When Nothing Is Working: How to Keep Moving Forward When Hope Feels Gone

A psychologist-informed, real-world guide for when negative thoughts won’t stop and hope feels like it’s gone
There are seasons in life when it isn’t just “a bad day.” It’s waking up with dread in your chest, dragging yourself through the hours, and going to sleep (if you can) feeling like you’ve failed again. It’s the mind that never shuts up, constantly narrating why you’re behind, why you’re broken, why nothing will change, why you should stop trying.
And maybe the hardest part is that you are still trying. You’re hanging on to a thin thread—a glimmer—, but the glimmer feels too small to matter. You wonder: If I’m still here, why don’t I feel any better? Why can’t I… turn it around?
This article is for that place.
Not a “just be grateful” place. Not a “positive vibes” place. The real place.
What you need here isn’t a motivational quote. You need traction: ways to reduce the mental pain and restore a sense of agency—little by little—until your system can breathe again.
And we’re going to do that in a grounded, psychology-based way that you can actually use today.


Part 1: What’s happening in your mind is not your fault—and it’s not the full truth
1) Your brain is not failing. It’s adapting.
When life repeatedly teaches you that effort doesn’t lead to relief, your brain does something that looks like “giving up.” But it’s often a survival adaptation: the nervous system conserves energy by lowering motivation, optimism, and initiative.
This can show up as:
• Exhaustion (even after sleep)
• Numbness or “flat” emotions
• Irritability or sudden anger
• Brain fog
• Loss of interest
• Feeling heavy
• Feeling trapped
• Feeling detached from your own life
This is not a weakness. It’s a brain-body system that’s been overdrawn.
2) Negative thoughts aren’t just “thoughts”—they’re often symptoms
When your mind is flooded with negativity, it can feel like a moral failing or a personality defect. But clinically, persistent negative thinking is often a feature of:
• depression,
• anxiety,
• trauma stress,
• chronic overwhelm,
• burnout,
• grief,
• or prolonged uncertainty.
In these states, your brain’s threat system tends to hijack attention. It’s scanning for danger and disappointment. It starts producing “protective” thoughts like:
• “Don’t get your hopes up.”
• “You’ll fail anyway.”
• “Why bother?”
• “You’re behind.”
• “It’s never going to work.”
These thoughts feel like realism, but they’re often state-dependent predictions—not accurate forecasts.
3) The mind becomes a courtroom, and you become the defendant
One of the most painful parts of this experience is that your mind doesn’t just feel bad—it starts prosecuting you.
You wake up and immediately:
• review your mistakes,
• replay conversations,
• measure your life against an impossible standard,
• anticipate rejection,
• and scan for signs that you’re doomed.
That’s not you being “dramatic.” That’s the inner critic taking over as a misguided attempt to prevent future pain: If I punish you enough, maybe you’ll change. If I keep you afraid, maybe you’ll stay safe.
Except it doesn’t work. It just drains you.
Today’s goal:
We stop trying to “win” against your mind. Instead, we reduce the mind’s control and rebuild your ability to move.


Part 2: Redefine “positive energy” so it’s realistic in the dark
When people say “stay positive,” it can feel insulting. Because you’re not choosing negativity—you’re surviving it.
So, let’s define positive energy in a way that fits reality:
Positive energy = life force directed toward care, agency, and meaningful action—despite the presence of pain.
Not happiness.
Not constant optimism.
Not pretending.
Positive energy, in this sense, can look like:
• getting out of bed when you don’t want to,
• drinking water,
• going outside for two minutes,
• asking someone to check in on you,
• taking one small step toward stability,
• refusing to let your thoughts dictate your behavior.
That’s positive energy. It’s courage in micro-doses.


Part 3: The “Today Toolkit” — things you can do within the next hour
If you’re reading this while suffering, don’t try to absorb everything. Pick one of the following and do it.
Tool #1: The 90-Second Nervous System Reset (physiology first)
When you’re overwhelmed, your brain’s reasoning system goes offline. You can’t think your way out if your body is in alarm.
Do this:

  1. Two physiological sighs
    o Inhale through your nose
    o Top it off with a second quick inhale
    o Exhale slowly through your mouth
    Repeat twice.
  2. Drop your shoulders and unclench your jaw.
  3. Press your feet into the floor and name 5 things you see.
    This takes 90 seconds. It won’t fix your life. But it can reduce the intensity enough for you to choose the next step.
    Tool #2: “Name the story” (stop fusing with thoughts)
    Your brain is generating a narrative. You don’t have to argue with it—label it.
    When the mind says:
    • “Nothing works.”
    You say:
    • “I’m noticing the Nothing Works story.”
    When it says:
    • “No hope.”
    You say:
    • “My mind is offering the No Hope story.”
    This creates space. Even 2% space helps.
    Tool #3: The 5-Minute Rescue Action (traction over transformation)
    Ask:
    “What is one five-minute action that would make my next hour slightly easier?”
    Examples:
    • Shower (even a quick one)
    • Put on clean clothes
    • Take out trash
    • Wash five dishes
    • Step outside and feel the air
    • Open one email and respond with one sentence
    • Make your bed (not for aesthetics—for momentum)
    Then do it like a robot—no inspiration required.
    Tool #4: The “Borrowed Hope” text
    Text someone this:
    “Hey. I’m having a rough day, and I’m stuck in my head. I don’t need advice—can you check in on me later or send something kind?”
    This matters because hopelessness thrives in isolation.
    Tool #5: The “Two Lists” reality anchor
    On paper, write:
    Not in my control:
    (put 3–5 things)
    In my control or influence:
    (put 3–5 things)
    Then choose one from the second list and do it.
    Even a tiny agency reduces helplessness.

Part 4: Why “nothing is working” often means the wrong target is being treated
This is a huge psychological trap: you try to fix your life by fixing outcomes, but your real problem is capacity.
If your nervous system is depleted, you may not need a new strategy yet—you need:
• rest that actually restores,
• reduction of mental noise,
• consistent nutrition,
• stabilization routines,
• and social support.
Otherwise, you’re trying to build a house with no tools.
A useful metaphor:
If your phone is at 2% battery, you don’t open 20 apps and yell at it to run faster. You charge it.
When you’re at 2%, “trying harder” can be the wrong move.


Part 5: The three phases of moving forward when you feel hopeless
Phase 1: Stabilize (reduce suffering and chaos)
Goal: lower intensity, reduce self-harmful patterns, restore basics.
Phase 2: Rebuild capacity (small routines and small wins)
Goal: increase energy and confidence through repeatable actions.
Phase 3: Reconnect to meaning (values and purpose)
Goal: not “big dreams,” but reasons to live today.
You don’t skip Phase 1. People try—and it collapses.
So, let’s do this in order.


