Marknis wrote:
How can I change my thoughts to where my outlook is that things are still possible?
From experience, the suggestion I can speak of is 'being burned by your own flames'.
Knowing the flame and the fuel is one step, acknowledging it is also one.
Yet purifying yourself with it (so to speak) is another.
It can be scary, it can make one react badly, but it can break your repetitive negative thought cycles once you're able to catch on. By controlling the flint that lits it, by mitigating or controlling the fuel itself.
What I meant your own flames, I meant your anger, your frustrations...
And the fuel I meant the triggers and the source of those anger and frustrations. It may include your own wanting of unfulfilled desires and priorities that might've gone out of proportion.
One doesn't have to prove others wrong -- that's one hint. This doesn't mean you stop succeeding, this simply means you focus somewhere else in order to succeed.
The desire to prove anyone wrong means you're taking the bait, or taking it as a bait by making statements into a fuel. It also means you're also keep litting those flames into the fuel. One can acknowledge the fuel, and when you figured you can choose not to lit those flames with it.
And think that proving them wrong would make those 'voices' disappear? Not really... It'll be replaced with other statements from 'can't do this' to 'don't deserve this' to 'never be enough' -- it'll be still 'there' even if one proves those voices 'wrong' unless you're able to let go of it.
Meaning because they're not your own life boss.
Unless you wanna remain that as your goal motive for however long you like, it'll become more of a choice to make once you're able to catch on. And when you do, don't feel ashamed. Because a good fraction of people may take a lifetime figuring it out.
Yes, the posts I write can be confusing. But it's the best description I got for now.