Eight
Steps to Taking Control of Every Situation in Your Life!
Like it or not, we are all gladiators.
We go to sleep and wake up in a social arena from which there
is no escape. Challenge upon challenge confronts us, walls
restrain us, and a mob of spectator's mocks, sneers, or cheers
us. Each and every day brings new battles whether we want
them or not and whether we're up to them or not. Life forces
us to face one skirmish after another - no choice in the matter.
What we can choose, though, is which kind of gladiator to
be, victor or victim.
Being a victim in this social arena translates into having
bad relationships.
Most people are victims - victims of their own perceptions.
That's because people don't develop and listen
to their own unique, authentic self. Rather they allow their
mental spectators - those little tyrants rattling around in
their heads - to tell them second by second how to fight their
battles, what they can and cannot do. These tyrants applaud
and they hiss, they encourage and they discourage.
These mental spectators are the memories
of the judgments of real-life people. For example, it's the
memory of your aunt saying, "I hope you marry someone
rich, because you're not going far on brains." It's the
echo of your father growling, "You've got a back problem
- no spine."
And their influence over your relationships
can't be overestimated.
Millions of people accept the judgments of their mental spectators
as the truth and, therefore, the mediocre results that come
from believing those judgments.
With so many people living this way, the question becomes,
is this the way I have to live? Fortunately, the answer is
not unless you want to.
Once you identify your mental spectators - and your interactions
with them - you can move beyond victim and assume the role
of victor.
What it takes are eight steps for getting
command, eight steps you can apply to most any situation you
want altered. You can positively influence your relationships,
your employment options, any aspect of your life.
Let's look at the steps.
1. Define What Ails You.
Ask, what's my problem? Am I a jealous weasel, troubled that
others have what I want? Am I ticked off most of the time?
Am I sad and whiney? Anxiety ridden? Moody? All of the above?
Without this step, you're doomed. It will take personal courage,
but you won't get results without identifying what ails you.
2. Discover the Effects.
Ask, how are my problems affecting my life? Am I a lousy parent,
a friendless dork, a backstabber, a slut, a drunk, a junkie?
Am I none of the above, but someone who is less than I could
be? This step requires absolute self-honesty, but the truth
will help set you free.
3. Seek the Source.
Ask, from where are my problems coming? Who are my real and
my mental spectators? What do my mental spectators look like,
say, and do? Exactly who or what is keeping me from taking
command of my life? This could be one of the most incredible
experiences of your life. You will look into the abyss and
see who is looking back.
4. Identify Your Role.
Ask, how am I contributing to my problems? What is my responsibility
in all this?
Did I decide to be a garbage disposal? Do I beat myself to
death trying to please others? Do I expect things of myself
that are unfair? Do I treat myself as a friend or an enemy?
Do I allow my mental spectators to drive me to distraction,
depression, anger, anxiety? Recognizing your role in your
own problems is a positive - but scary - step toward knowing
yourself and gaining personal command.
5. State Your Desires.
Ask, what do I specifically want to do about my problems?
Do I want to be a doormat, a slut, a drunk, a friendless geek?
Or do I want to rule my mental spectators? Do I want to stand
up to a spectator, real or imagined, who puts me down? Do
I want to take command of my education, my bank account, my
relationships? Until you can actually list your desires in
the order of their importance, you will be a victim. However,
once you do
this, you are on your way to being a victor.
6. Seek Options.
Ask, what are my options, and in what order should I place
them? What is the first option I should concentrate on? The
second one? The third? If you have a soul-sucking hangover
most mornings, you might opt to give up your booze buddies
for some real friends. Secondly, take the money you normally
spend at bars and deposit it in a college fund for yourself
or your kids. If, instead, you're a workaholic and you want
to spend more time with your kids, then DO IT. Very few people
on their deathbed have said, "If I could live life all
over again, I'd spend more of it at work and less with people
I love." Choices are involved here, but by weighing options
and alternatives, and then making personal choices, you are
taking command. Do this and you'll begin to gain real power.
7. Learn Winning Techniques.
Ask, how do I rule my real and my mental spectators? Must
I collapse in a heap when they point thumbs down? How can
I learn to take charge on every level and get a grip on my
life? There is no "magic" involved, but you might
feel as if there is. Unlike a vanquished gladiator falling
at the whim of spectators, you decide your own course.
8. Master Your Relationships.
Ask, what more can I do to master my relationships by strengthening
myself and my perceptions? How do I take command right now
in developing my own identification and self-worth? Congratulations!
You're working on the one person in the entire world you can
work on - YOU! And any improvements in yourself can't help
but enrich your relationships with other people and the world
around you.
Although this is only a brief overview of
each of the eight steps for jump-starting your relationships
and taking control of your life, you'd be amazed at how significant
the effects of a few minor adjustments in perception can be.
- Terry Rich Hartley, Ph.D. |