Phase 1: Stabilize — How to survive the days that feel unbearable
A) Stop feeding the mind’s worst habits
When you’re suffering, your brain craves behaviors that temporarily numb pain but worsen it later.
Common ones:
• doomscrolling,
• isolating,
• sleeping all day,
• overworking,
• alcohol or substance reliance,
• emotional eating or not eating,
• endless rumination.
Pick one to reduce by 20% today. Not eliminate. Reduce.
Example:
• If you doomscroll for 2 hours, reduce to 90 minutes and use the remaining 30 minutes for a walk or shower.
B) Create a “Minimum Viable Day”
When life feels impossible, plan a day you can succeed at.
Minimum Viable Day checklist:
• drink water
• eat something with protein
• step outside for 2 minutes
• one hygiene action (shower/brush teeth/wash face)
• one tiny task (5–10 minutes)
• one connection (text/short call/being around people)
If you do only this, you did not fail. You stabilized.
C) Use “shame-proof” language
Your brain may say:
• “I’m pathetic.”
Replace it with:
• “I’m in a hard season.”
• “My system is overloaded.”
• “This is what stress looks like.”
This is not a word game. Shame increases cortisol and avoidance. Compassion increases resilience and follow-through.
D) Crisis plan for spirals (do this before the next spiral)
Write this on a note in your phone:
When I spiral, I will:

  1. Do 2 physiological sighs
  2. Drink water
  3. Step outside for 2 minutes
  4. text one person: “Can you say hi?”
  5. Choose one 5-minute task.
    If spirals include thoughts of self-harm, add:
    • contact 988 (U.S.) or your local crisis line
    • remove access to means
    • be near another human

Phase 2: Rebuild capacity — the daily system that creates “positive energy”
This is where you rebuild the ability to live.
The most important principle:
Mood follows action more often than action follows mood.
When you’re depressed or hopeless, you cannot wait until you feel like it. You act first—tiny—and let the brain catch up.
The “3 Anchors” system (simple and powerful)
Every day, hit three anchors:

  1. Body anchor (10–20 minutes)
    • walk
    • stretch
    • shower
    • basic strength
    • anything physical
  2. Life anchor (10–20 minutes)
    • one admin task
    • one email
    • one bill
    • one appointment scheduled
    • one chore
  3. Meaning anchor (10–20 minutes)
    • music
    • reading
    • journaling
    • prayer/meditation
    • art
    • nature
    • learning
    This system is the antidote to helplessness because it creates evidence:
    • “I can care for myself.”
    • “I can manage life.”
    • “I can touch meaning.”
    Why this works psychologically
    Hopelessness is partly a loss of agency. These anchors restore agency through repetition.
    You’re not trying to feel great. You’re trying to prove to your brain that you can still steer.
    The “If-Then” plan (for low-motivation brains)
    Motivation is unreliable. Use automatic decisions.
    Examples:
    • If I wake up and feel dread, then I do 2 sigh breaths + water.
    • If I sit down and start scrolling, then I stand up and walk to the door for 60 seconds.
    • If I can’t focus, then I do a 5-minute timer and do “start-only” work.
    This reduces decision fatigue.

Phase 3: Reconnect to meaning — hope that doesn’t require certainty
Here’s the truth: sometimes your life won’t change quickly. But meaning can exist even inside pain. That’s not a slogan. It’s psychological survival.
Values vs. feelings
A feeling is weather. A value is a compass.
Even when you feel hopeless, you can still live one value today, like:
• honesty,
• courage,
• love,
• responsibility,
• faith,
• creativity,
• service,
• growth.
Ask:
“What kind of person do I want to be in this chapter—even if it hurts?”
Then choose a tiny value-based action:
• love: send a kind message
• courage: make the appointment
• growth: read 2 pages
• service: do one helpful thing
• faith: say one prayer
Hope often returns as a side effect of values-based living.


Part 6: How to deal with relentless negative thoughts (the deep work)
Now let’s address the core of what you described: negative thoughts plague your every waking moment.
Step 1: Separate thoughts into three categories
Not all negative thoughts are the same. Treating them the same fails.
Write a list of your most common negative thoughts, then label each:

  1. Threat thoughts (anxiety)
    “Something bad will happen.”
  2. Worthy thoughts (shame)
    “I’m not enough.”
  3. Futility thoughts (depression)
    “Nothing matters / nothing will change.”
    Each category needs a different response.

Threat thoughts: respond with safety cues and planning
Anxiety hates uncertainty. Give it structure.
Try:
• “What is the smallest next step that increases safety or clarity?”
Examples:
• schedule a doctor visit
• check bank balance and write a plan
• make a list of options
• ask for help
Then stop. Anxiety will want more planning. Set a timer: 10 minutes max.


Worth thoughts: respond with compassion and evidence
Shame says: “You are bad.”
Respond with:
• “I’m suffering. That doesn’t mean I’m worthless.”
• “What would I say to someone I love in this state?”
Then list three pieces of evidence that you are trying:
• “I got out of bed.”
• “I’m reading this.”
• “I asked for help.”
Your brain needs proof.


Futility thoughts: respond with micro-hope and action
Depression says, “Nothing matters.”
Don’t argue. Instead:
• “Maybe. But I’m still going to do one small thing.”
Then take one action. This is crucial: depression loses power when you act without permission.


Part 7: The “Hope Ladder” — rebuilding hope from the bottom rung
If hope is gone, you don’t jump to “everything will be fine.” You climb.
Rung 1: “I can survive this hour.”
Actions:
• breathe
• water
• food
• outside
• contact
Rung 2: “I can make today 1% easier.”
Actions:
• tidy one small area
• prepare one simple meal
• shower
• pay one bill
• schedule one thing
Rung 3: “I can make tomorrow a bit easier.”
Actions:
• set clothes out
• write a 3-line plan
• set an appointment
• ask someone to check in
Rung 4: “I can build a routine that supports me.”
Actions:
• the 3 anchors
Rung 5: “I can build a life I respect.”
That comes later. Don’t demand it now.


