“I’ll Learn”!

Lately, I read this quote on Instagram, and it hit home hard. It confirmed the insight I got after I was offered a job with similar tasks like my fomer job which I tried to avoid. I understood that I cannot find peace in avoiding them but in opening up to them and life led me again to that point again to understand and dissolve the issue eventually. You can read about it here.

It is easy to hide behind “I can’t” when we don’t feel like doing something or are even afraid. But that can throw us into a vicious circle. We talk ourselves into something we can’t, although we could. Maybe others told us we were not smart enough or not worthy. Maybe there was more expected from us than we could give, or we expected too much from ourselves. It can put immense pressure on one and lead to overwhelming situations. To avoid pressure, we hide behind “I can’t” – and resign. The more we resist and think “I can’t”, the more we begin to believe it. The more we believe it, the more we block ourselves from the motivation to try it. The less we try, the less we learn, and the more we lose contact with the matter. The insecurity and fear grow. And we are even more convinced that “I can’t”. That way, we deny and destroy a part of our potential – only because we decided to think so. What a misconception!

We only need to repeat a thought a few times, and it begins to sink deeper like a considerable truth. The next step is to find confirmations for that thought, which we will always find. After a while, we genuinely believe what started as a protective thought to escape the fear. But we forget that initial reason and live in our distorted truth. Do we know how many misunderstandings live within us? I don’t think we can. As long as we are unaware that we use excuses, we won’t recognize them. We could leave our prison but hold on tight to its bars. And the funny thing is that we are doing this from outside the prison cell. First, we build our prison. Later, we learn to break out of it again. We are our own teachers, and life provides the lessons.

Through the awareness that our convictions about our abilities are only thoughts but not given facts, we can look at them with a distanced view. Why do we think we can’t? Did others tell us? Did we tell ourselves? Since when do we believe we can’t? What did we believe before, and what happened that we changed our beliefs? In the end, it doesn’t matter what the origin was. What does matter is the insight we receive that this belief is only a destructive thought pattern. Don’t take them as something set and unchangeable. Every thought pattern is changeable. If someone says it isn’t, it is only another excuse.

We must not let anyone put us in a prison cell, even less should we put ourselves in it. Whenever we are automatically trying to find a way to avoid something, let us take a moment and think WHY this resistance makes us think “I can’t”. If we come to the conclusion that we are only running from our fears and expectations, the answer can only be:

In Love and Light


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About the Author

Erika's avatar

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The purpose of my blog is to inspire and shine a light on the beauty and power of the wonderful being inside your body. You came into this world to share what only you can give. Remember who you really are, conquer the world the way you always wanted to, and become the blessing to us all that you were meant to be.

44 Comments

“We must not let anyone put us in a prison cell, even less should we put ourselves in it.”

This line is so real in today’s world, I recently was thinking about quitting social media. It’s been something that I’ve kept telling myself I can’t. Until today, after coming to a realization that it adds nothing to my growth and inner wellbeing. Comparison and dopamine hits you get out of it keep you in a perpetual cycle of wanting more. It surely is a mental drug, and these companies are making tons of profit, while the average person wastes their potential. I’ve deleted my Facebook and Instagram apps. Opened my WordPress account, and I spotted your post. What a confirmation!.

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Unfortunately, I have to agree. If I had not have my publisher put a lot of it up, I would not be even here. I don’t regret blogging, That does add inspiriation in a good way. But I only have the others for promoting my buisness actually. However, I deletted my Twitter account because of the reasons you mentioned and because Musk is not a person I want to support.
I hope we will still have you here for a while, and I am so glad that my post may have given you some steadfastness in your decision. Conincidences have their justification… 😉

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WordPress has always been like somewhere I call “home” because ever since I published my first post 3 years ago, my life has drastically changed. I’ve seen myself grow, figure a lot of things about myself, find like-minded souls like you and more others. I’m here for good Erika. I am also glad that you use social media for your business promotion that’s wise.

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When I think back, it is truly stunning how much blogging affected my life in several fields. And yes, it is kind of “Home” for me too. It is a home we created with what we give. And we connected with like-minded people. I don’t want to miss that anymore and I am happy to hear that you won’t leave (at least not too soon). Have a great rest of your day at your side of the globe, Sanjo!

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It took me so long until I understood again, how much and how long we can stand in our own way not noticing it. Thank you, Cher, let’s keep it in mind. Tests will show up everywhere. Hugs 💖

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