Bringing About Progressive Change - Part I

Many of us find ourselves as adults, particularly in our 30s and 40s, having already created a life. We find ourselves stuck in certain elements of that life that cannot be changed. These elements are bad habits that range anywhere from losing weight to wanting to explore and develop spirituality. We find we cannot change because over time we have slowly developed these habits and routines.
For example when attempting to lose weight we continue to follow the bad habits that we have developed over a long time so we don’t know how to break away from the habit. In the case of wanting to develop our spiritual connections, we find ourselves providing excuses such as being “too busy” taking care of family, finances, the house, etc.
Recently I was listening to a very prominent speaker who was discussing how we can bring about changes in our lives… progressive changes. The speaker covered four important steps in order to accomplish this and I felt it necessary to share with everyone. The four steps are:
- Getting back in touch with the real me.
- It’s for my benefit.
- One thing at a time.
- Build a community.
Getting back in touch with the real me:
Getting in touch with the real me is a search for me as I remember myself at my best. It could have been when I was 30, 25, or even 20 years old. The time period when I loved the person I was before the “habitual” and “too busy” person emerges in a life that holds me down.
How do we change back to this person (the real me)?
First we need to understand that we got to the “habitual” and “busy” person in first place over time by developing habits through repetitive actions. It could be a habit of having a dessert at the end of every meal. At first it was satisfying a sweet tooth and then it became a necessity. Three years later, obviously I am going to have to deal with some weight issues, sugar addictions, and/or diabetes.
Somehow I taught myself over these years that I have to have a dessert after every meal. I changed the way my brain works. Our brains develop in accordance to our actions. This is a phenomenon that was discovered in the 1980’s which is called neuroplasticity which explains the brain is not a fixed thing, it is a constant changing organ. In the above example, the brain adapted the idea that every meal has to end with a dessert. It changed in accordance with the actions. So just as we once learned how to say our first word by repeating it a bunch of times, our brain creates the connections and can constantly learns how to adapt itself to our behaviors.
What we need to know is that, “My brain is not the real me” ( You Are Not Your Brain by Jeffrey M. Schwartz, M.D. and Rebecca Gladding, M.D.). Our brains are a tool just like the rest of our body, it may be the most important tool we have, but just the same it is a tool.
The “real me” is a spiritual entity, my soul. My soul (inner being) is the real me, not my brain, nor my body. Therefore I can utilize my brain to conceptualize the real me the way I used to like myself, instead of the way I am today, stuck.
To sum up… when I was 20 I loved changes, I loved to meet new people, see new places and I didn’t have dessert after every meal. So the present me who is stuck in trying to pay the bills, keep a family going, and have dessert after every meal is not the real me, it’s the present me that was developed through my actions over 20 years. Realizing this process allows me to get in touch with the real me.
Take some time to absorb, question, and even converse with us on Facebook about what we have discussed. Stay tuned for the next post in which we discuss numbers two, three, and four.