Part 8: A complete “Do This Today” plan (choose your level)
Level 1: Emergency day (you’re barely hanging on)
Do only these:

  1. water + protein
  2. 2 physiological sighs
  3. Step outside for 2 minutes
  4. text someone “hi.”
  5. one 5-minute task
    That’s a win.
    Level 2: Hard day (you can do a bit more)
    Add:
    • 10-minute walk
    • one life admin task
    • 15 minutes of meaning (music/reading/journaling)
    Level 3: Rebuild day (you’re ready to build traction)
    Do:
    • 20 minutes of movement
    • 20 minutes life task
    • 20 minutes meaning
    • 20 minutes connection (being around people counts)
    This is a powerful day.

Part 9: When you keep trying and still feel stuck—what to adjust
If you’ve been trying and nothing changes, these are the most common reasons:
1) You’re aiming too high, too fast
Your nervous system can’t comply. Lower the goal, increase consistency.
2) You’re doing growth without stability
You’re trying to “level up” while neglecting sleep, nutrition, and connection.
Stability first.
3) You’re alone in it
Some loads require support—therapy, community, trusted friends, coaching, and medical evaluation. Needing help is not failure.
4) There might be untreated depression/anxiety/trauma
If symptoms persist for weeks to months, consider professional care. That’s not surrender. That’s strategy.


Part 10: The reader’s personal worksheet (use this right now)
Step 1: Write your current pain in one sentence
Example:
• “I feel like nothing works and I’m exhausted by my own thoughts.”
Step 2: Identify your biggest drain (choose one)
• sleep
• isolation
• finances
• relationship
• health
• purpose
• grief
• work stress
Step 3: Choose one stabilizing action
From this list:
• make an appointment
• ask someone for support
• take a walk
• eat protein
• shower
• clean one small area
• write a simple plan
Step 4: Choose one “tomorrow help”
• set clothes out
• prep breakfast
• schedule one call
• write a 3-line plan
Step 5: Choose one meaningful action
• music
• prayer
• journal
• nature
• art
• reading
That’s youPlanan.


You don’t need to feel hopeful to act hopeful
The most important truth in this entire article is this:
You don’t wait for hope to show up. You behave like a person who deserves help and care—until hope has room to return.


A Simple 7-Day Positive Start Plan (Anyone Can Do This)


This plan is not about fixing your whole life in a week. It’s about creating traction—small actions that reduce mental weight, rebuild self-trust, and give your nervous system enough stability to start turning the wheel again.
Two rules for the week

  1. Keep it small. Keep it consistent.
    You’re not proving strength by doing a lot. You’re building strength by doing a little—daily.
  2. No zero days.
    If you can’t do the full plan, do the minimum version—even two minutes counts. Momentum grows from continuity.
    The daily “3 Anchors” (do these every day)
    Each day includes three anchors. They’re the foundation of positive energy because they restore agency.
  3. Body Anchor (10 minutes)
    Choose one: walk, stretch, shower, light exercise, step outside, and breathe.
  4. Life Anchor (10 minutes)
    Choose one: small chore, one email, one errand, one bill, one call.
  5. Meaning Anchor (10 minutes)
    Choose one: music, reading, journaling, prayer/meditation, art, nature, or learning.
    If 10 minutes is too long, do 2 minutes per anchor. The point is not intensity—it’s showing up.
    One extra daily practice: “Borrowed Hope.”
    Once per day, connect with one human in any small way:
    • text “hey.”
    • short phone call
    • sit near people (coffee shop counts)
    • support group, class, community space
    Isolation amplifies hopelessness. Connection reduces it—even if you don’t feel like talking.

Day 1: Stabilize Your System
Goal: lower the intensity. Make today survivable and slightly softer.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: 10-minute walk (or 2 minutes outside if that’s all you can do)
• Life Anchor: Drink water + eat something with protein (eggs, yogurt, nuts, chicken, protein bar)
• Meaning Anchor: Play one song that feels calming or grounding
Try this tool (2 minutes): The 90-Second Reset
• Two physiological sighs: inhale, top-off inhale, slow exhale (repeat twice)
• Press your feet into the floor, name 5 things you see
Borrowed Hope:
Text one person: “I’m having a rough day—can you just say hi?”
Minimum version (if you’re barely functioning):
• drink water
• step outside for 60 seconds
• send one text


Day 2: Make the Next 24 Hours Easier
Goal: create a small advantage for tomorrow.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: shower or stretch
• Life Anchor: choose one “tomorrow help”:
o set out clothes
o prep breakfast
o fill your water bottle
o tidy one small surface (just one)
• Meaning Anchor: write 3 sentences:

  1. “Today feels like _.”
  2. “One thing I can do is _.”
  3. “One thing I need is _.”
    Borrowed Hope:
    Spend 10 minutes around people (at a store, coffee shop, or library). You don’t have to talk.
    Minimum version:
    • set out clothes
    • 60 seconds outside
    • one sentence journal: “I’m still here.”

Day 3: Interrupt the Thought Spiral
Goal: stop letting thoughts act like commands.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: walk or light movement
• Life Anchor: do a 5-minute task you’ve been avoiding (set a timer)
• Meaning Anchor: try “Name the Story” for your main thought:
o “I’m noticing the ‘Nothing Works’ story.”
o “I’m noticing the ‘I’m Not Enough’ story.”
Bonus tool (3 minutes): Thought Dump + One Next Step
• Write every negative thought for 2 minutes (fast, messy).
• Then circle one next step you can take today (tiny).
Borrowed Hope:
Ask someone: “Can I talk for 5 minutes? No advice—listen.”
Minimum version:
• Label one thought as a “story.”
• do one 5-minute task


Day 4: Restore Agency with Small Wins
Goal: prove to your brain that you can still steer.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: 10 minutes outside + movement
• Life Anchor: choose one:
o clean one small area (a corner counts)
o pay one bill or make one call
o respond to one email
• Meaning Anchor: “Two Lists” exercise:
Two Lists (5 minutes):
• Not in my control: _ • In my control/influence: _
Pick one from the second list and do it.
Borrowed Hope:
Say hello to one person (cashier counts)—small social contact matters.
Minimum version:
• write 2 items per list
• do one tiny action from the control list


Day 5: Rebuild Hope Through Meaning (Not Mood)
Goal: reconnect with something that makes life feel less empty.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: walk or stretch
• Life Anchor: do one helpful thing for your future self:
o schedule an appointment
o organize one document
o refill meds/toiletries
o plan one simple meal
• Meaning Anchor: do one 15-minute “meaning activity”:
o music + headphones
o read 5 pages
o nature
o prayer/meditation
o art/creative work
Key mindset:
Hope is not a feeling you wait for—it’s something you practice by living your values for 15 minutes.
Borrowed Hope:
Share one honest sentence with someone safe: “I’ve been struggling.”
Minimum version:
• one song + one deep breath + one simple task


