You Are What You Think
By David Stoop
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About this ebook
In You Are What You Think, David Stoop shows readers how to use self-talk to make positive changes in their attitudes and beliefs. Self-talk can be private speech, thoughts, or external speech, all of which shape emotions and behavior for good or bad. This popular book, previously published as Self-Talk, will help readers overcome stress, guilt, depression, anxiety, and anger; release the power of faith; choose healthy, positive thoughts; and more.
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You Are What You Think - David Stoop
Stoop
1
THE SEARCH FOR SELF-CONTROL
A man without self-control is as defenseless as a city with broken-down walls.
Proverbs 25:28 TLB
Attitude is everything! Every motivational speaker underlines that message. All coaches hammer that truth home to their players. Anyone working with other people knows how important attitude is in determining the successful outcome of any task. The apostle Paul emphasized the importance of our attitude when he wrote,
Now your attitudes and thoughts must all be constantly changing for the better" (Eph. 4:23 TLB ).
The importance of attitude seems so clear to us when we look at other people. How often do we think or say about one of our children or our husband or wife, They have an attitude problem!
We see people who have the greatest intentions and whose motives are spiritually and morally sound but who cannot succeed because their attitude is negative and self-critical.
Paradoxically, we want God’s very best for ourselves and our relationships. We have right and good intentions; and we prayerfully and thoughtfully set goals for ourselves. But then we fall again and again into the same routines and patterns of behavior that keep us right where we’ve always been—where we don’t want to be. Experience has proven over and over that good intentions and the best goal-setting skills simply aren’t enough.
Knowledge is never enough either. Lots of people have all kinds of impressive credentials and have accumulated volumes of important knowledge and skills, but they have never really been able to get their lives moving in any direction. We look at them and shake our heads, thinking of all that wasted potential, and wonder why they put all that effort into getting ready
when it appears to everyone watching that they don’t intend to ever get started.
The one thing, from a human perspective, that seems to make the difference between those who succeed and those who fail is attitude. No matter who you are, attitude really is everything—it’s what makes the difference in every aspect of life.
OK, but even if we agree that attitude is everything, it still sounds so superficial. When I face a problem,
we protest, I immediately want to work on my goals or on expanding my knowledge base. It can’t be as simple as changing my attitude!
What we can so clearly see as the issue in someone else just doesn’t seem to be that evident, or important, when we look at ourselves. Perhaps it’s because our own attitudes are so much a part of us that we really can’t identify them. Or if and when we do recognize a problem with our attitude, it just frustrates us because we don’t know how to change it.
Our World Feels Out of Control
All too often our attitudes are the by-product of our experiences in an out-of-control world. And when pressed to change our attitudes, our internal response may be, How? I feel so helpless, so out of control!
And really, how can a person feel in control when the newspapers confront us every day with increasing evidence that the world out there is out of control? Prices soar unchecked. The national debt reaches beyond the incomprehensible figure of a trillion dollars. The environment is rapidly being depleted of its resources. The air is polluted, water is contaminated, and our food increasingly needs enrichment.
But the evidence of an outer world beyond our control pales in significance when compared to our inner feelings of not being able to control our own personal lives. Every day I encounter this in my work with people.
Families are out of control. Divorces have outnumbered marriages for several years. Young adults shy away from marriage on the premise that they can’t find any examples of happily married couples. Children from fractured homes feel divided and powerless—how can a child possibly keep track of four sets of grandparents and all the step-relationships within an ever-changing family structure? Too many children grow up in a chaotic world and know they are out of control.
How do kids cope with these feelings? Many, sadly, slip into the drug culture. The statistics are frightening. Did you know that the money generated through the sale of drugs tops that of even our country’s largest corporations?
Because of the chaos and stress, many of us end up not feeling well. Over 40 million Americans suffer from allergies; and 30 million suffer from sleep-onset insomnia. It’s estimated that 25 million people in the United States are afflicted with hypertension (high blood pressure). Around 20 million of us have ulcers, and too many millions suffer from jagged nerves to the point of needing tranquilizers. And more than that, one out of three persons has a weight problem, creating unhealthy cycles of weight loss and gain.
