13 Things Mentally Strong People Don\'t Do: Take Back Your Power, Embrace Change, Face Your Fears, and Train Your Brain for Happiness and Success pdfdrive com


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13 Things Mentally Strong People Don\'t Do Take Back Your Power, Embrace Change, Face Your Fears, and Train Your Brain for Happiness and Success ( PDFDrive )

RECOGNIZE YOUR CHOICES
There are very few things in life you have to do, but often we convince ourselves
we don’t have a choice. Instead of saying, “I have to go to work tomorrow,”
remind yourself that it’s a choice. If you choose not to go to work, there will be


consequences. Perhaps you won’t get paid. Or maybe you’ll risk losing your job
altogether. But it’s a choice.
Simply reminding yourself that you have a choice in everything you do, think,
and feel can be very freeing. If you’ve spent most of your life feeling like a
victim of your circumstances, it takes hard work to recognize that you have the
power to create the kind of life you want to live.
TAKING BACK YOUR POWER WILL
MAKE YOU STRONGER
You don’t get to be named one of the most powerful people in the world by
giving away your power. Just ask Oprah Winfrey. She grew up in extreme
poverty and was sexually abused by several people throughout her childhood.
She bounced between living with her mother, father, and grandmother, and as a
teenager, she frequently ran away from home. She became pregnant at age
fourteen, but the infant died shortly after birth.
During her high school years, she began working at a local radio station. She
worked her way through several media jobs, and eventually, she landed a job as
a TV news anchor. But she was later fired from the position.
She didn’t allow one person’s opinion of her on-air suitability to stop her,
however. She went on to create her own talk show and by the age of thirty-two,
her show became a national hit. By the age of forty-one, she had a reported net
worth of over $340 million. Oprah has started her own magazine, radio show,
and TV network and has coauthored five books. She’s even won an Academy
Award. She’s started a multitude of charities to help people in need, including a
leadership academy for girls in South Africa.
Oprah didn’t let her childhood or her former employer take away her power. A
woman who was once teased because she was so poor she wore potato sacks as
dresses was named one of the world’s most powerful women by both CNN and
Time. Statistically, her upbringing would have predicted a poor prognosis. But
Oprah refused to be a statistic. She chose to define who she was going to be in
life by not giving away her power.
When you decide that no one else has the power to control how you feel,


you’ll experience empowerment. Here are some other ways how retaining your
power will help you become mentally strong:
You’ll develop a better sense of who you are when you’re able to make
choices based on what’s best for you instead of what will prevent the most
repercussions.
When you take responsibility for your own behavior, you’ll become
accountable for your progress toward your goals.
You will never be pressured into doing something that you don’t want to do
based on guilt trips or what you think other people want you to do.
You’ll be able to devote your time and energy to things you choose. You
won’t have to blame other people for wasting your time or ruining your day.
Retaining your personal power reduces your risk of depression, anxiety, and
other mental health issues. Many mental health problems are linked to a
sense of hopelessness and helplessness. When you decide not to give other
people and external circumstances the power to control how you feel and
behave, you gain more power over your mental health.
When you hold a grudge, those feelings of anger and resentment do nothing to
lessen the other person’s life. Instead, harboring anger and resentment gives that
person more power to interfere with your quality of life. Choosing to forgive
allows you to take back your power, not just over your psychological health, but
also over your physical health. Research shows some of the health benefits of
forgiveness include the following:
Forgiveness reduces your stress. Over the years, many studies have shown
that holding a grudge keeps your body in a state of stress. When you practice
forgiveness, your blood pressure and heart rate decrease.
Choosing to forgive increases your tolerance to pain. In a 2005 study of
patients with chronic low back pain, anger increased psychological distress
and decreased a person’s tolerance to pain. A willingness to forgive was


associated with increased pain tolerance.
Unconditional forgiveness can help you to live longer. A 2012 study
published in the Journal of Behavioral Medicine discovered that when people
were only willing to forgive others under certain conditions—like the other
person apologized or promised to never repeat the same behavior—their risk
of dying early actually increased. You don’t have any control over whether
someone will apologize. Waiting to forgive people until they say they’re
sorry gives them control over not just your life, but perhaps even your death.

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