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ARTICLE - HOW COMFORTABLE ARE YOU WITH CHANGE? 1997 Article
New form of career consulting creates clarity around issues of change
By Eve K. Bernshaw
Have you
felt powerless around the need to make certain decisions? Has the fear of change or transition created concern, or an adverse
effect on your life? If so, you are not alone. Every day millions of people experience various forms of anxiety or fear, while
attempting to make decisions. Most of them, just like you, may not know that effective and functional decision-making is a
learned behavioral skill.
If you find yourself identifying with these feelings, or simply wish to sharpen your decision-making
skills, it may be time to ask yourself this simple question:
How and why do I react to change in the way I do?
As
you attempt to comprehend your unique relationship with change, you will automatically start to develop a powerful decision
making skill. The skill is functional choice, where you begin to instinctually choose decisions that create function and growth,
subsequently creating a freedom from the fear of change.
There are many ways to measure the depth of our emotional
maturity. One way is in examining how we solve problems and make decisions. Another way is the manner in which we deal with
transitional experiences, when and how they are dealt to us. Our comprehension, responsiveness and overall coping ability
continue to grow and change at every stage of life. We accumulate knowledge and insight, by absorbing the teachings and beliefs
we inherit from others. As we are maturing, we supplement that base of knowledge with our own, first hand experience of success
and failure, with all the accompanying feelings of joy and pain that arrive with each reward or consequence.
For most
people, decision-making equates to knowing what to do. As long as we are operating within our scope of experience and know
how, all is well. We start to feel inadequate when our knowing what to do, has been compromised or skewed, by our limited
experience. At this point, our decision is stymied. We revert to whatever means of default decision-making (survival), is
available to us. The results usually indicate that an experience of inadequacy triggers fearful or negative beliefs, which
control and produce a range of insecure reactions. Not a surprising result, considering how few of us have had training in
deliberation, or even the basic, parental guidance in the fine art of decision making.
Insecure reactions range from
uncertainty and doubt, to blinding fear. Fears, or self-limiting beliefs, either are born of an inherited source or are self-created.
In either case, all beliefs are simply instructions, ideologies and convictions. Beliefs are taught to us, or created by us,
for one very important reason. Beliefs keep us safe.
Originally, fear protected us. Our primal instinct of fight or
flight lives on today in our inheritance of beliefs from generations' past. The offspring if those ancient beliefs still inhabit
corners of our psyche, creating realities that still exist in current day behaviors.
Upon close examination, we find
many inherited beliefs, no longer serving us in any positive way, yet they remain. Until the source and purpose of those beliefs
are acknowledged, lives are held in bondage, clinging to erroneous fears that painfully control decisions, without reason
or even hope of an intended purpose.
Emotions surrounding change can range from anticipation to debilitating paralysis.
Clients often described a transition block as feeling hesitant and uncertain. They feel stuck or unable to move. Like an obstacle
in our path, this type of emotional barrier suspends decision making, by blocking our ability to focus. Even the anticipation
of a block can trigger anxiety. Just imagining judgmental criticism can trigger us, when our confidence and self-esteem are
low. That form of anxiety usually shows up, not coincidentally, as we are being summoned to perform or produce in an unfamiliar
role.
Our ability to understand the core issue (beliefs) behind our fear of change is the key. The optimum goal of
decision-making is to operate out of functional intent, rather than being driven by an imagined (fear) belief of what may
happen. We create an outcome by our ability to continually choose functional decisions that create our intention.
Understanding
this paradigm creates a new perspective. Freedom from indecision and fear of change is available for those who dare to question
the source and purpose behind their beliefs. As we understand the role our beliefs play in every decision we make, we realize
we have the power to choose between beliefs that create function and fulfillment, or beliefs that control our life, based
on fear.
Example of a successful transitional experience
Imagine the process you currently use in making decisions.
Break it down step by step. Compare it to the following example of a successful transitional experience.
Notice that
this process is circular, dynamic and exponential in design. Remember: A successful transitional experience occurs when a
functional decision is made from intent.
Having an ability to focus on an intended result or goal, concurrent with
initiating necessary decisions that change and adjust, whilst progressing forward in a measured, proactive manner. Realizing
that the natural product or result from this process is a dynamic, collective knowledge and confidence acquired from all previous
transitional experiences. Knowing we have allowed all previous, accumulative experiences, perceived to be either successful
or failed, to educate and enlighten our ability to expand our ever changing, dynamic understanding. Knowing that as we continue
to focus on the re-created, intended result, we continually see it changing and becoming a new and modified intended result.
Through our choice of decisions, we dynamically have been creating what we intended every moment, and indeed have succeeded.
If you have recently questioned the validity of your decision-making process, ask yourself who was manning your emotional
helm at the time? Have your decisions been intent driven, functional and proactive, or have you turned on your emotional autopilot,
defaulting responsibility to a habitual or programmed process? Have you surrendered to assumed conclusions, based on old,
inherited or self-created fears?
Take a moment and consider the following examples of fear based decisions, and the
significant life changes that could have occurred, had decisions been based on intention and functional choice, rather than
fear of consequence.
The career change dreamed of for years, and dismissed. The creative venture painfully put
on hold for fear of an unknown future.
The unacknowledged reasons behind the dissolution of any relationship.
The
overwhelming power of an unknown future, holding the freedom of recovery in irons.
The postponement of any action
once thought significant. But because of little attention and unclear intent, its memory finally died, all but forgotten.
Being
brought up observing a traditional family behavior of unending grief or sadness as a child, you never questioned, you just
assumed, that you too were predestined to a life of sadness.
Everyone has felt the fear of change and transition or
imagined failure in our lives. However, when the fear of change controls or dominates our life, it may be time to consider
a new way of looking at our decision making process. It may time to accept a new level of responsibility in this creative
& dynamic experience called life. By learning to create functional decisions from choice, rather than consequence, we can
automatically add more options for unlimited growth and freedom, in all areas of our life.
c Copyright 1997-2009 E.K.Bernshaw
All Rights Reserved
Transitions Counseling/Consulting 760-536-6643 http://www.transitionscounseling.com
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