Day 6: Build Momentum with Structure
Goal: replace chaos with a simple scaffold.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: 10–20 minutes of movement
• Life Anchor: write a basic plan for tomorrow:
The 3-LinPlanan (2 minutes):

  1. One body thing tomorrow: _
  2. One life task tomorrow: _
  3. One meaningful thing tomorrow: _
    • Meaning Anchor: spend 10 minutes learning or reading something that supports your growth
    Borrowed Hope:
    Make one short plan with someone: coffee, a call, a walk—anything with a time.
    Minimum version:
    • write tomorrow’s 3 lines only

Day 7: Review, Keep What Works, Repeat
Goal: turn a good start into a sustainable pattern.
Do today:
• Body Anchor: outside + movement
• Life Anchor: tidy one small space
• Meaning Anchor: do a compassionate review:
Weekly Review (10 minutes):
• What helped even 1% this week?
• What made things worse?
• What 2 habits will I repeat next week?
• Who can I reach out to more regularly?
Borrowed Hope:
Thank one person who supported you—or tell someone you’re trying to build a better week.
Minimum version:
• write one sentence: “Next week I will repeat __.”


A “Bad Day” Alternative (so you don’t fall off the plan)
If a day hits you hard, do this 10-minute rescue routine instead of quitting:

  1. 2 physiological sighs
  2. Drink water
  3. Step outside for 2 minutes
  4. text one person “hi.”
  5. Do one 5-minute task
    That’s not failure. That’s resilience.

Does the 7-day plan work?
Because it targets the real roots of hopelessness:
• Body regulation lowers mental intensity
• Small wins rebuild confidence and agency
• Meaning actions reconnect you to purpose
• Connection reduces isolation-driven despair
• Structure prevents spirals from running on the day
You don’t need to feel hopeful to do hopeful actions. Start small, repeat daily, and let your mind catch up.
Visualize the Life You Truly Want — Quiet the Mind, See It Clearly, Start Becoming It
When you’re exhausted, discouraged, or stuck in survival mode, “visualize your dream life” can feel unrealistic—like imagining a mansion while you’re trying to keep the lights on. So this bonus is not about fantasy. It’s about using visualization the way psychologists often use it: as a tool to reduce mental noise, clarify what you actually want, and train your brain to notice the next right steps.
Visualization works best when it’s grounded in two truths:

  1. Your nervous system must feel calm enough to imagine a future.
  2. The future becomes believable when it’s tied to actions you can take.
    So, we’ll do this in a way that’s soothing, realistic, and immediately usable.

Why visualization can help (especially when you feel stuck)
Your brain is a prediction machine. When life has been painful, it predicts more pain. Visualization gently interrupts that pattern by giving your mind a new “map”—not as a promise, but as a direction.
When done well, visualization can:
• quiet intrusive thoughts by giving attention to a safer target,
• reconnect you to values (love, growth, freedom, peace),
• increase motivation by making the goal feel emotionally real,
• and help you spot opportunities your brain was filtering out.
The goal isn’t to “think positive.”
The goal is to see clearly.


Step 1: Quiet your mind first (3–7 minutes)
If you try to visualize while your mind is loud, you’ll fight yourself the whole time. Start by settling the body.
The Quieting Routine

  1. Sit comfortably. Feet on the floor if possible.
  2. Take two physiological sighs:
    o inhale through nose, top it off with a short second inhale, slow exhale through mouth
    Repeat twice.
  3. Now breathe normally and do this grounding scan:
    o Name 5 things you see
    o Name 4 things you feel (clothes on skin, feet on floor)
    o Name 3 things you hear
    o Name 2 things you smell
    o Name 1 thing you appreciate (even small: “warmth,” “a chair,” “the fact I’m trying”)
    This tells your brain: Right now, I’m safe enough to imagine.

Step 2: Choose a visualization that fits your life (pick one)
Different people respond to different styles. Choose what feels most natural.
Option A: The “One Perfect Ordinary Day”
This is the most powerful for most people because it’s believable. You’re not imagining a perfect life—just a good day.
Ask:
• If life were healthier, calmer, and more aligned… what would a good ordinary day look like?
Option B: The “Future Self Meeting”
You imagine meeting a version of you who made it through this season and built a life you respect.
Option C: The “Core Feelings First”
If details feel hard, start with feelings. You visualize the emotional state you want: peace, love, confidence, purpose.


Step 3: The guided visualization (10 minutes)
The “One Perfect Ordinary Day” Script
(You can read this slowly or adapt it in your own words.)

  1. Set the scene
    Close your eyes. Picture waking up in a life that fits you. Not flawless—just right.
    Notice the light in the room. The feeling in your body when you wake up. What’s different?
  2. How do you feel when you wake?
    Pick 3 words:
    • calm
    • steady
    • hopeful
    • loved
    • capable
    • peaceful
    • energized
    • clear-headed
    Let those words settle in your chest like warmth.
  3. What do you do in the first hour?
    See yourself doing a simple morning routine that supports your mind.
    Maybe it’s water, a shower, clean clothes, a short walk, a quiet coffee, prayer, a journal, music—something that says: I take care of me now.
  4. What does love look like in your day?
    Love doesn’t have to mean romance (though it can). Love might be:
    • being present with your partner or family
    • setting boundaries with someone unhealthy
    • feeling connected to friends
    • offering kindness without losing yourself
    Picture one moment where you feel connected and seen.
  5. What does success look like (for you)?
    Success isn’t just money or status. It might be:
    • meaningful work
    • reliable income
    • consistency
    • finishing what you start
    • creating something
    • feeling proud of your effort
    • being dependable
    • living with integrity
    Picture one moment in your day where you do something that makes you feel capable and proud—something real.
  6. What does peace look like in the afternoon?
    See yourself handling stress differently.
    Not because life has no stress, but because your mind now has skills.
    Picture a moment where something goes wrong, and you stay steady.
  7. How do you end the day?
    Imagine the evening. What do you do that helps you sleep well?
    Notice the feeling: I lived today in a way that matches who I want to be.
    Then take one slow breath and open your eyes.

Step 4: Make it real in 3 lines (this is the bridge to change)
Visualization becomes powerful when you turn it into a simple blueprint.
Write:

  1. The life I want feels like: (3 words)
    Example: calm, connected, confident
  2. The kind of person I am in that life is: (3 traits)
    Example: consistent, loving, disciplined
  3. One small action I can do today to become that person is:
    Example: 10-minute walk + send a kind message + handle one small task
    This turns visualization into identity-based action:
    “I don’t chase life. I become the person who lives it.”

