“Don't let others ruin your day. Ruin your own damn day!”
I
came across this humorous statement recently and it got me thinking.
Self-sabotage is one of
those pesky, insidious realities many of us face. We can convince ourselves
we’re so together. We have a great relationship, career, family, home, and
financial portrait. We have the bases covered. We’re good. We know who we are
and what we want in life.
Humpty Dumpty, getting
ready to have a great big fall, in three, two…
Most of us are really
not aware we self-sabotage until after the fact. It’s usually after a marriage
crumbles, a job is lost, we lose a house, a car or anything that represents
stability, financial or otherwise. We are somehow, someway devastated. And
probably, what’s at that devastating center is the realization that we had a hand
in bringing it on all by ourselves. We broke our own hearts.
The Why of
Ruining Our Own Damn Day: Reason 1:
“This is
perfect.”
No better starting
point than completely unrealistic expectations, right?
Yes, in life, you and I
fixate on something or someone… and christen them as “perfect.” For all time.
In all circumstances. Without fail. We give the something or the someone a job
they were never meant to possess: the key to perfecting our own imperfection.
The problematic issue,
in the first place, is perfection itself. There is no such thing, let
alone, assigned to anything external. So, if we place faith in its existence,
we are already setting ourselves up for assured failure. We will ruin
our own damn day, via this self-sabotage method.
The Why of
Ruining Our Own Damn Day: Reason 2:
“This is so
good (so I’ll wreck it).”
If we believe in the
perfection of our designated object of our affection, we, of course, attach a
“good” label to it. This can be troublesome in a couple of ways.
First, what if the
thing we call “good” is NOT?
What if it’s harmful?
Dangerous? Not right for us?
But here we are,
thoroughly decided it’s perfect, it’s good, and there’s no other, more
complicated, more realistic explanation to it than that?
So, that’s a fun
prelude to the future ruining of our day.
And regardless of the
object of our desire’s actual status, there’s a second, more alarming aspect to
our self-sabotage. We can view that certain something or someone as being
perfect and good, so much so, that we, inherently, are unworthy of it.
We are quite worthless, in fact. We don’t deserve it. Therefore, we have no
other choice other than to ruin it for ourselves.
We ruin our own damn day
once again.
The Why of
Ruining Our Own Damn Day: Reason 3:
“Nothing
else will ever come my way again.”
Cheery outlook, isn’t
it?
Yes, while we’re all
preoccupied with these impossible, unrealistic standards and expectations about
the issues in our lives, we also add this bleak perspective to our
self-sabotaging mindsets.
We panic. We
apply end-all, be-all importance to our designated idol of fulfillment. There are no other buses coming our way,
taking us to our destinations. Better hop on this thing, then, for all its
worth!
A big part of what
fuels this self-sabotage tactic involves the oppressive, black or white, all or
nothing way of thinking. If we entertain that line of assessing something, it
usually won’t be too long before we cross into the “or else” nature of this
faulty belief. Indeed, we can wrongly determine that absolutely nothing and no
one else can come close to our own perfect and chosen “idol.” We stand in
judgment of anything else coming close. We are judge, jury and executioner. We
pulverize and kill.
We ruin our own damn day,
yet again.
Yet, it’s still not a
hopeless, despair-filled death sentence.
Yes, it looks grim,
this human tendency to destroy ourselves and our lives. Yet, if we are aware of
these propensities to do so, to ruin our own stuff, we can, hopefully, make another
choice. We can choose. We can choose something different.
We need to take responsibility for ourselves, including our decisions,
conscious or unconscious, to self-sabotage.
Now that we are aware,
what will we do? What will we do with our days?
Copyright © 2020 by
Sheryle Cruse
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