Chapter 2: The Mountain is You -- Brianna Wiest

THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS SELF-SABOTAGE WHEN YOU HABITUATE YOURSELF to do things that move your life forward, you call them skills. When they hold your life back, you call them self- sabotage. They are both essentially the same function.

Chapter 2: The Mountain is You -- Brianna Wiest
The Mountain is You -- Brianna Wiest

THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS
SELF-SABOTAGE
WHEN YOU HABITUATE YOURSELF to do things that move your life forward,
you call them skills. When they hold your life back, you call them self-
sabotage. They are both essentially the same function.
Sometimes, it happens by accident. Sometimes, we just get used to living a
certain way and fail to have a vision for how life could be different.
Sometimes, we make choices because we don’t know how to make better
ones or that anything else is even possible. Sometimes, we settle for what
we’re handed because we don’t know we can ask for more. Sometimes, we
run our lives on autopilot for long enough that we begin to think we no
longer have a choice.
However, most of the time, it’s not accidental at all. The habits and
behaviors you can’t stop engaging in—no matter how destructive or
limiting they may be—are intelligently designed by your subconscious to
meet an unfulfilled need, displaced emotion, or neglected desire.
Overcoming self-sabotage is not about trying to figure out how to override
your impulses; it is first determining why those impulses exist in the first
place.
Self-sabotage is often misunderstood to be a way in which we punish,
deride, or intentionally hurt ourselves. On the surface, this seems true
enough. Self-sabotage is committing to a healthier diet and finding yourself
pulling up to the drive-thru a few hours later. It’s identifying a market gap,
conceiving an unprecedentedly brilliant business idea, then getting
“distracted” and forgetting to begin working on it. It’s having strange and
terrifying thoughts and allowing them to paralyze you in the face of
important life changes or milestones. It is knowing you have so much to be
grateful for and excited about and yet worrying anyway.We often misattribute these behaviors to a lack of intelligence, willpower,
or capability. That is usually not the case. Self-sabotage is not a way we
hurt ourselves; it’s a way we try to protect ourselves.
WHAT IS SELF-SABOTAGE?
Self-sabotage is when you have two conflicting desires. One is conscious,
one is unconscious. You know how you want to move your life forward,
and yet you are still, for some reason, stuck.
When you have big, ongoing, insurmountable issues in your life—
especially when the solutions seem so simple, so easy, and yet so
impossible to stick with—what you have are not big problems but big
attachments.
People are pretty incredible in the fact that they basically do whatever they
want to do.
This is true of everything in human life. Regardless of the potential
consequences, human nature has revealed itself to be incredibly self-
serving. People have an almost superhuman way of doing whatever they
feel compelled to do, regardless of whom it could hurt, what wars it could
spawn, or what future would be put at risk. When you consider this, you
begin to realize that if you’re keeping something in your life, there has to be
a reason you want it there. The only question is why.
Some people can’t figure out why they can’t seem to motivate themselves
enough to create a new business to facilitate their goal of becoming
significantly wealthier, perhaps not realizing that they have a subconscious
belief that to be rich is to be egocentric or disliked. Or perhaps they actually
don’t want to be super-wealthy. Maybe it’s a cover-up for wanting to feel
secure and “taken care of,” or their real desire is to be recognized for their
art, and as this feels too unlikely to ever happen, they fall back on a
secondary dream that doesn’t actually motivate them.Some people say that they want to be successful at any cost and yet don’t
want to log the hours of work it would take to get there. Perhaps it is
because they understand at some level that being “successful” doesn’t really
make you happy nor liked. In fact, the opposite tends to be true. Success
usually exposes you to jealousy and scrutiny. Successful people are not
loved in the way that we imagine they would be; they are usually picked
apart because envious people need to humanize them in some way. Perhaps
instead of being “successful,” what many really want is just to be loved, and
yet their ambition for success directly threatens that.
Some people can’t figure out why they keep choosing the “wrong”
relationships, people whose patterns of rejection, abuse, or refusal to
commit seem to be consistent. Perhaps they don’t realize that they are
actually re-creating the relationship dynamics they experienced when they
were young because they associate love with loss or abandonment. Perhaps
they want to re-create family relationships in which they felt helpless, but to
live them again as an adult where they can help the addict, the liar, or the
broken person.
When it comes to self-sabotaging behaviors, you have to understand that
sometimes, it’s easy to get attached to having problems.
Being successful can make you less liked. Finding love can make you more
vulnerable.
Making yourself less attractive can guard you. Playing small allows you to
avoid scrutiny.
Procrastinating puts you back in a place of comfort.
All the ways in which you are self-sabotaging are actually ways that you are
feeding a need you probably do not even realize you have. Overcoming it is
not only a matter of learning to understand yourself better, but realizing that
your problems are not problems; they are symptoms.
You cannot get rid of the coping mechanisms and think you’ve solved the
problem.WHAT DOES SELF-SABOTAGE LOOK LIKE?
It’s impossible to say decisively what self-sabotage does or doesn’t look
like, because certain habits and behaviors that can be healthy for one person
can be unhealthy in another context.
With that said, there are definitely some specific behaviors and patterns that
are typically indicative of self-sabotage, and they usually relate to being
aware that there’s a problem in your life, yet feeling the need to perpetuate
it regardless. Here are some of the main signs that you’re probably in a
cycle of self-sabotage.
