while hoping and waiting for things to get better while also secretly worrying they wouldn’t.  This New Year it’s time for a new approach.  We often get exactly what we expect - which is a pretty powerful concept if we take time to let it in and live with that awareness.  I’m no longer going to wait and see how things turn out or hope for certain results.  I’m acting as if I already have everything within me and around me that I need to be successful, happy and fulfilled. 

You can’t hate your body thin the same way you can’t make money from a place of fear.  If you choose to feel thin, healthy and confident you are less likely to hit the drive thru at McDonalds.  You are more likely to take chances on opportunities when you are feeling abundant, secure and confident. There’s something inside us that wants to make things better which is why we want to make New Year’s Resolutions.  The secret to feeling happy is progress.  Knowing we’re changing and getting better is what makes us happy.  Vern McLellan said, “What the New Year brings to you will depend a great deal on what you bring to the new year.” 

This new concept of acting “as if” is a game changer for me in this new year.  I have to tell myself to forget all the reasons why this won’t work and believe the one reason why it will.  Choosing to feel the way I want to feel with my resolutions and choosing to act as if they already happened is a step in faith of the unseen and unknown.  God is the only way to make it sincere and not merely go through the motions.  You don’t have to look any further then Mark 10:27 when Jesus said, “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.”

Results for the week:  - 0.2 lbs lost; Total Lost: 36.2

D.O.W. = 182

Starting weight:  182.0; Current weight: 145.8

Comments

Popular Posts