Before You Listen to That Voice Again…

One of the greatest obstacles to living from the inside out isn’t what happens to us. It’s what we repeatedly tell ourselves about what happens to us.

Far too many people spend years – sometimes decades – allowing fear, anxiety, and self-doubt to become the loudest voices in their lives. You know the voice.

The one that shows up right before a presentation, a performance, a difficult conversation, or a new opportunity and says:

  • “You’ll embarrass yourself.”
  • “You can’t handle this.”
  • “You’re going to fail.”
  • “What if everything goes wrong?”
  • “Better stay where it’s safe.”

What’s amazing is that this voice has a terrible track record and yet somehow keeps getting promoted. It predicts disasters that never happen. It exaggerates problems. It questions your abilities.

And despite all of that, many of us continue treating it like a trusted advisor. The longer you listen to that voice, the more convincing it becomes. Eventually, fear stops being something you experience and starts becoming part of who you think you are.

Instead of saying, “I feel anxious,” you begin saying, “I am an anxious person.” Instead of, “I’m nervous about speaking,” it becomes, “I’m just not a speaker.” Fear begins to steal more than your peace of mind. It starts stealing opportunities, relationships, experiences, and dreams.

That’s why learning to manage your inner dialogue is one of the most important skills you can develop.

Step 1: Stop the Thought

When you notice an anxious or self-defeating thought beginning to gain momentum, interrupt it. Immediately.

Say: “STOP!” Picture a bright red stop sign. Don’t debate the thought. Don’t negotiate with it. Don’t invite it to sit down and explain itself over coffee. Just stop it.

Sometimes the healthiest response to a negative thought is simply:

“Thank you for sharing your opinion. Now please be quiet.”

Step 2: Replace the Thought

Stopping the thought creates space. Now fill that space with something better. Our brains create neural pathways based on repetition. The more often we think a thought, the easier it becomes to think it again.

If you’ve spent years rehearsing thoughts like:

  • “I’ll always be anxious.”
  • “I can’t handle pressure.”
  • “I’m not confident enough.”

Your mind naturally follows those familiar routes. But new routes can be built.

Replace:

  • “I can’t do this” with “I’m learning to do this”

Replace:

  • “I’m going to panic” with “I have tools that can help me stay present”

Replace:

  • “I’ve always been this way” with “I’m becoming stronger than I used to be”

Step 3: Repeat Until You Believe the New Story

Lasting change doesn’t happen because of one positive thought. It happens because you consistently choose healthier thoughts over fearful ones. Each time you do, you strengthen a new pathway.

Little by little:

  • Confidence grows.
  • Fear loses its authority.
  • New possibilities appear.

Living from the inside out means refusing to let fear write your life story. It means choosing thoughts that support who you are becoming rather than who fear says you are.

Remember:

  • Your brain can learn.
  • Your habits can change.
  • Your confidence can grow.

So today, give your inner critic a coffee break. Actually, make it a long vacation.

Then start creating the thoughts that will help create the life you’ve been wanting all along.

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive or off-topic.