RESISTANCE
Resistance is what happens when we have a new project that we need to
work on and simply can’t bring ourselves to do it. It’s when we get into a
great new relationship and then keep bailing on plans. It’s when we get an
amazing idea for our business and then feel tension and anger when it
comes time to sit down and actually get to work.
We often feel resistance in the face of what’s going right in our lives, not
what’s going wrong. When we have a problem to solve, resistance is
usually nowhere to be found. But when we have something to enjoy, create,
or build, we are tapping into a part of ourselves that is trying to thrive
instead of just survive, and the unfamiliarity can be daunting.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Resistance is your way of slowing down and making sure that it’s safe to
get attached to something new and important. In other cases, it can also be a
warning sign that something isn’t quite right, and you might need to step
back and regroup.
Resistance is not the same thing as procrastination or indifference and
shouldn’t be treated as such. When we are experiencing resistance, there is
always a reason, and we have to pay attention. If we try to force ourselvesto perform in the face of resistance, it usually intensifies the feeling, as we
are strengthening the internal conflict and triggering the fear that’s holding
us back in the first place.
Instead, releasing resistance requires us to refocus. We have to get clear on
what we want as well as when and why we want it. We have to identify
unconscious beliefs that are preventing us from showing up, and then we
have to step back into the work when we feel inspired. Wanting is the
entryway to showing up after resistance.
HITTING YOUR UPPER LIMIT
As discussed before, there is only a certain amount of happiness that most
of us will allow ourselves to feel. Gay Hendricks calls this your “upper
limit.”
Your upper limit is essentially the amount of “good” that you’re
comfortable having in your life. It is your tolerance and threshold for
having positive feelings or experiencing positive events.
When you begin to surpass your upper limit, you start to unconsciously
sabotage what’s happening in order to bring yourself back to what’s
comfortable and familiar. For some people, this manifests physically, often
as aches, pains, headaches, or physical tension. For others, it manifests
emotionally as resistance, anger, guilt, or fear.
It might seem totally counter-intuitive, but we are not really wired to be
happy; we are wired to be comfortable, and anything that is outside of that
realm of comfort feels threatening or scary until we are familiar with it.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Hitting your upper limit is a really great sign. It means that you’re
approaching and surpassing new levels of your life, and that is first and
foremost something to congratulate yourself for. The way you resolve anupper-limit problem is by slowly acclimating yourself to your new
“normal.”
Instead of shocking yourself into big changes, allow yourself to slowly
adjust and adapt. By taking it slow, you are allowing yourself to gradually
reinstate a new comfort zone around what you want your life to be. Over
time, you gradually shift your baseline to a new standard.
UPROOTING
Uprooting happens when someone finds themselves jumping from
relationship to relationship or changing their business website again and
again, when they really need to focus on confronting relationship issues
when they arise or taking care of clients they already have. In uprooting,
you are not allowing yourself to blossom; you are only comfortable with the
process of sprouting.
It might be constantly needing a “fresh start,” which is often the result of
not having healthy ways to deal with stress or struggling with conflict
resolution. Uprooting can be a way of diverting attention from the actual
problems in your life, as your attention must go toward reestablishing
oneself at a new job or in a new town.
Ultimately, uprooting means you are always just beginning your new
chapter but never really finishing it. Despite your efforts to keep moving on,
you end up more stuck than ever before.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
First, recognize the pattern.
One of the primary symptoms of uprooting is not realizing that one is doing
it. Therefore, the most important step is to become aware of what’s
happening. Trace back your steps over the past few years: How many
places have you moved or worked? Then figure out what is driving you
away from each new thing you find.Next, you need to get clear on what you really want. Sometimes, uprooting
occurs because we step too quickly toward what we think we want, only to
find that we didn’t think it through and don’t really want that thing very
much. Clarity is key, because you’re thinking long-term now. What would it
look like to choose one place to live, then build connections there? What
would it look like to work at the same place and move up in your position
or build your business?
Remember that healing from an uprooting pattern is not about settling for
something you don’t want, nor is it about staying in an unsafe or unhealthy
situation because you don’t want to move again. It’s about getting clear and
determined on what’s the right path for you and then making a plan for how
you can thrive, not just survive. When the moment comes that you would
typically flee, confront the discomfort and stay where you are. Figure out
why you are uncomfortable getting attached to one thing or another, and
determine what a healthy attachment would look like for you.
PERFECTIONISM
When we expect that our work must be perfect the first time we do it, we
end up getting into a cycle of perfectionism.
Perfectionism isn’t actually wanting everything to be right. It’s not a good
thing. In fact, it is a hindering thing, because it sets up unrealistic
expectations about what we are capable of or what the outcomes of our
lives could be.
Perfectionism holds us back from showing up and trying, or really doing the
important work of our lives. This happens because when we are afraid of
failing, or feeling vulnerable, or not being as good as we want others to
think we are, we end up avoiding the work that is required to actually
become that good. We sabotage ourselves because it is the willingness to
show up and simply do it, again and again and again, that ultimately brings
us to a place of mastery.HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Don’t worry about doing it well; just do it.