Health specialists used to argue over which diseases could be classified as psychosomatic (beginning in the mind). Today most medical research indicates that between 75 to 90 percent of all illness is caused by the stresses of modern life. In fact, many researchers no longer ask which diseases are stress related; instead, they ask how much of every disease is stress related.
We can numb our pain, distract ourselves from it, project it, and try to deny it’s even there; but none of these escapes can truly relieve our pain. Only an honest understanding of ourselves and our God can do that.
Understanding Our Emotions
Psychologists have traditionally agreed that we all experience three basic emotions: love, anger, and fear. We can liken these to the three primary colors: red, yellow, and blue. Every color, shade, and hue we see is one of these three primary colors or some combination of them. In the same way, every feeling we experience in life is one of the primary emotions or, more likely, some combination of them.
To better understand the three primary emotions, it helps to see that each one has movement and direction. Love is the emotion that always moves us toward someone or something. When I love someone, I want to be with that person. I move toward him or her. I want to hear his or her voice and feel his or her touch. If I am in love with something—for example, chocolate—I find that I always end up at the candy store whenever I go to the mall. Love for chocolate draws me there, and I may not even be aware of it until my senses tell me I am there.
The movement of anger is not only toward but also against someone or something. Anger is a separating emotion. I move toward the object of my anger, but with a marked intensity that either strikes out against that object or pushes it away.
The movement of fear is always away from someone or something. If I am afraid, I back away. I want to get away from the object of my fear. If I am afraid to ride in elevators, I keep my distance from them. If I am afraid of confrontation, I will back away from the person involved and avoid any possible conflict with him or her.
Anger and fear, emotions that are opposite in direction, have been called the emotions that trigger the fight/flight syndrome. Anger prepares me to fight—to move against and push away. Fear prepares me to take flight—to move away from the threat. Both anger and fear are reactions to a threat. Interestingly, what takes place physiologically (in my body) when I am angry is identical to what happens when I am fearful. The difference is in my perception of the threat—how I see that which is threatening me.
For example, let’s say you are visiting a friend of yours in a distant city. He lives in a part of the town that seems scary and dangerous to you. One evening you borrow his car and return to his home quite late. You can find a parking space only several blocks away.
As you lock the car and start walking toward your friend’s house, you hear footsteps behind you. You momentarily slow down; so do the footsteps. You speed up; so do they. You start running; so do they. What would any normal human being experience in that situation? Fear! Lots of it!
You run toward your friend’s house, but just as you get the key in the door, the footsteps come up behind you and stop. A voice behind you says, Ha! I gotcha!
You turn around and see that the footsteps belong to your friend. Now what do you feel? Anger! Instantly!
What happened? For one thing, your emotions changed from fear to anger in a split second. And the reason they did is based on the other thing that changed—your perception of the threat. When the threat was the unknown, the pursuing footsteps, you imagined all kinds of horrible things that could happen if your pursuer caught up with you. When the threat became known and was seen to no longer be a threat, anger became the natural response.
If that friend is also your fiancé, you can see how the three primary emotions of love, anger, and fear can get all mixed up, and we can move from love to fear to anger—and back and forth between them—in a confusing pattern.
When we add to these three emotions the myriad of feelings we experience, it gets even more complex. We use the term feelings to describe worry, guilt, anxiety, sadness, depression, happiness, joy, contentment, and so forth. But I can better understand this myriad of feelings if I can understand the three basic emotions and how they work. My understanding of their movement will also help me sort out what I am experiencing emotionally when I am in a sequence of events like those described above that have all three emotions working at the same time.
Another important point to understand about the three basic emotions is how they are related to self-control. The emotions of anger and fear are reactions to threatening situations or people. Love is the emotion of self-control, for when love is our response, we are able to act, not react, to life.
Overwhelmed or Overcontrolling
We respond in one of two ways when we are confused by our feelings and emotions. We either become overwhelmed, allowing our feelings to spill over onto those around us and draw them into a confusing drama; or we become overcontrolling, holding a tight rein on any expression of our feelings or emotions while also attempting to carefully control everything that goes on around us.
