How to Stop Hijacking Yourself

The hardest part about dealing with Monger is noticing she is even there. The Monger is wily and subtle. She isn't a giant in-your-face monster who storms into your life and makes you miserable. No, she is much more sneaky. This sneakiness is why we often don't notice our Monger. She plays there in our heads quietly, telling us how much we suck, how terrible we are, how we could be better, thinner, cuter, smarter, friendlier, more accommodating, etc. Because she is so subtle, so wily, so creative, we listen to her and believe her. So here are some ways your Monger might be showing up in your life, and you don't even recognize it.

Procrastination. 

Your inbox is growing and growing, and you set aside an hour to plow through it, but at the end of the hour, you have made minimal progress.

How your Monger hijacked it: One of the first emails you come across is from a co-worker wanting an answer to a pressing problem. The truth is, you don't have time to research the answer right now, and you need to tell her that your plate is full, and you won't be able to get to it for a couple of weeks. As you go to write, your Monger says, "Really, you are going to tell her your plate is full? Who do you think you are? OH, you are SOOO busy, right? Well, maybe if you were better organized, you wouldn't have to dump all your work on everyone else." So you write nothing. And that repeats for a few more emails until finally, unknowingly, you give up (who can blame you!?). Why would you want to listen to that added stress to your day?

Overly Emotional Response (aka a nine response to a two event) 

It is Saturday, and you and the family arrive home after a busy day of sports and birthday parties. Your husband asks a simple question, "What's for dinner?". And your immediate response is anger. You scream, "I don't know...why is it always my job to figure out what's for dinner!!"

How your Monger hijacked it: In the car on the way home, you are thinking about what to have for dinner, AND you also think that you don't want to cook. As you start to say to your husband, "Hey, let's grab something out or help me come up with dinner?" Your Mongers starts playing in your head, "You are such a terrible mom...you can't even come up with dinner!! Give me a break, how hard is that!! It is your job to make dinner, so just do it and quit whining". You get more and more irritated, fighting with the reality that you don't want to make dinner but also having the inner war that a 'good mom always makes dinner.' So when you get home, your husband asks a simple, logical question, what's for dinner, and you are ready to explode!!

There are countless ways these two scenarios play out.

You decide you want to do some landscaping in your yard, but you give up after only an hour. Because unknowingly, your inner critic was hammering you the whole time about how untalented you were.

You are excited to go to happy hour with your new co-workers, but you decide not to go at the last minute. Because your inner critic spent most of the day telling you that you were too old, and your co-workers don't want to hang out with an old person.

You want to share your new idea at the staff meeting, but you pass when it is your turn to speak because your inner critic spent the first half of the meeting telling you how stupid the idea was and that everyone will make fun of you.

Our Monger isn't subtle and sneaky. She sidetracks us, manipulates us, and convinces us that she knows what's best. She changes our behaviors, makes us engage in activities we don't want to, and prevents us from fully showing up in our lives. Her power comes from her quiet, determined methods. So the more you start noticing her preferred methods, the easier it is to take away her power.

Pay attention to the sneaky ways your Monger shows up. Notice how often you start a task you want to do, only to end up sidetracked and derailed and ask yourself:

What happened here?

What was my inner dialogue before I quit?

Notice when you have a super emotional response to a minimal crime and ask yourself. What happened here? What was my inner dialogue before I quit?

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How to Not Be Paralyzed by Your Inner Critic