Don’t worry about writing a bestseller, just write. Don’t worry about
making a Grammy-winning hit, just make music. Don’t worry about failing,
just keep showing up and trying. At first, all that matters is that you do what
you really want to do. From there, you can learn from your mistakes and
over time get to the place where you really want to be.
The truth is that we actually do not accomplish great feats when we are
anxious about whether or not what we do will indeed be something
impressive and world-changing. We accomplish these sorts of things when
we simply show up and allow ourselves to create something meaningful and
important to us.
Instead of perfection, focus on progress. Instead of having something done
perfectly, focus on just getting it done. From there, you can edit, build,
grow, and develop it to exactly what your vision is. But if you don’t get
started, you’ll never arrive.
LIMITED EMOTIONAL PROCESSING SKILLS
In life, there are going to be people, situations, and circumstances that are
upsetting, infuriating, saddening, and even enraging. There will likewise be
people, situations, and circumstances that are inspiring, hopeful, helpful,
and truly offer purpose and meaning in your life.
When you are only able to process half of your emotions, you stunt
yourself. You start going out of your way to avoid any possible situation
that could bring up something frustrating or uncomfortable, because you
have no tools to be able to handle that feeling. This means that you start
avoiding the very risks and actions that would ultimately change your life
for the better.
In addition, an inability to process your emotions means you get stuck with
them. You sit and dwell on your anger and sadness because you don’t knowhow to make them go away. When we can only process half of our
emotions, we ultimately only live half of the life we really want to.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Healthy emotional processing looks different for everyone but generally
involves these steps:
• Get clear on what happened.
• Validate your feelings.
• Determine a course correction.
First, you need to understand why you’re upset or the reason why
something is bothering you so much. Without clarity on this, you’ll
continue to waste your time mulling over the details without really
understanding what’s hurting you so much.
Next, you have to validate how you feel. Recognize that you are not alone;
anyone in your situation would probably feel similarly (and does) and that
what you feel is absolutely okay. In doing this, you can allow yourself a
physical release such as crying, shaking, journaling about what you feel, or
talking to a trusted friend.
Once you are clear on what’s wrong and have allowed yourself to fully
express the extent of your emotions, you can determine how you will
change your behavior or thought process so that you get an outcome that
you really want in the future.
JUSTIFICATION
Your life is ultimately measured by your outcomes, not your intentions. It is
not about what you wanted to do or would have done but didn’t have the
time. It’s not about why you thought you couldn’t; it’s just whether or not
you eventually did. When you’re in a pattern of self-sabotaging behavior,you’re often treating those excuses the same way you would treat
measurable outcomes: You’re using them to make yourself feel
momentarily satisfied, using them as a replacement for the accomplishment
itself.
When we have a goal, dream, or plan, there is no measure of intent. It is
only whether you did it or did not. Any other reason you offer for not
showing up and doing the work is simply you stating that you prioritize that
reason over your ultimate ambition, which means that it will always take
precedence in your life.
You may also be using excuses to help navigate away from uncomfortable
feelings that are ultimately necessary for your growth.
HOW YOU RESOLVE THIS
Start measuring your outcomes and focusing on at least doing one
productive thing each day.
It’s no longer about how many days you really wanted to go to the gym; it’s
about how many days you did. It’s no longer about wanting to show up for
your friends; it’s whether or not you did. It’s no longer about the great ideas
you had about how to change your business; it’s about whether or not you
did.
Stop accepting your own excuses. Stop being complacent with your own
justifications. Start quantifying your days by how many healthy, positive
things you accomplished, and you will see how quickly you begin to make
progress.
DISORGANIZATION
By leaving our lives and spaces in disarray, we are not just mindlessly
forgetting to take care of our surroundings. We are often actually creating
distractions and chaos that serve an unconscious purpose.A clean, organized space—both for work and for living— is essential to
thriving. This means a tidy home, clothes that are easy to reach and put
together each morning, a clean kitchen, and an organized desk. Paperwork
should be filed in one space, your bedroom should be calming, and
everything should have a “home” that it can return to at the end of the day.
Without cleanliness, we create fewer opportunities for ourselves. Nothing
positive, nor beautiful, flows from chaos. Deep down, we know this. Often,
when we are self-sabotaging through disorganization, it is because when we
are very clean or organized, we get an uneasy feeling. That uneasy feeling
is what we are trying to avoid, because it is the recognition that now that
everything is in order, we must get to work on doing what we need to do or
who we want to become.
When we leave our spaces messy, we are always a few tasks or priorities
away from stepping out and showing up.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Like anything, you need to start slow and adjust yourself over time. To
declutter and reorganize, start with one room, and if that is too much, try
one corner, drawer, or closet. Work on that, and only that, and then
implement a routine that maintains the organization.
From there, start arranging your space so that it works for you, not against
you. Put something soothing on your bedside table like a diffuser, or create
an organized family calendar in the kitchen so appointments and schedules
are visible to others. If you have trouble with the mail being disorganized,
create a spot for it to go when it comes in each day. If you have trouble with
laundry being disorganized, create a system for it and decide on a day or
two that you do the wash, and do it in bulk.
You must slowly let yourself get used to working at a clean desk, and
eventually it will become second nature. You’ll begin to realize that you
also feel so much less stressed and much more in control of your life.It is very hard to show up as the person you want to be when you are
surrounded by an environment that makes you feel like a person you aren’t.