Step 5: The “Noise Clearing” practice (for racing thoughts)
If your mind keeps interrupting with negativity, use this simple method:
The Mental Screen Technique
• Imagine your thoughts are words on a screen.
• You don’t delete them—slide them to the side.
• Say: “Not now. I’m practicing seeing my life.”
Then gently return to the scene.
This builds the skill of attention control: the core of mental peace.


Step 6: Visualization for love, happiness, and success (without vagueness)
If you want to visualize those themes more specifically, use these prompts:
Love
• What does being loved feel like in your body?
• What boundaries exist in your life that protect your peace?
• How do you communicate when you feel safe and grounded?
• What do your relationships look like when you respect yourself?
Happiness
• What simple moments bring genuine lightness?
• What do you do more of? What do you stop tolerating?
• What does “content” look like at 3 pm on a normal day?
Success
• What are you building? (work, art, family, health, stability)
• What does your daily routine look like when you’re succeeding?
• What does success cost you (time, discipline, boundaries), and are you willing to pay it?
Success is a schedule before it is a feeling.


Step 7: A 7-day visualization mini-challenge (easy and effective)
Do this once per day, 5 minutes only:
• Day 1: Visualize waking up calm
• Day 2: Visualize one loving connection
• Day 3: Visualize yourself handling stress well
• Day 4: Visualize one success moment (small win)
• Day 5: Visualize your healthiest routine
• Day 6: Visualize your confident future self speaking to you
• Day 7: Visualize a full “good ordinary day” from start to finish
After each session, write:
• “Today I will take one step: __.”


A final grounding truth for the reader
You don’t visualize escaping your life.
You visualize to remember what you’re building.
And you don’t need to see the whole path.
You only need a clear picture of:
• how you want to feel,
• who you want to be,
• and the next small step that proves you’re moving toward it.
That’s how a quiet mind creates a real future.

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.


https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

At War with Your Thoughts: How to Overcome When You Feel Like There’s Nothing Left

There is a war no one sees, yet millions fight it daily. It’s a war that doesn’t leave physical scars, but its wounds run deeper than skin. It’s the internal battle — the relentless, invisible fight against your thoughts. For some, this war flares up in moments of stress. It’s a lifelong storm for others, rolling inside their minds without pause. And for many, this war peaks when they feel like they have nothing left — no strength to fight, no hope to hold onto.

This article isn’t about pretending that battle doesn’t exist. It’s about facing it head-on. It’s about what to do when your thoughts become the enemy, and how to claw your way out even when you’re convinced you can’t.

The Silent Battlefield: What It Means to Be at War with Your Thoughts

To the outside world, you might seem okay — you smile, go to work, talk to people. But inside, your mind is a war zone. Self-doubt fires off rounds. Anxiety sneaks through the cracks. Regret and fear take turns occupying your mental space, demanding attention.

This war is cruel because the enemy knows you intimately. It knows every weakness, every insecurity, every past failure — and it uses all of it against you. Thoughts like:

  • “I’m not enough.”
  • “I’ll never get through this.”
  • “Everyone else has it together except me.”
  • “I’m a burden.”

These thoughts play on repeat until they feel like truth. But they are not truth. They are the weapons your mind uses against you. And recognizing that is the first step toward reclaiming your peace.


Why This War Feels So Exhausting

Your mind is supposed to be your refuge — where you can process, understand, and make sense of life. When your mind turns against you, there is no safe place to retreat. This is what makes internal wars so utterly draining. You carry the battle with you everywhere you go — to work, dinner with friends, even into your sleep. It’s a fight with no off switch.

Add to this the weight of pretending everything is fine on the outside, and you have the perfect storm for burnout. It’s why so many people at war with their thoughts say they feel utterly empty. Not just tired — hollowed out.


Step One: Understanding That Thoughts Are Not Facts

This is a critical realization: Not everything you think is true. Your mind is not an unbiased narrator. Trauma, fear, past experiences, and survival mechanisms shape it. When you feel overwhelmed, your brain often defaults to the negative — it tries to predict disaster to “protect” you from it. This negativity bias can create a loop where your brain manufactures worst-case scenarios and reacts to them as if they are reality.

Action step: Start observing your thoughts instead of believing them.
When a thought says, “You’re worthless,” don’t accept it as truth. Pause and ask:

  • Is this a fact or a feeling?
  • Would I say this to my best friend?
  • What evidence do I have for this belief?

Step Two: Naming the Enemy

When your mind is at war, the enemy can feel like this vague, overwhelming cloud of “everything is wrong.” That’s too big to fight. But if you can name your specific fears, you shrink them to size.

  • Are you afraid of failure?
  • Rejection?
  • Being seen as weak?
  • Losing control?
  • Facing something from your past?

Naming your fears strips them of some of their power. You can’t fight a fog, but you can fight a nameable fear.


Step Three: Breaking the Spiral with Small Wins

When you’re at rock bottom — the place where you feel like you have nothing left — small wins matter more than ever. Your brain craves proof that you can still function and move forward, even if only by inches.

Small wins can look like:

  • Drinking a glass of water.
  • Stepping outside for fresh air.
  • Texting someone to say, “I’m struggling, but I’m here.”
  • Making your bed.
  • Writing down one thing you’ve survived before.

These aren’t trivial. These are battle victories. They remind your brain that you are still capable — and capability, no matter how small, is a foothold out of the darkness.


Step Four: Speaking Back to the Voice

That cruel inner voice that tells you you’re not enough? It thrives on your silence. It grows louder when you don’t challenge it. So talk back — out loud if you need to.

When it says, “You always mess everything up,” answer with:
“Not true. I’ve gotten through hard things before.”
When it says, “You’ll never be happy,” answer with:
“That’s fear talking. I have no idea what tomorrow holds.”

Even if you don’t fully believe your responses yet, speaking them plants seeds of self-compassion.


Step Five: Anchoring Outside Yourself

When your mind is the battlefield, you need something outside of yourself to ground you — a safe harbor in the storm. This could be:

  • A trusted friend who can handle the truth of your struggle.
  • A physical space, like a park, lake, or forest, where you feel calmer.
  • A spiritual practice — prayer, meditation, breathwork.
  • A creative outlet — writing, painting, photography — something that externalizes the chaos inside.

These anchors remind you there is a world outside the war in your head — a world you still belong to.


Step Six: Remember This War is Not Your Identity

This is perhaps the most crucial truth:
You are not your thoughts. You are not your struggle. You are not your darkest day.

