Self talk is a powerful tool to use in our journey towards success. It can also be the thing that causes us to ‘self destruct’. When someone is battling with depression / anxiety (like me), their mind is bombarded nonstop of this ‘self destruct’ talk. They may even know that this is happening but it is very hard to ignore something that is speaking loudly inside your mind. This can also apply to someone that might not have a mental illness but have low self-confidence. It’s time for us to remind ourselves the truths in the power of who am I.
Traits vs Experiences
Based on Merriam-Webster site, here are the definitions of these:
Traits: a quality that makes one person or thing different from another
Experiences: the process of doing and seeing things and of having things happen to you
As you can see, they have different meanings and yet people tend to use them both to describe who they are. This is wrong and has severe affect on our mental health. It is very important that you truly understand the difference between the two. Traits are the things that define who we are and experiences are the events that occur in our life. For example: Loss of a family member is a life experience of mine and being an introvert is one of my personal traits.
It may seem easy for you to recognize the difference between the two but it is difficult for someone who’s battling with depression, like me.
How?
For every relationship that has failed, I have attributed it as something is wrong with me. In my head, I see myself as damaged and that’s why it ended. Am I really damaged? Hmm…nope and I know this because it is not one of my traits.
So why is it so hard for me to separate trait vs experience?
That is because somewhere in my childhood I put the two together and never pulled them apart. That is until recently.
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Who vs What
Based on Merriam-Webster site, here are the definitions of these:
Who: used to question a person's character or authority
What: used to ask for information about someone or something
This one might be a little more difficult to explain because it is based off of my own opinion. For me, “Who” is truth / fact and “What” is lie / opinion. Here is what I mean: I love bowling aka “Who am I” is truth because I have been on a league for years. I am a loser aka “What am I” is a lie because this is my opinion and no one else thinks that about me. A few years ago, I finally realized that I had been thinking of myself with the “Whats” and not the “Whos”.
It has been a long hard battle to get me to where I am today, mentally and physically. I understand and embrace the fact that this battle may never be won or ended. If I give up, then I am sending the wrong message to others that it is ok for them to give up also. As someone that expresses a lot of positivity amidst the chaos, I could not look myself in the mirror and be ok with others giving up.
How can I embrace something that has caused so much pain and chaos?
This is because I have accepted it as one of my personal traits. It is “Who I am” and once I realized this, I WAS FREE. Free to make my own decisions as the battle rages on. In the past, this ‘evil’ would tell me that I was worthless and I would agree with it as I would fall deeper into the darkness of depression. Now when it wants to tell me this, I tell it “Shut the hell up” and use my techniques to empower the positive truths of myself.
Do I still have bad days? Heck yes I do but I have been having a lot more good days since I learned the truth about me. The truth about who you are will never be found in society, the world or even deep inside your own mind. The truth resides safely tucked away deep in your heart. Only you have the ability and power to access this. The next time you are knee deep in mindless lies, think about yourself in the context of “Who am I?” and then finish the following sentence from the heart…
I AM ________!
Until my next post...Share. Inspire. Conquer.
I originally shared this on my website
Wow. This is not only very profound, but something that I have been bouncing around in my brain for a while. Pretty much since I started blogging again, actually. I would start to write about myself or introduce myself and realize that I was telling people things about my life, instead of who I am. I don't really know if I'm saying it right, but your post really jumped out at me. I feel like I need to do some writing exercises to clariy it all.
I'm being very introspective today... thanks for the clarity you have given me with this post. I feel like I can take some direction with my writing on this idea... even just for my own satisfaction/clarity.
Thanks. I am glad that this piece has inspired something positive for you :)
This is a great piece!
I would say that sometimes our traits influence how we interpret and experience. But it's still important to separate them out, as much as we can, to keep them separate from each other.
I agree—as we are all subjective beings, who we are shapes how we experience things, and the things we experience can have deep impacts on who we become. :)
Absolutely!
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