ATTACHMENT TO WHAT YOU
DON’T REALLY WANT
Sometimes, your dreams for your life are adopted from other people’s
preferences. In other cases, you determine what you want and then you
outgrow your old ambitions.
Sometimes, we fight endlessly to try to force ourselves to want something
that we do not really want, and it always leaves us empty, because it isn’t a
genuine desire. This is different than lacking motivation or experiencing
resistance. Our inability to perform is not based in fear or lack of skill, it is
based in an inherent knowing that this is not what we want for our lives,
and perhaps we’re feeling lost or unable to change our path.
When you find yourself struggling with something, you have to ask
yourself: Do I actually want to do this? Do you want the job, or do you just
like how the title sounds? Are you in love with the person, or do you like
the idea of the relationship? Are you still holding an outdated idea of what
your greatest success will be, and if so, what would it look like to let that
go?
At the end of the day, self-sabotage sometimes functions to show us that we
aren’t quite on the right path yet, and that we need to reevaluate to
determine what would feel best for our lives, even if that means we
disappoint some people or even our younger selves.
We do not have to live the rest of our lives trying to achieve some measure
of success we thought was ideal when we were too young to understand
who we even were. Our only responsibility is to make decisions for the
person we have become.
HOW TO RESOLVE THISBe willing to accept that maybe your “success story” doesn’t look the way
that you once thought it might.
Maybe the kind of success you’re really hungry for is to feel at peace each
day, or making your life about travel instead of work. Maybe it’s about
having thriving friendships or a happy relationship. Maybe the business you
got into 10 years ago isn’t the business you want to be in forever. Maybe the
work you thought you’d love isn’t coming as naturally to you as you’d
hoped.
When we let go of what isn’t right for us, we create space to discover what
is. However, doing so requires the tremendous courage to put our pride
aside and see things for what they really are.
JUDGING OTHERS
We all know that gossiping, or judging other people’s lives and choices, is
not a healthy or positive way to connect with other people. However, it does
far more damage than we realize, as it sets up barriers to our own success.
If we feel bad about not being as successful as another person, we might try
to find something negative about them to make ourselves feel better. If we
do that every time we come across a person who is more successful than we
are, we begin to associate that level of success with being disliked. When it
comes time for us to take action to move our lives forward, we’re going to
resist doing it, because becoming more successful will create a breach in
our self-concept.
In other cases, you might have heard people you grew up around
villainizing others who had money. They might have said things like, “Ugh,
rich people are the worst.” Maybe they chalked all wealthy people up to
being morally corrupt. This sweeping characterization sealed itself in your
subconscious, and now you find yourself sabotaging your own attempts to
become financially healthy, because you associate it with guilt and being
disliked.When we set up judgments for others, they become rules that we have to
play by, too. By judging others for what we don’t have or because we envy
them, we sabotage our own lives far more than we ever really hurt anybody
else.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Many people say that you have to love yourself first before you can love
others, but really, if you learn to love others, you will learn to love yourself.
Practice non-judgment through non-assumption. Instead of reaching a
conclusion about a person based on the limited information you have about
them, consider that you’re not seeing the whole picture and don’t know the
whole story.
When you are more compassionate about other people’s lives, you become
more compassionate about your own. When you see someone who has
something you want, congratulate them, even if it feels hard at first. It will
extend back and open you up to receiving it as well.
PRIDE
Pride is often involved in many of our worst decisions.
Sometimes, we know a relationship is wrong, but the shame of leaving
seems worse than staying. Sometimes, we start a business and realize we
don’t really like it very much or refuse to accept that we need to change or
ask for help. In these cases, our pride is getting in the way. We are making
decisions based on how we imagine people view our lives, not how they
actually are. This is not only inaccurate, but it is also very unhealthy.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
To overcome our attachment to pride, we have to start to see ourselves more
wholly and honestly.Instead of thinking that we need to prove to everyone around us how perfect
and flawless we are, we can imagine ourselves more realistically: as people
who, despite our weaknesses, are trying our best. In the end, it looks far
worse to hold onto what’s wrong because you care about what others think
than it is to let go because that’s what’s right for you. People will respect
you far more if you can acknowledge that you are an imperfect person—
like everyone else—learning, adapting, and trying your best.
In reaching this mindset, you also open yourself up to learning. By not
assuming you know everything or that you need to seem perfect, you can
admit when you’re wrong, ask for assistance, and lean on others sometimes.
Basically, you open yourself back up to growth, and your life is better for it
over the long term.
GUILT OF SUCCEEDING
In a world of so much pain, horror, and misfortune, who are we to have
happy, abundant lives?
That’s the thought process that so many people go through. One of the
biggest mental barriers people face is the guilt that comes with finally
having enough or more than one needs. This can come from many different
sources, but it ultimately boils down to feeling as though you “don’t
deserve” to have it.
This feeling often comes up when we start to earn more money or have
nicer things. Often, people will sabotage their higher incomes with reckless
discretionary spending or by being less vigilant about their clientele or
workload, because they are not quite comfortable having more than the
basic necessities, and so they put themselves back into a comfortable
feeling of lack.
