-ceeded.
This first post on my new blog is about success and all the reasons one might not achieve it. Fear, distraction, self sabotage, lack of discipline, lack of confidence, etc. There are infinite reasons and/or excuses for why one may never find success no matter how badly one wants it.
There are also different levels of success and different meanings for everyone. For example, I have seven published novels. I am a successful author. But, am I really? To others maybe, to me, not at all. I measure my success in different ways. Yea, I'm proud I finished and published seven novels and I have readers who enjoy them. I am making money, enough to cover what I would make working part time at my old job, which means I get to be home with my kids.
Being home with my kids was a personal dream of mine and I have achieved it. I succeeded. But, it would not be happening if not for my husband and his job which provides the majority of our family income. Therefore, my success is diminished. As an author I want to be earning more, publishing more, reaching more, more, more, more. That just isn't the case right now.
Success is hard. Everyone knows this, but why it is hard is different for every person. For me, its hard because I've never had great success at anything. My middle school chorus was exceptional. We won awards and we were better than the area high schools. But, that isn't
my success, it was
our success. I've never worked for and won anything all by myself. I've never tried. Why?
I might have to ask a therapist about that. What I do know, from the actual hypnotherapy education I learned but have not professionally used, is it that I subconsciously don't know how to succeed. It is unknown to me and therefore categorized as scary. I even will attempt to sabotage myself, mostly through procrastination. Why try if I'm only going to fail? I'm already outside my realm of comfort. There is only one job I KNOW I can do successfully, but I'm not doing it anymore.
I succeeded at being a veterinary technician. I was damn good at my job. But I didn't want to be a vet tech forever. I wanted to write, I wanted to publish, I wanted to be home wiping my kids, not wiping dog butts. I also wanted to make more money. Vet techs don't make good money. It's not a job you do for money. Neither is writing, but with writing the potential is there. Being a vet tech, there is no potential to earn enough money to support a family, a house, a car, etc. There are fewer and fewer jobs that can support the American dream. A vet tech is not one of them and never was.
Enough negative, lets look at the positive. What am I doing to counter act my own self sabotage? How do I get out of the comfortable subconscious cage I built that tells me to be a vet tech and not an author? I needed motivation and that came in the form of my son. I had to go back to work six weeks postpartum. I worked grave yard shifts and came home to care for a newborn. I had help from my husband, but only one of us had boobs that made milk. It was brutal, and financially it wasn't enough. We struggled, we've
been struggling. I'm done struggling. He was just starting his career, and I was beginning to see that I needed to start mine if I ever wanted to see the day where I wasn't just a vet tech, but an author and a mom who could support her family without struggling, and BE THERE.
My successes have been small, but I haven't been a vet tech for over a year and I spend every day with my two favorite people.
Now I will write about how I'm going to make my successes bigger. One of the hypnotherapy tools I learned is called Mental Bank, created by Dr. John Kappas.
"So what is it that you desire? A happy relationship? A higher income?
The Mental Bank Program puts you in the driver's seat for programming
your subconscious mind to achieve those goals and attract those
opportunities automatically."
Click
here for more info about the Mental Bank Program.
Here is a picture of my Mental Bank ledger. I made it myself :)
I will admit I'm not the best at keeping it going. Change takes work and so does success. I won't achieve either unless I put in the effort. Mental Bank is so easy its stupid, so there isn't I good excuse except maybe my own self sabotage. The mind wants homeostasis. It wants to stay the same. When the process of change begins you may find that the biggest hurdle is yourself. I have found that to be true for myself. My biggest walls are the ones I built. I will have to be ruthless with my sledge hammer, metaphorically speaking.
I am also upping my social media participation, hence the blog. I've got to put myself out there (something this introvert hates doing) so readers can find me. Its all uncomfortable and scary, but necessary, for myself and my kids.
Cheers to success,
Ella