This war you’re fighting? It’s something you are experiencing — not who you are. This distinction matters because it leaves room for hope. It means you can have days of brutal self-doubt and still be a worthy, lovable human being. It means even if your mind tells you you’re beyond saving, that voice is wrong.


What to Do When You Feel Like There’s Nothing Left

There will be moments when you hit the wall — when every tool feels useless and every ounce of fight seems drained. In these moments, the goal shifts. It’s no longer about progress. It’s about survival.

When you feel like there’s nothing left:

  1. Do the absolute basics. Drink water. Eat something small. Breathe. That’s enough.
  2. Don’t isolate completely. Even if you can’t talk, sit near someone you trust.
  3. Create the tiniest future point. This could be as small as: “I’ll make it to sunset.”
  4. Remember: feelings are not forever. This storm will pass. You won’t feel this way forever.
  5. Say one kind thing to yourself — even if you don’t believe it yet. Something as simple as, “I’m trying. That matters.”

Why This Fight is Worth It

Your mind will tell you it’s not worth fighting — that nothing will change, that you are too broken, that hope is a lie. But here’s the truth those thoughts will never tell you:

  • You have survived every dark day before this one.
  • Some people love you even when you can’t love yourself.
  • There are moments of beauty and joy you haven’t lived yet.
  • You are needed in ways you can’t yet see.

This war isn’t your fault. But healing is your right — no cruel thought can take from you.


You Are Not Alone

If nothing else sinks in, let this be the takeaway:
You are not the only one fighting this war.
Millions of people battle their thoughts every day, and though the voice in your head tries to convince you you’re isolated, you are part of a silent army — people who know exactly what you’re going through and believe you are worth saving.

You are not broken. You are not alone. And you are worth fighting for.

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Breaking Free: How to Escape the Grip of Negative Thoughts and Transform Your Life

Negative thoughts can be relentless invaders, hijacking our minds and derailing our pursuit of happiness and success. For many, these persistent, gloomy narratives become an unwelcome backdrop to daily life, impacting everything from relationships to career prospects. But there’s hope. By understanding the nature of negative thinking and employing proven strategies, it’s possible to break free from this mental prison and embark on a journey of self-improvement. This comprehensive guide will explore the roots of negative thinking and provide practical, actionable steps to help you reclaim control of your thoughts and, ultimately, your life.

1. Understanding Negative Thoughts: The First Step to Freedom

1.1 The Nature of Negative Thinking

Negative thoughts are more than just fleeting moments of pessimism. They’re often deeply ingrained patterns of thinking that can become habitual and automatic. These thoughts may manifest as self-criticism, catastrophizing, or overgeneralization, among other forms. Recognizing these patterns is crucial for beginning the process of change.

1.2 The Impact of Negative Thoughts on Your Life

The consequences of persistent negative thinking extend far beyond momentary discomfort. Chronic negativity can lead to:

– Increased stress and anxiety

– Decreased motivation and productivity

– Strained relationships

– Lowered self-esteem

– Physical health issues

– Missed opportunities for growth and happiness

Understanding the far-reaching effects of negative thoughts can serve as a powerful motivator for change.

2. Recognizing Your Thought Patterns: The Power of Self-Awareness

2.1 Common Types of Negative Thinking

Identifying the specific patterns you tend to fall into to combat negative thoughts is essential. Some common types include:

– All-or-nothing thinking

– Overgeneralization

– Mental filtering

– Discounting the positive

– Jumping to conclusions

– Magnification or minimization

– Emotional reasoning

– “Should” statements

– Labeling

– Personalization

2.2 Techniques for Identifying Your Thought Patterns

– Journaling: Keep a thought diary to track recurring negative thoughts

– Mindfulness meditation: Practice observing your thoughts without judgment

– Cognitive restructuring exercises: Learn to identify and challenge distorted thinking

3. Challenging Negative Thoughts: Tools and Techniques

3.1 The ABCDE Method

Developed by psychologist Albert Ellis, this technique helps you systematically challenge negative thoughts:

A – Activating event

B – Belief

C – Consequence

D – Dispute

E – Effect

3.2 Socratic Questioning

Use these probing questions to examine the validity of your thoughts:

– What evidence supports this thought?

– Is there evidence against this thought?

– Are there alternative explanations?

– What’s the worst that could happen? How likely is it?

– What would I tell a friend in this situation?

3.3 Cognitive Defusion

Learn to create distance between yourself and your thoughts using techniques like:

– Labeling thoughts (e.g., “I’m having the idea that…”)

– Visualizing thoughts as leaves floating down a stream

– Saying thoughts in a silly voice

4. Cultivating Positive Thinking: Building a New Mental Landscape

4.1 The Power of Gratitude

Practicing gratitude can shift your focus from negative to positive aspects of your life:

– Keep a daily gratitude journal

– Share your appreciation with others

– Practice gratitude meditation

4.2 Positive Affirmations

Use positive statements to reinforce self-worth and optimism:

– Create personalized affirmations

– Practice affirmations daily

– Use present tense and positive language

4.3 Visualization Techniques

Harness the power of your imagination to create positive mental imagery:

– Visualize successful outcomes

– Create a mental “happy place”

– Use guided imagery for relaxation and motivation

5. Lifestyle Changes to Support Positive Thinking

5.1 Exercise and Physical Activity

Regular exercise can boost mood and reduce negative thinking:

– Aim for at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise daily

– Try mood-boosting activities like yoga or dance

– Incorporate outdoor activities for added benefits

5.2 Healthy Sleep Habits

Proper sleep is crucial for maintaining a positive mindset:

– Establish a consistent sleep schedule

– Create a relaxing bedtime routine

– Limit screen time before bed

5.3 Nutrition and Diet

A balanced diet can support mental health and positive thinking:

– Incorporate mood-boosting foods (e.g., omega-3 fatty acids, complex carbohydrates)

– Stay hydrated

– Limit caffeine and alcohol intake

6. Building a Support System: The Power of Connection

6.1 Cultivating Positive Relationships

Surround yourself with supportive, positive people:

– Identify toxic relationships and set boundaries

– Seek out like-minded individuals

– Join support groups or clubs aligned with your interests

6.2 Seeking Professional Help

Don’t hesitate to reach out to mental health professionals:

– Consider therapy or counseling

– Explore cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)

– Look into support groups led by professionals

6.3 The Role of Community and Volunteering

Engaging with your community can provide perspective and purpose:

