10 Toxic Thoughts: Are They Ruining Your Life?
How do you do that? To start, consider reining in what you expect out of life. "We live in a society where we are programmed to think we are losers if we are not millionaires or on the cover of a magazine," says Los Angeles-based clinical psychologist Dr. Angela Wilder. Unrealistic goals lead to disappointment. And even if you do set high goals and reach them, happiness isn't assured.
Toxic Thought #1: I'm a Loser.
Feeling inadequate or unworthy impairs your ability to function at home and at work, and to forge satisfying relationships with family, friends and colleagues. Don't feel that by telling yourself that you're no good that you can "shame" yourself into doing better. It just doesn't work that way, the experts say. "To have a healthy emotional life, you have to change this limiting belief," says Kelley Kosow, a Miami-based life coach.Toxic Thought #2: Someone Else Should Take Care of Me
Forget this Disney-esque fantasy. In reality, the only one who is going to save you is you, says Miami-based life coach Kelley Kosow. Be your own Prince Charming, and take responsibility for all of the different areas of your life, including your health and happiness.Toxic Thought #3: I Need To Stay Safe.
People are often more committed to being safe than being happy. That's why many people stay in a bad marriage or unfulfilling job. "It's comfortable - people instinctively resist change," says Miami-based life coach Kelley Kosow. What's the takeaway? If you want to increase your happiness, you can't always play it safe. "Without change, there can't be growth," she says.Toxic Thought #4: I Know I Am Right.
People who insist on always being right tend to be people who are afraid of something, says life coach Kelley Kosow. The result is stagnation.How to get unstuck? The first step is admitting that you're stuck. Then look at what the underlying fear is and deal with that.
"When I work with people, I explain that these thoughts, however crazy they may sound, all have a purpose that served them at one time," says therapist Heide Banks, who works in New York and Los Angeles. "It then becomes our job to turn that thought around."