When we are overwhelmed by our world, we retreat into something that appears safe—a place to hide. But we soon discover that we are still out of control and need to find new places to hide or new ways to escape.
Marge is a good example of someone overwhelmed by life. She’s friendly and caring, always taking the time to listen to her friend’s problems. But lately she finds herself drained by the experience. As she lies awake at night, unable to sleep, her mind races back over all the things she needed to get done that day but didn’t. Or she lies there wrestling with possible solutions to help her friend. Anything but sleep.
When she drags herself out of bed in the morning, she’s confronted with yesterday’s dirty dishes—plus a few from the day before. The pile of dirty clothes seems to touch the ceiling. And then the phone starts to ring. In between calls Marge collapses on the sofa, paralyzed by the thought of all that needs to be done. Or in desperation she heads out to the shopping mall just to try to get away from everyone and everything.
When she tries to discipline her kids, they use a variety of ways to distract her attention until she finally gives in, throwing her hands up in despair. Her kids learned long ago how to hook into her feeling of being overwhelmed and work it to their advantage.
Marge’s craft room spills over into other rooms in the house. She’s interested in different projects, starting them with enthusiasm but seldom seeing anything through to completion. She wishes she weren’t such a procrastinator.
Occasionally Marge gets her work all caught up and feels a degree of control over her life. She vows never to let things get out of control again—a vow that is usually broken in a couple of days. She longs for an effective way to organize her life, but she doesn’t have any idea how to begin.
Sometimes the feeling of being overwhelmed takes the form of a phobia, as in Donna’s case. She is afraid of crowds, afraid of heights, and afraid of being closed in. When she first came to my office, she sat on the edge of the couch with her eyes glued to the door. As we talked she related how her fears had recently intensified.
Usually her family adapts to her phobias. They know they will have to arrive at church late so she can stand in the back near the door. They also know they will leave early so Donna can avoid having to talk with anyone.
Her husband, Fred, doesn’t schedule many social commitments. When he must, Donna has to insure her safety with the same tactic—arrive late and leave early. Lately they have had to leave several social engagements earlier than planned, for Donna has experienced anxiety attacks that included fainting spells.
Her phobias appear to be aggravated by Fred’s upcoming promotion to head up his company’s new plant. Donna’s phobias no longer appear to be a safe place for her to hide, for Fred’s new position will make new and threatening demands on her.
Inside, Donna’s emotions rage like a hurricane. She obviously doesn’t faint on purpose. And she really can’t control her phobias. Every time she tries to socialize, her anxiety attacks get worse. She is overwhelmed by emotions and feelings she can’t even begin to understand. Her family’s empathy only adds feelings of guilt to her fears.
Marge and Donna are examples of two people overwhelmed by emotions and feelings. From outward appearances you might not recognize that either of them is out of control. But inside, their emotions and feelings swing violently, adding to their fears and feelings of frustration.
The other response, becoming overcontrolling, can be just as devastating. But overcontrolling people are even better at hiding the conflict. This method of coping leads such people to push themselves and to push those around them. And they will push until something snaps, usually their health. Then they are even more out of control.
Peggy is an expert at overcontrolling her emotions. Her attempts at control push her to the point of feeling as though she will explode. But outwardly Peggy is regarded as Mrs. Efficient! Her home is always spotless, even though she would be quick to point out the less-than-perfect spot. Her meals are always on time and look as though a dietitian planned them. Younger mothers and wives look at Peggy with feelings of awe and envy. Everything she does is done well. And she stays so busy that she wears everyone else out just watching her.
Everyone in the family toes the line. Her kids are afraid to step out of line for fear of being put on restriction. Whenever they try to protest, they are put into a lose
position and forced to retreat. Even her husband seems to be afraid to challenge her routine. So he quietly fits into Peggy’s scheduling of the household.
Underneath the surface, though, Peggy is a churning sea of questions and self-doubt. She wonders if she can do anything right. She’s never satisfied with the way her house looks, the way the kids behave, or the way her life is headed. Sometimes she wishes she could die so she could relieve her family of the burden she