– Volunteer for causes you care about

– Participate in community events

– Join local clubs or organizations

7. Mindfulness and Meditation: Cultivating Present-Moment Awareness

7.1 Introduction to Mindfulness

Learn to focus on the present moment without judgment:

– Practice mindful breathing

– Engage in body scan meditations

– Incorporate mindfulness into daily activities

7.2 Meditation Techniques for Beginners

Start a meditation practice to calm your mind:

– Try guided meditations

– Begin with short sessions and gradually increase the duration

– Experiment with different styles (e.g., loving-kindness, transcendental)

7.3 Incorporating Mindfulness into Daily Life

Make mindfulness a habit:

– Practice mindful eating

– Take mindful breaks throughout the day

– Use mindfulness apps or reminders

8. Reframing Negative Experiences: Finding Growth in Adversity

8.1 The Concept of Post-Traumatic Growth

Explore how challenges can lead to personal development:

– Identify areas of growth from past difficulties

– Cultivate resilience through adversity

– Reframe setbacks as opportunities for learning

8.2 Techniques for Reframing

Learn to view situations from different perspectives:

– Practice looking for silver linings

– Use the “best friend” perspective

– Imagine how the situation might benefit you in the long run

8.3 Journaling for Perspective

Use writing to process and reframe experiences:

– Write about challenges from a future perspective

– Explore multiple interpretations of events

– Reflect on lessons learned and personal growth

9. Setting and Achieving Goals: Creating a Positive Future

9.1 The Importance of Goal-Setting

Understand how goals can provide direction and motivation:

– Set SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound)

– Balance short-term and long-term objectives

– Align goals with personal values

9.2 Breaking Down Goals into Actionable Steps

Make progress through small, manageable tasks:

– Create a step-by-step plan for each goal

– Set milestones and deadlines

– Celebrate small victories along the way

9.3 Overcoming Obstacles and Setbacks

Develop strategies for maintaining motivation:

– Anticipate potential challenges

– Create contingency plans

– Practice self-compassion when facing setbacks

Escaping the grip of negative thoughts is a journey that requires patience, persistence, and self-compassion. By implementing the strategies outlined in this guide – from challenging negative thought patterns to cultivating mindfulness and setting positive goals – you can gradually rewire your thinking and create a more optimistic, fulfilling life. Remember that change takes time, and it’s expected to experience setbacks. The key is remaining committed to your personal growth and celebrating each small step forward. As you continue on this path of self-improvement, you’ll likely find that not only do negative thoughts lose their power, but you also gain a newfound sense of resilience, purpose, and joy in life.

Cultivating Positivity: A Guide to Nurturing Optimism in the Face of Life’s Challenges

Maintaining a positive outlook can be a significant challenge in today’s fast-paced and often stressful world. We’re bombarded with negative news, face personal and professional pressures, and sometimes struggle to find the silver lining in difficult situations. It’s okay to find it challenging, and you’re not alone. However, the power of positive thinking is well-documented, with numerous studies showing its benefits for mental health, physical well-being, and overall life satisfaction.

This article will explore practical strategies for keeping positive thoughts at the forefront of your mind while acknowledging that negative thoughts are a natural part of the human experience. These strategies are theoretical concepts and practical tools you can use in your daily life. We’ll delve into techniques for recognizing negative thought patterns, methods for reframing them, and ways to cultivate a more optimistic mindset.

Positive thinking is not just a mindset; it’s a transformative force that can reshape your life. This article will show how to harness this power to improve mental and physical health, relationships, and professional success.

Before we dive into specific strategies, it’s crucial to understand why positive thinking is so critical. Positive thoughts aren’t just about feeling good in the moment; they can have far-reaching effects on various aspects of our lives:

1. Mental Health: A positive outlook has been linked to lower rates of depression and anxiety, as well as increased resilience in the face of stress.

2. Physical Health: Optimistic individuals tend to have more robust immune systems, lower blood pressure, and a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease.

3. Relationships: Positive thinkers often have more satisfying social connections and are better equipped to navigate interpersonal challenges.

4. Professional Success: A positive attitude can increase productivity, creativity, and career advancement.

5. Longevity: Studies have shown that individuals with a more positive outlook live longer than their pessimistic counterparts.

Understanding the Nature of Thoughts

Before we can effectively manage our thoughts, it’s essential to understand their nature. Thoughts are not facts; they are mental events that come and go. Both positive and negative thoughts are a normal part of the human experience. You’re not alone in this struggle. The goal isn’t to eliminate negative thoughts but to create a balanced perspective where positive thoughts take center stage.

Strategies for Cultivating Positive Thoughts

1. Practice Gratitude

One of the most powerful ways to foster positivity is through gratitude. By regularly acknowledging the good things in your life, you train your mind to focus on the positive. Consider these practices:

– Keep a gratitude journal: Write three things you’re grateful for daily.

– Share your appreciation: Thanks to others for their actions or presence in your life.

– Reflect on past challenges: Consider difficulties you’ve overcome and be grateful for the strength and growth they’ve brought you.

2. Engage in Positive Self-Talk

The way we talk to ourselves has a significant impact on our overall outlook. Make a conscious effort to use encouraging and supportive language when addressing yourself:

– Replace self-criticism with self-compassion: Instead of berating yourself for mistakes, speak to yourself like a good friend.

– Use affirmations: Create and repeat positive statements about yourself and your abilities.

– Challenge negative self-talk: When you think negatively, pause and ask if there’s evidence to support that thought or if there’s a more balanced perspective.

3. Surround Yourself with Positivity

Our environment plays a crucial role in shaping our thoughts. Create an atmosphere that nurtures positivity:

– Cultivate positive relationships: Spend time with people who uplift and support you.

– Consume uplifting media: Choose books, movies, and music that inspire and encourage you.

– Create a positive physical space: Decorate your home or workspace with items that bring you joy and motivation.

4. Practice Mindfulness

Mindfulness involves being fully present in the moment without judgment. This practice can help you observe your thoughts without getting caught up in them:

– Try meditation: Start with short sessions and gradually increase the duration.

– Use mindfulness apps: Many apps offer guided exercises to help you develop this skill.

– Practice mindful activities: Engage in everyday tasks with full attention, such as mindful eating or walking.

5. Set and Pursue Meaningful Goals

Working towards objectives that align with your values can provide a sense of purpose and positivity:

– Identify your core values: Reflect on what truly matters to you.

– Set SMART goals: Create specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound objectives.

– Celebrate small wins: Acknowledge progress to boost motivation and positive feelings.

6. Engage in Acts of Kindness

Helping others not only benefits them but also boosts our sense of well-being and positivity:

– Volunteer: Find causes that resonate with you and contribute your time or skills.