When it comes to success, guilt is an unfortunately common emotion,
especially for good-hearted people who want to do the right thing and live
authentic lives.HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Please realize that most extremely successful people have no guilt
whatsoever. In fact, this feeling usually only comes up when you’re
stepping between not having enough and finally having enough.
What you have to realize is that money and success are tools. They buy you
back time and offer you the opportunity to help, employ, influence, and
change the lives of others. Instead of looking at your success as a status
differentiator—which will always make you feel bad and uncomfortable—
see it instead as a tool with which you can do important and positive things
in the world and your own life.
FEAR OF FAILING
How often do we not even attempt something because we are afraid to look
bad or fail immediately?
The fear of failing is often something that holds people back from putting in
the work they would need to become truly great at something, but it can
also take another, more insidious form. Once we have established
something new in our lives, this fear can come up as a constant irrational
worry that we’re “missing something,” that our partner is being unfaithful,
or that we’re one misstep away from losing it all.
These catastrophic thoughts happen when we want to shield ourselves from
potential loss. They only come up when we finally have something we care
enough about and really want to keep.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
There is a difference between failing because you are trying something new
and daring, and failing because you are not showing up, doing the work, or
being responsible for your actions.
These are two very different experiences and should be separated in your
mind.As scary as it might be to not be great at something initially, or perhaps
even experience a loss, it is even worse to fail by virtue of never trying and
always playing small. Failure is inevitable, but you have to make sure it’s
happening for the right reasons.
When we fail out of negligence, we take a step back. When we fail because
we are attempting new feats, we take one step closer to what will work.
DOWN PLAYING
When we downplay our successes in life, we are either trying to make
ourselves seem less impressive so others do not feel threatened and
therefore like us more, or we are trying to avoid the sense that we have
“made it,” because we are afraid of peaking.
Though so many of us long for the moment when we feel as though we
have finally arrived and achieved the measures of success we so deeply
desire, we often receive them only to then feel as though they aren’t that
great, impressive, or that they don’t make us feel as good as we thought
they would.
This happens because of downplaying. The idea of having “made it” makes
us afraid that we are reaching the pinnacle and therefore will fall off of it. If
we acknowledge that we’ve arrived, what goals remain? It is a feeling akin
to death, so we instead find another measure to work toward.
Likewise, when we are around other people, we do not stand firmly in our
pride because we are taught it is a bad thing (and when done in an
unhealthy way, it is). What we are sensing is the feeling of being “better
than” others because we have achieved something. This makes us
uncomfortable because we know it’s both untrue and unkind.
HOW TO RESOLVE THISWe can all acknowledge and appreciate other people’s diverse
accomplishments and talents while still being happy about our own. Instead
of shrugging off a compliment, we can respond by saying: “Thank you, I
worked very hard, and I’m happy to be here.”
If the fear is that we are “peaking” too soon, we have to reform our idea of
progress. We do not get better only to get worse again. We do not achieve
one thing only to lose it and return to what we were before. That instinct is
a self-sabotaging behavior, one that wants to keep us within our old comfort
zone.
Instead, we can acknowledge that when one part of our life improves, it
radiates out to everything else. When we achieve one thing, we are better
equipped for the future. Life tends to gradually get better as we keep
working on it; it only gets worse if we accomplish something then shut
down because we are intimidated by our own power.
UNHEALTHY HABITS
This is the most common way that people sabotage their own success: by
maintaining habits that are actively keeping them away from their goals.
This is when someone declares that they want to be in better shape but
doesn’t change anything they do each day to facilitate that. Or when they
want to make a change professionally but find ways to make it difficult if
not impossible for them to actually do it.
At the core of all these behaviors is the fact that one part of our psyche
understands that we should be evolving and moving forward with our lives
and another part is intimidated by the potential discomfort it would bring.
Usually, this culminates in so much inner tension and frustration that a
breaking point is reached, and changes are made from there.
However, the goal is to not have to get to a crisis point in your life before
you can become aware of the ways you’re holding yourself back from
living peacefully and comfortably.HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Define health on your own terms. What does a healthy life look like for
you? How would it make you feel, and what would you be doing?
It is difficult to look solely to anyone else’s definition of healthfulness,
particularly because we are all different people with varying needs,
preferences, and schedules.
Instead, figure out what makes you feel best. Decide what combination of
healthy eating, exercise, and sleep is right for you, and stick to it. Like so
many things, healthy habits are best established gradually. Instead of trying
to force yourself to take an hour at the gym at 6 AM, try instead to do 15
minutes, or perhaps swap out with a class you really enjoy, or go at a time
that works better for your schedule.
Make it easy for yourself to succeed. Prep your meals or keep water by your
desk so you can sip it throughout the day. Gradually recondition yourself to
prefer healthy habits, ones that actually work for your lifestyle.
BEING “BUSY”
Another very common way that people sabotage is by distracting
themselves to the point of being completely phased out of their lives.
People who are constantly “busy” are running from themselves.
Nobody is “busy” unless they want to be busy, and you will know that
because so many people with extremely hectic schedules would never
describe themselves that way. This is because being “busy” is not a virtue;
it only signals to others that you do not know how to manage your time or
your tasks.
