So how do you stay calm, composed and maintain self esteem in a
tough environment? Here are some tips you may to consider as a starter guide to
self improvement.
Imagine yourself as a Dart Board. Everything and everyone else
around you may become Dart Pins, at one point or another. These dart pins will
destroy your self esteem and pull you down in ways you won’t even remember.
Don’t let them destroy you, or get the best of you. So which dart pins should you avoid?
Dart Pin #1 : Negative Work Environment
Beware of “dog eat dog” theory where everyone else is fighting just
to get ahead. This is where non-appreciative people usually thrive. No one will
appreciate your contributions even if you miss lunch and dinner, and stay up
late. Most of the time you get to work too much without getting help from
people concerned. Stay out of this, it
will ruin your self esteem. Competition is at stake anywhere. Be healthy enough
to compete, but in a healthy competition that is.
Dart Pin #2: Other People’s Behavior
Bulldozers, brown nosers, gossipmongers, whiners, backstabbers,
snipers, people walking wounded, controllers, naggers, complainers, exploders,
patronizers, sluffers… all these kinds of people will pose bad vibes for your
self esteem, as well as to your self improvement scheme.
Dart Pin #3: Changing Environment
You can’t be a green bug on a brown field. Changes challenge our paradigms.
It tests our flexibility, adaptability and alters the way we think. Changes
will make life difficult for awhile, it may cause stress but it will help us
find ways to improve our selves. Change will be there forever, we must be
susceptible to it.
Dart Pin #4: Past Experience
It’s okay to cry and say “ouch!” when we experience pain. But don’t
let pain transform itself into fear. It might grab you by the tail and swing
you around. Treat each failure and mistake as a lesson.
Dart Pin #5: Negative World View
Look at what you’re looking at. Don’t wrap yourself up with all the
negativities of the world. In building self esteem, we must learn how to make
the best out of worst situations.
Dart Pin #6: Determination Theory
The way you are and your behavioral traits is said to be a mixed end
product of your inherited traits (genetics), your upbringing (psychic), and
your environmental surroundings such as your spouse, the company, the economy
or your circle of friends. You have your own identity. If your father is a
failure, it doesn’t mean you have to be a failure too. Learn from other
people’s experience, so you’ll never have to encounter the same mistakes.
Sometimes, you may want to wonder if some people are born leaders or
positive thinkers. NO. Being positive, and staying positive is a choice.
Building self esteem and drawing lines for self improvement is a choice, not a
rule or a talent. God wouldn’t come down from heaven and tell you – “George,
you may now have the permission to build self esteem and improve your
self.”
In life, its hard to stay tough specially when things and people
around you keep pulling you down. When we get to the battle field, we should
choose the right luggage to bring and armors to use, and pick those that are
bullet proof. Life’s options give us arrays of more options. Along the battle,
we will get hit and bruised. And wearing a bullet proof armor ideally means
‘self change’. The kind of change which comes from within. Voluntarily. Armor
or Self Change changes 3 things: our
attitude, our behavior and our way of thinking.
Building self esteem will eventually lead to self improvement if we
start to become responsible for who we are, what we have and what we do. Its
like a flame that should gradually spread like a brush fire from inside and
out. When we develop self esteem, we take control of our mission, values and
discipline. Self esteem brings about
self improvement, true assessment, and determination. So how do you start
putting up the building blocks of self esteem? Be positive. Be contented and
happy. Be appreciative. Never miss an opportunity to compliment. A positive way
of living will help you build self esteem, your starter guide to self
improvement.
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