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Noelle C. Nelson, Ph.D., is a career and relationship expert, popular seminar leader, speaker, and author of nine best-selling books, including Your...
 
 
 
 

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Make A Different Kind of New Year’s Resolution

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You know your usual litany of New Year’s resolutions: “This year I’m gonna lose 5 – 10 -50 pounds. This year I swear I’ll get to the gym at least twice a week. This year I absolutely positively will not spend past my credit limit. This year I swear I’ll never have another ginger Martini (given the consequences of your last bout with said delectable beverage).

It’s your standard January 1 list most years – and it’s a great list!

But how about if instead of – or in addition to -  your “weight loss-money woes-nasty habits” list, you considered a different kind of New Year’s resolution.

What if, on January 1, you declared: “This year I am going to talk nice to myself!”

Weird, huh. Talk nice to yourself. It’s definitely something worth looking at. Because how you talk to yourself is a major part of what gets you moving towards – or against – those things you want in your life. And most of us talk mean to ourselves most of the time.

Oh, sure, you may have your occasional moment of “I’m the greatest,” but ten to one, your conversation inside your head goes mostly like this: “How could I have been so stupid? That’ll never work. I’m an idiot. Can’t believe I overslept like that! I messed up again. I’ll never get that promotion. Why can’t I be like so-and-so, get my act together? He/she always gets things right the first time. I never get it right the first time. Or the second or third, or – oh, what’s the use! I’ll never amount to much of anything. My hair looks terrible, today of all days! I’m too fat/thin/old/young, they’re gonna hate me. I can’t pull this off, whatever made me think I could?”

Need I go on? You wouldn’t dream of lambasting your best friend with such a demeaning tirade. Why are you doing it to yourself?

Criticizing yourself is hurtful. Plus, it prevents you from achieving whatever it is that you want – from an enjoyable first date to nailing that corner office. People who succeed in life have confidence in themselves, in their abilities, and most often – they actually like themselves. They talk themselves up, not down.

Talking yourself up doesn’t mean you have to turn into some obnoxious arrogant person singing the song of incredible me-me-me: “I’m great, you’re lower than dirt. I’m the best, I’m fabulous, you’re barely good enough to trail in my shadow.” Yuck.

Talking yourself up means cutting yourself some slack. Give yourself the benefit of the doubt. So instead of “How could I have been so stupid? That’ll never work” you say to yourself, “Wow, that didn’t come out the way I thought it would. OK, I think I’ll try something else. I can probably come up with something that’ll work.” Or “I’ll never amount to anything” becomes “I’m on the path. I’m taking steps to get where I want to go. Anyone who’s a success now has at some point been where I am. It’s OK. I’m doing just fine.”

Got it? Great. Happy New Year!

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Al_Pal 6 pts

Yes! I'm pretty good at this. One thing I make sure to do, if I call myself or my action stupid, is to instead call it foolish. Usually works and helps. ;p

Recovering Supermom 5 pts

This is something I've worked on for a long time, and yes, I will make it my resolution to keep working on it. Thanks for posting this!

shaycv 7 pts

I think this is something everyone should do. You have to be nice to yourself just as much as everyone else.

Denise 507 pts moderator

I'm in. But then again, I'm pretty much always in when it comes to positive self-talk.

Everyone should do this. EVERYONE.

Denise

BlogHer.com Community Manager

Conversation from Facebook

BlogHer
BlogHer

Elizabeth Maxwell That's super helpful, actually. I can duplicate the problem and I can see why it's throwing that error for iPhone users. I'm reporting it to my tech team now. (Good news is - if you click the link from a non-mobile platform, you'll be able to access the post.) - Denise

Elizabeth Maxwell
Elizabeth Maxwell

And says:
"Huh.

Are you sure that's the url you wanted?"

I am using an iPhone if that helps.

Elizabeth Maxwell
Elizabeth Maxwell

404 page not found

BlogHer
BlogHer

I wonder why the link isn't working for some of you. What happens when you click it? Were you clicking from a computer browser or from a phone? Anyone want to email me to tell me what happened when you clicked? (denise@blogher.com) - Denise

Shelly Cunningham
Shelly Cunningham

This was just the subject of my blog the other day - LOVE!

Jenn Marie
Jenn Marie

Can't get the link to work :(

Beth Zimmerman
Beth Zimmerman

Link doesn't work.

Leigh Cunningham
Leigh Cunningham

Couldn't get the link open either

Elizabeth Maxwell
Elizabeth Maxwell

Link doesn't work for me.

Gracelyn Marie
Gracelyn Marie

Just to live life. That's it.

Melissa Corliss Aiello
Melissa Corliss Aiello

Yes, that is one of my resolutions. I've got a few more that I'm getting ready to live by...not waiting for Jan. 1st.

Angie Rapids
Angie Rapids

This is the year of absolutely no resolutions.