Being busy communicates importance; it often makes you seem a little
untouchable to others. It also overwhelms the body so that it can only focuson the tasks at hand. Being busy is the ultimate way to distract ourselves
from what’s really wrong.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
If your schedule is unmanageable, you’re never going to be as effective or
productive as you could be. If this is the case, your first job has to be to
streamline and prioritize your tasks in order of importance, outsource
whatever else you can, and then let go of the rest.
If your issue is that you intentionally create chaos and busyness in your day
when there is no need for it, you have to get comfortable with simplicity
and routine. Start with writing down your top 5 tasks that need to be done
each day, and then focus on doing those and only those.
You might also need to confront the sense of “protection” that being busy
gives you. Does it make you feel more important than others? Does it give
you an excuse to say “no” to plans or to avoid some people? You need to
find healthier and more productive ways to cope with these feelings, such as
finding genuine self-confidence in what you do by creating something
you’re proud of, or getting better at calmly but clearly stating your
boundaries and needs in relationships.
SPENDING TIME WITH THE WRONG PEOPLE
It’s true that so much of our lives is shaped by the people we spend them
with, and the company you keep is another common way that people self-
sabotage.
Certainly you can think of some people in your life who stress you out,
make you feel insecure, and yet keep you coming back for more. These
relationships exist at the lighter end of the toxicity spectrum, but they are
self-defeating nonetheless.
If you find yourself preoccupied with a certain friendship or relationship
that is making you feel almost addicted to the feeling of being “less than” or“jealous of,” you need to gradually phase out of it. You don’t need to be
mean, rude, or even cut anyone out of your life.
You do, however, need to understand that the people you spend the most
time with will shape your future irrevocably, and so you must choose them
wisely.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Work on building a circle of people who support and inspire you, who have
similar goals and enjoy spending time with you. You should leave a get-
together feeling energized and inspired, not exhausted and angry.
It takes time to find your group of friends, and you may not discover that all
at once. It could start with offering to take someone you admire out for
coffee, or reaching out to do something with a person with whom you’d like
to reconnect. Slowly but genuinely rebuild your connections, and then
foster and care for them as much as you can.
WORRYING ABOUT IRRATIONAL FEARS AND LEAST LIKELY
CIRCUMSTANCES
Another very common way that people sabotage without realizing is by
preoccupying themselves with fears of worst-case scenarios.
You’re probably familiar with this, at least to some degree: You have a
weird or highly unlikely thought that evokes a deep sense of dread, fear, and
series of “doomsday” scenarios in your head. You then keep coming back to
it to the point that it even controls some part of your life.
Irrational fears, especially the kind that are least likely to become reality,
are often what we project real fears onto.
These irrational fears are safe, because deep down we know they aren’t
going to happen. They are placeholders, a way for us to express the feeling
we really have onto something we know isn’t going to happen.When you find yourself in a fear cycle, constantly repeating some strange,
random, or unimportant one-off circumstance or situation that has a very
low probability of becoming reality, ask yourself if you have any feelings
about something related that is actually valid.
For example, if you get anxious about being a passenger in a car, consider if
your fear is of “moving forward” or being “out of control.” Or, if you’re
anxious about being fired from your job, the fear might really be the idea
that you aren’t worthy of another job or being humiliated by a higher-up.
HOW TO RESOLVE THIS
Instead of wasting all of your energy trying to control some worst-case
scenario, consider what the message of the fear may be and what it is telling
you that you need in your life.
If the fear was an abstract metaphor, what would the meaning be? Is the
abrupt loss of income a symbol of your desire for security? Is the fear of the
future a symbol for not living fully right now? Is the anxiety about making
decisions a symbol for knowing what you really want and being too afraid
to choose it?
At the core of the things we most fear is a message that we are trying to
send ourselves about what we really care about. If we can identify what we
want to protect, we can find healthier and more secure ways to do it.
HOW TO TELL IF YOU’RE IN A
SELF-SABOTAGE CYCLE
Even if you can cognitively understand self-sabotaging behaviors,
sometimes the most difficult shift is recognizing that we are engaging in
them.
In fact, sometimes the signs are so subtle, they are barely recognizable and
often don’t come to our attention until they become highly problematic orsomeone else points them out. Some of the most prominent symptoms of
self-sabotage are as follows:
YOU ARE MORE AWARE OF WHAT YOU DON’T WANT THAN
WHAT YOU DO.
You spend more of your time worrying, ruminating, and focusing on what
you hope doesn’t happen than you do imagining, strategizing, and planning
for what you do.
YOU SPEND MORE TIME TRYING TO IMPRESS PEOPLE WHO
DON’T LIKE YOU THAN YOU SPEND WITH PEOPLE WHO
LOVE YOU FOR WHO YOU ARE.
You are more focused on growing into the kind of person who evokes the
envy of your supposed enemies rather than the kind of person who is
beloved by their family and friends and prioritizes them no matter what.
YOU’RE PUTTING YOUR HEAD IN THE SAND.
You don’t know basic facts about your life, like how much debt you have or
what other people in your field are being paid for similar work. When you
get into an argument, you run away until you forget rather than talking
about what’s wrong and coming up with a solution. In other words, you are
in denial, and so any hope of healing is futile.
YOU CARE MORE ABOUT CONVINCING OTHER PEOPLE
YOU’RE OKAY THAN ACTUALLY BEING OKAY.