– Perform random acts of kindness: Look for small ways to help or brighten someone’s day.

– Practice empathy: Understand others’ perspectives and offer support when needed.

7. Cultivate Optimism

While it’s essential to be realistic, consciously adopting a more optimistic outlook can shift your thought patterns:

– Look for the silver lining: Identify potential positive outcomes or lessons in challenging situations.

– Practice positive reframing: Consider alternative, more constructive interpretations when faced with an adverse event.

– Visualize success: Imagine positive outcomes for future events or challenges.

Recognizing and Managing Negative Thoughts

While cultivating positivity is crucial, it’s equally important to acknowledge and effectively manage negative thoughts. Here are strategies to help you navigate these challenging mental states:

1. Identify Thought Patterns

Learn to recognize common negative thought patterns:

– All-or-nothing thinking: Seeing things in black-and-white terms without acknowledging nuance.

– Overgeneralization: Drawing broad conclusions from a single event.

– Mental filtering: Focusing solely on negative aspects while ignoring positives.

– Jumping to conclusions: Making assumptions without evidence.

– Catastrophizing: Imagining the worst possible outcomes.

2. Practice Thought Observation

Instead of immediately reacting to negative thoughts, try observing them:

– Create mental distance: Imagine your thoughts as clouds passing through the sky or leaves floating down a stream.

– Use labeling: Identify thoughts as just thoughts, not facts (e.g., “I’m having the thought that I’m not good enough” rather than “I’m not good enough”).

– Employ the RAIN technique: Recognize the thought, Allow it to be present, Investigate its origin, and Non-identify with it.

3. Challenge Negative Thoughts

Once you’ve identified a negative thought, challenge its validity:

– Examine the evidence: Look for facts that support or contradict the thought.

– Consider alternative explanations: Are there other ways to interpret the situation?

– Assess the utility: Ask yourself if holding onto this thought is helpful or harmful.

4. Use Cognitive Restructuring

This technique involves actively replacing negative thoughts with more balanced or positive ones:

– Identify the negative thought.

– Evaluate its accuracy and usefulness.

– Generate alternative thoughts that are more realistic or constructive.

– Choose the most helpful thought to focus on.

5. Practice Self-Compassion

When dealing with negative thoughts, treat yourself with kindness:

– Acknowledge that everyone experiences negative thoughts.

– Offer yourself words of comfort and understanding.

– Consider what you would say to a friend in a similar situation.

6. Engage in Mood-Boosting Activities

When negative thoughts persist, sometimes the best approach is to shift your focus:

– Exercise: Physical activity releases endorphins and can improve mood.

– Pursue hobbies: Engage in activities that bring you joy and fulfillment.

– Connect with others: Reach out to friends or family for support and perspective.

7. Seek Professional Help

If negative thoughts are persistently interfering with your daily life, consider talking to a mental health professional:

– Therapy can provide tools and strategies for managing negative thought patterns.

– Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is particularly effective for addressing negative thinking.

Moving Forward with a Balanced Perspective

As you work on cultivating positivity and managing negative thoughts, remember that the goal is not to eliminate all negative thinking. Instead, aim for a balanced perspective that acknowledges life’s challenges while maintaining a positive outlook.

Here are some final tips for moving forward:

1. Practice patience: Changing thought patterns takes time and consistent effort.

2. Be gentle with yourself. Setbacks will happen, and that’s okay. Treat them as learning opportunities.

3. Celebrate progress: Acknowledge and appreciate the positive changes you make, no matter how small.

4. Stay curious: Approach your thoughts with curiosity rather than judgment.

5. Maintain perspective: Remember that thoughts are temporary and don’t define you.

6. Stay connected: Share your journey with trusted friends or join support groups to stay motivated.

7. Continually educate yourself: Keep learning about positive psychology and mental health to expand your toolkit.

By implementing these strategies and maintaining a commitment to personal growth, you can create a mental environment where positive thoughts flourish. While negative thoughts will still arise, you’ll be better equipped to recognize them, put them in perspective, and move forward with resilience and optimism.

Remember, the power to shape your mental landscape lies within you. With practice and perseverance, you can cultivate a mindset that weathers life’s storms and finds joy, gratitude, and positivity daily. As you embark on this journey, be patient with yourself and celebrate every step forward. The path to a more positive outlook is a lifelong journey that offers rich rewards regarding personal well-being, relationships, and overall life satisfaction.

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Have too vs. Want too

Our lives are based on many things that we end up settling for because we don’t see a way to achieve what we desire the most. Do you want to continue to pay for the status quo? I don’t!

Throughout our lives, we have been conditioned to believe that without an education, money, status, and dozens more, why you cannot achieve. Your brain tells merely you NO. If you’re a spiritual person, the enemy gets in your head and convinces you that you will be nothing more than what you are today. Horse Manure!

Recondition your thoughts with faith. Not wishful thinking, hope! The big difference in that statement. You cannot just say to God, I want to write the next great novel that tops the New York Times bestseller list and not type a word. You have to take action to achieve what you desire. Work and I mean hard work.

life, work, happy

The Life You Want

 

Most of us have had the question posed to us: “If you could do anything in the world, what would you do?” If you put aside a dream in your life, what is stopping you from picking it back up? The answer to that question is your head, doubt, and fear.

If like me you would like to live the last half of your life doing what you want to do not what you have to do, we need to make some radical changes. Not impossible changes, fundamental changes, big difference.

Here are a few things you need to make a part of your life now:

  1. Don’t worry about how you will do it. Believe as though it already exists in life now. This is incredibly powerful when you see it in your mind and believe it in your heart. The how will present itself when you least expect it.
  2. Stay out of your head. Overthinking kills dreams faster than anything. Believe in your heart.
  3. Take steps every day towards the new goal. It can be researched, educating yourself, praying, visualization, it can be anything that moves you forward.
  4. Fight to keep negative thoughts out of your head. Also, don’t listen to nay-sayers. Sadly that can be family. What’s in your heart is what matters. Follow that which calls to your soul.
  5. Fear is not part of your equation anymore. When you come from a place of fear, you will not attain your goal. Don’t be afraid to have the life you want. Surprisingly folks self-sabotage life because they’re conditioned to be frightened.

Thoughts are the killer of all dreams, negative thoughts will drag you down. Don’t listen to them. If you want something wrong enough, negative thinking has to be conditioned to not overtake your mind.

“I’ve missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”–Michael Jordan

Get busy life is waiting for you, Godspeed!

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