Writing Thoughts to Think
I love motivational quotes and mantras. But here was a time when I was embarrassed to admit it. I felt like hanging up an inspirational quote by my desk was kind of like displaying a cliché word art plaque (sorry Live, Laugh, Love people—I do love you).
I didn’t want to adorn my office with the stuff of bad self-help books that offered superficial guidance or gave me “toxic positivity” vibes.
On the other hand, I’m kind of a self-improvement junkie, even if many of my intended improvements only happen in theory. I love taking classes and webinars, getting good coaching, and reminding myself of what I’ve learned. I’m a note-taker extraordinaire.
Long story short—I got over my insecurity. A bit of wisdom staring at me in the morning is often just the thing to get my mind aligned for writing. So, I bought one of those desktop flip albums that holds 4×6 photos and I printed out some writing thoughts that are helpful to me. It sits by my desk and each day when I sit down to work, I flip.
What I know is that the thoughts I choose to believe create my feelings. And if I use this knowledge strategically, I can choose to believe certain thoughts and create certain feelings that will fuel my actions. As a goal-oriented writer and business owner, I’ve got to take action.
I encourage you to try this for yourself and make a list of writing thoughts you want to believe. You might argue with some of the ideas on my list. And that’s okay. Choose thoughts that work for you. But I do encourage you to consider ideas that might stretch what you think is possible for yourself.
These aren’t direct quotes I’ve copied from others but my own version of ideas I’ve collected here and there. They are thoughts I choose to think that put me on the path to creating the kind of writing results I want to create.
- Ambition entails risk. No big deal.
- My writing is not causing me stress. The way I’m thinking about my writing is causing me stress.
- What would I say next if I did know what to say? Resist confusion.
- Worry is natural but it’s not necessary.
- I can check Twitter again or I can work.
- Fearing the collective judgment of others is a phantom fear.
- Good habits give me confidence.
- “I’m too busy,” “I don’t know what to say,” and “I can’t” are dream stealers.
- I can learn to associate writing with pleasure.
- Get SO good at rejection.
- The more willing I am to be uncomfortable, the more likely I am to hit my goals.
- Overwhelm is not an excuse for not taking action.
- What emotion do I need to create with my thoughts today in order to take the action I want to take?
- I am one decision away from throwing in the towel and one decision away from being back on track.
- No one is coming to do the work for me.
- I can figure this out.
- Not finding happiness today? Choose purpose.
- Activity is not the same thing as productivity.
- Self-confidence comes from knowing that if I don’t succeed, I’ll be fine.
- Spend as much time creating something as I do consuming information.
- Shift from being problem-focused to solution-focused.
- The content I need right now is not in a book on writing, an essay, or someone else’s memoir. The content I need is in my mind.
- I can make this fun.
- Have my own back.
- What opportunity can I pursue today?
- Almost any dream I can imagine can be achieved in five years.
- I am capable of exerting significant effort.
- Do my behaviors reflect what I want most?
- No amount of hope will replace hard work.
- The cost of neglecting myself is high.
Originally published at the Writer’s Fun Zone.
This list is really good. I was amazed at how many items seem aimed right at me, even though I have never thought of undertaking a writing project. (I fantasized about it, and experimented for a while with short, reflective-type, semi-poetic pieces mostly for myself.) But what’s surprising is how this list applies to other activities too., including just making it through difficult moments or days. I’m going to keep it handy.
Thanks, Albert. “Short, reflective-type, semi-poetic” sounds like prose poetry. I wonder if that’s your genre 🙂