You’d rather post photos that make it look like you had a great time than
being concerned about whether you actually had a good time. You put more
effort toward trying to convince everyone you’re doing well rather than
being honest and connecting with people who could help or support you.
YOUR MAIN PRIORITY IN LIFE IS TO BE LIKED, EVEN IF
THAT COMES AT THE EXPENSE OF BEING HAPPY.You think more about whether or not your actions will earn you the
approval of “people” (who are “people,” by the way?) rather than whether
or not they will actually make you feel fulfilled and content with who you
are.
YOU’RE MORE AFRAID OF YOUR FEELINGS THAN ANYTHING
ELSE.
If you get to the point in life at which the scariest, most detrimental thing
you face is the fear of whether or not you will be able to handle your own
emotions, you are the one standing in your own way—nothing else is.
YOU’RE BLINDLY CHASING GOALS WITHOUT ASKING
YOURSELF WHY YOU WANT THOSE THINGS.
If you are doing “everything you are supposed to be doing” and yet you feel
empty and depressed at the end of the day, the issue is probably that you’re
not really doing what you want to be doing; you’ve just adopted someone
else’s script for happiness.
YOU’RE TREATING YOUR COPING MECHANISMS AS THE
PROBLEM.
Instead of trying to incite war on yourself to overcome your overeating,
spending, drinking, sexing—whatever it is you know you need to improve
—ask yourself what emotional need that thing is filling. Until you do, you
will battle it forever.
YOU VALUE YOUR DOUBT MORE THAN YOUR POTENTIAL.
Negativity bias makes us believe that “bad” things are more real than good,
and unless we keep that inclination in check, it can leave us believing that
everything we fear to be true is more real than the good things that are
actually true.
YOU ARE TRYING TO CARE ABOUT EVERYTHING.Your willpower is a limited resource. You only have so much in a day.
Rather than using it to try to become good at everything, decide what
matters most to you. Focus your attention on that, and let everything else
slip away.
YOU ARE WAITING FOR SOME ONE ELSE TO OPEN A DOOR,
OFFER APPROVAL, OR HAND YOU THE LIFE YOU HAVE
BEEN WAITING FOR.
We grow up with the illusion that success is what’s handed to people who
are most deserving, talented, or privileged. When we arrive, however, we
realize it is constructed by those who find an intersection of their interests,
passions, skills, and a market gap. Sprinkle on a little bit of persistence, and
the only way to fail is to give up.
YOU DON’T REALIZE HOW FAR YOU’VE COME.
You are not the person you were five years ago. You evolve as your self-
image does, so make sure that it’s an accurate one. Give yourself credit for
everything you’ve overcome that you never thought you would, and
everything you’ve built that you never thought you could. You’ve come so
much farther than you think, and you’re so much closer than you realize.
IDENTIFYING YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS
COMMITMENTS
Part of the reason we often experience intense inner conflict or self-
sabotage is because of something called a core commitments, which is
essentially your primary objective or intention for your life.5
Your subconscious commitments are basically what you want more than
anything else, and you often aren’t even aware of them. You can identify
your core commitments by looking at the things that you struggle with most
and the things you are most driven by. If you can peel back the layers of
your motivations toward each, you’ll find a root cause. When you find the
same root cause for everything, you’ve found a core commitment.People only seem irrational and unpredictable until you understand what
they are fundamentally committed to.
For example, if someone has a core commitment to feel free, they may find
themselves sabotaging work opportunities in order to achieve that. If
someone’s core commitment is to feel wanted, they could find themselves
in a series of relationships in which they have intense connections but
refuse to make commitments out of fear that the spark will “fade.” If
someone’s core commitment is to be in control of their lives, they might
have irrational anxiety about things that represent a loss of control. If
someone’s core commitment is to be loved by others, they might pretend to
be helpless in certain areas of life because if they don’t need others, they
might be left by them.
But the most important thing to understand is that your core commitments
are actually a cover-up for core needs. Your core need is the opposite of
your core commitment. Your core need is also another way to identify your
purpose. For example, if your subconscious core commitment is to be in
control, your core need is trust. If your subconscious core commitment is to
be needed, your core need is to know you are wanted. If your subconscious
core commitment is to be loved by others, your need is self-love.
The less that you feed your core need,
the “louder” your core commitment symptoms
will be.
If you are a person who needs trust and is therefore committed to staying in
control, the less that you believe you are supported, the more your negative
coping mechanisms are going to flare up. Perhaps this could happen in the
form of disruptive eating patterns, isolating yourself, or hyper-fixation on
physical appearance. If you are committed to freedom and therefore need a
sense of autonomy, the less that you build a life on your own terms, the
more you are going to sabotage opportunities and feel drained and
exhausted when you “should” feel happy.The more you lean into fulfilling your core needs, the more your
commitment symptoms will disappear.
Once you understand what a person really wants, you will be able to
explain the intricacies of their habits and behaviors. You will be able to
predict down to the detail what they will do in any given situation. More
importantly, once you start asking yourself what you really want, you’ll be
able to stop battling the symptoms and start addressing the only issue that
has ever really existed in your life, which is living out of alignment with
your core needs and, therefore, your core purpose.
CONFRONTING REPRESSED EMOTIONS
AND TAKING ACTION
There is a difference between understanding why we self-sabotage and the
act of no longer self-sabotaging.
This means that once we understand the root and purpose of the behavior,
we adjust it. We adapt. Overcoming self-sabotage is not just a matter of
understanding why you’re holding yourself back; it is being able to take
action in the direction that you want and need to, even if it is initially
uncomfortable or triggering.
This is a very important part of the process, because you are essentially
going to be confronting the exact emotions you have been trying to avoid.
When you stop engaging in self-sabotaging behavior, repressed emotions
that you weren’t even aware of will start to come up, and you might feel
even worse than you did before.
The thing about overcoming self-sabotage is that we don’t often need to be
told what to do. We know what we want to do, and we know what we need
to do. It is simply that we are being held back by our fear of feeling. To
begin to unravel this emotional holding pattern, we can work through the
following to find more ease and space and freedom while we change our
lives.THE MOST COMMON EMOTIONS
THAT ARISE WHILE YOU’RE BREAKING
SELF-SABOTAGING BEHAVIORS
The first feeling you are likely to confront is resistance. This is that
generalized sense of being “stuck” or your body feeling so tense that it is
almost “hard,” as though you are hitting a wall. This feeling is usually a
masking emotion that is preventing you from actually being aware of the
sensations beneath it which are more acute.
When you start to feel resistance, you don’t want to just “push through it.”
In fact, trying to do that means you’ll keep hitting the same wall that you’re
up against already. You’re going to strengthen the self-sabotaging behavior
because you aren’t really solving the problem by just trying to override it.
Instead, start asking the right questions.
Why do I feel this way?
What is this feeling trying to tell me about the action I am trying to take?
Is there something I need to learn here?
What do I need to do to honor my needs right now?
Then you have to reconnect to your inspiration or your vision for life. Get
clear on why you want to take this action and make a change. When your
motivation is the fact that you want to live a different and better existence,
you’re going to find that a lot of the resistance fades because you’re being
pushed by a vision that’s greater than your fear.
In other cases, you might run into other emotions such as anger, sadness, or
inadequacy. When those feelings come up, it is very important to make
space for them. This means to allow them to rise up in your body and
observe them. Watch where they make you tense up or constrict. Feel whatthey want you to feel. There is nothing worse than the fear of feeling the
emotion, as the experience itself is ultimately often just some physical
tension around which we’ve crafted a story.
Remember that a lot of these feelings may very well have a root in
something related to the self-sabotaging behavior. If you are angry about
how one of your parents treated you, it probably won’t come as a surprise
that the core feeling of why you are sabotaging your relationships is anger
and mistrust. The feelings associated with self-sabotage are not usually
random. In fact, they can lead us to deeper insights about what we really
need and what problems within us are still unresolved.
To fully release those feelings once you are aware of them, try writing
yourself a letter. Write something to your younger self or from the
perspective of your future self. Write down a mantra or a manifesto.
Remind yourself that you love yourself too much to settle for less, or that it
is okay to be angry in unfair or frustrating circumstances. Give yourself
space to experience the depth of your emotions so that they do not control
your behaviors.
DISCONNECTING ACTION
AND FEELING
The final and most important lesson to overcome self-sabotage is to learn to
disconnect action from feeling.
We are not held back in life because we are incapable of making change.
We are held back because we don’t feel like making change, and so we
don’t.
The truth is that you can have a vision of what you want, know that it is
undoubtedly right for you, and simply not feel like taking the action
required to pursue that path.
This is because our feelings are essentially wired as comfort systems. They
produce a “good” feeling when we are doing what we have always done—staying in familiarity. This, to our bodies, registers as “safety.” In other
cases, the accomplishments or changes that we are very happy about are
those that we also perceive to offer us a greater measure of safety. If the
achievement potentially puts us at risk in any way or exposes us to
something unfamiliar, we aren’t going to be happy about it initially, even if
it is a net positive for our lives.
However, we can actually train ourselves to prefer behaviors that are good
for us. This is how we restructure our comfort zones. We begin to crave
what we repeatedly do, but the first few times we do it, we often feel
uncomfortable. The trick is being able to override that initial hesitation so
we are guiding our lives with logic and reason, not emotionality.
Though your emotions are always valid and need to be validated, they are
hardly ever an accurate measure of what you are capable of in life. They are
not always an accurate reflection of reality. All your feelings know is what
you’ve done in the past, and they are attached to what they’ve drawn
comfort from.
You may feel as though you are worthless, but you most certainly are not.
You may feel as though there is no hope, but there most certainly is. You
may feel as though everyone dislikes you, but that is probably a gross over-
exaggeration. You may think everyone is judging you, but that is a
misperception.
Most importantly, you may feel as though you cannot take action, when you
most certainly can. You simply do not feel willing, because you are not used
to it.
By using logic and vision to guide ourselves, we are able to identify a
different and better life experience. When we imagine this, we feel peaceful
and inspired. To rise up to meet this version of our lives, we must overcome
our resistance and discomfort. We will not feel happy initially, no matter
how “right” for us those actions are.
It is essential that you learn to take action before you feel like doing it.
Taking action builds momentum and creates motivation. These feelings willnot come to you spontaneously; you have to generate them. You have to
inspire yourself, you have to move. You have to simply begin and allow
your life and your energy to reorient itself to prefer the behaviors that are
going to move your life forward, not the ones that are keeping you held
back.