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Be Your Own Cheerleader

Be Your Own Cheerleader

Accountability is not a tool that you use to shame yourself.

Accountability is an active form of mindfulness that you can use to honour the commitments you make to yourself (and potentially others).

I use accountability as a tool to follow through on the promises I make to myself. Read that again if you need, because your capacity to follow through is an incredibly powerful resource.

I use accountability techniques to refine how I map out the small actionable steps to achieve my goals and associated responsibilities. Mapping my accountability is especially useful to motivate me when I’m starting something new and feel like I’m in the weeds, struggling to push through or feeling overwhelmed.

The use of accountability map can instill a positive sense of ownership of what you want (without guilt or shame if you don’t immediately achieve). I regularly refer my clinical clients to use accountability maps because you can readily track the small successes you’ve made (and easily dismissed). 

Acknowledging those small wins that generate feel-good hormones and puts credits of hope into your happiness account. This is what can significantly impact your personal growth in a positive way — small hits of dopamine. 

Why do I love accountability mapping so much? Because the positive action of mapping provides you with conscious permission to become your own cheerleader. 

When you map where in your life you’ve been accountable, you remain present rather than triggered. This is a neurological space in your mind, whereby you can allow your imagination to unfold and envisage seeing more success. It is these visions that kick start motivation to continue. This part of your psyche is your inner cheerleader!

Here are four reasons why your ‘inner cheerleader’ could use accountability as a crucial tool in achieving your goals.

Increased Focus

When you can hold yourself accountable (not is a space of shame or guilt), your cheerleader self can revisit your clear goals and objectives. Regularly revisiting and refreshing your vision of what you want to achieve enables you to remain focused. 

This focus boosts your capacity to concentrate on the small actionable steps which will result in what’s truly important in relation to achieving your goal.

Improved Productivity

When your cheerleader tracks your progress, you can identify potential inefficiencies and areas for improvement. Reflection by your cheerleader isn’t a bad thing. Tracking your performance supports you to identify any arising gaps. This will keep you honest with yourself in terms of progress or procrastination.

In my experience when I track my personal progress, I find myself leaning into more efficient use of my time and resources, as well as improving new techniques. My inner cheerleader naturally streamlines processes and systems to ensure I am repeatedly hitting the targets and then expanding to the next goal.

Enhanced Self-Discipline 

Working with your inner cheerleader boosts your accountability capacity through encouragement whilst do-ing the action. Actively utilise that positive internal dialogue from your internal cheerleader to boost your self-discipline and drive a hunger for more consistent effort and dedication to your goals. 

The more positive dialogue you have inside your everyday mind, the more you will crave this subtle serotonin boost and crave more success. You will naturally crave how good it feels after you have completed the small actionable task, rather than focussing on how you feel before the event.

Boosted Confidence

Allow your inner cheerleader to recognise and celebrate everything and all achievements – no matter how small. Cheering all aspects of your beautiful life naturally builds your self-esteem. Your self esteem and belief in self builds the foundations of your confidence in your abilities.

Conclusion

I don’t know about you, but I call upon my inner cheerleader for every single Park Run I participate in. I call upon her when I’m vacuuming or even doing the dishes. That positive part of my psyche is always around cheering me on, no matter what I’m trying to achieve. 

Give your inner cheerleader a shout out today and allow yourself to be mindful of how you feel after you complete the task.

Want to read more like this?

This is My Roarsigned copies of my first published book can be purchased from this website.

  • Self Reflection – A little Look Withinclick here
  • 8 Hot Tips How To Journal – click here
  • Can You Risk Not Stepping Up To Mother yourself?Click here

Listen to the audio version via the “I Am Change-ing” Podcast – click here

First published with WordGarden, a Medium Publication. Click here this piece.

About Karen

Change Facilitator

Karen Humphries is an advanced Kinesiology Practitioner, Wellbeing Coach, Hypnotherapist (including psychotherapy), Resource Therapist (Ego State), Intuitive Meditation Facilitator, and trainee Counselor (Mental Health).

Karen is a published author of This Is My Roar.

She is a self-confessed laughaholic.  She loves being of service to the world with her humorous and positive approach to life, encouraging people to ‘choose to change and bloom from within.’ 

Karen Humphries, Change Chick, Change Facilitator, Kinesiology, Wellness Coach, Australian Bush Flower Essences, LEAP Facilitator, Trauma, Public Speaker, Cancer Ambassador, Blooming From Within, Traralgon, Victoria, Gippsland
Cancel That

Cancel That

Use This Statement As A Circuit Breaker to Unwanted Self-Talk

I see clients within my therapeutic clinic who admit their perception of self is misguided. They tell me they feel lost, ungrounded and disassociated. They are not centred physically, mentally or emotionally.

Throughout the therapy session, I guide the client to unpack the reasons for those words. They retell their stories. They retrace the steps leading to this place on the road of life. It often starts with not believing or backing yourself. It can start with something as simple as your language to describe yourself.

Your brain automatically defaults to a negative outlook. Why? Because it takes less effort. You don’t have to expend energy seeking solutions, evidence, or positive patterns. It takes the shortest path to a response/reaction. However, it’s worth noting that the brain also doesn’t know what is real (or not). When the brain records information, it does so as if it were happening.

When you use negative language to describe yourself, your brain believes what you tell it. Your mind records those statements and matches the memory with what you are doing. There is also a process of filing that memory with specific people in particular places. Your brain creates memories — that are not always factual, but based on how you responded to the occasion from an emotional and sensory perspective.

Crazy right?

When creating change processes with my clinical clients I start with tiny steps. As humans, it’s easier to create change when there are small changes — it’s more comfortable and digestible. You’re creating a new muscle memory that takes physical and mental energy. I liken the process to a baby taking a year to learn to walk. It’s a process and there are milestones like sitting, rolling, rocking, crawling, standing and stepping.

You get the drift.

It can feel confronting to observe yourself talking negatively to and about yourself. It’s likely to feel very uncomfortable within your body. And your confidence may feel dented when you recognise how often you’re repeating the negativity.

Never fear, not all is lost. In my two decades of therapeutic experience, try actions that break the circuit or interrupt the unwanted pattern. Rather than have to revisit an old painful memory, or recreate an unwanted behaviour, you can allow yourself to observe the negative language which triggers the survival reaction.

Try a circuit breaker today!

Is today the day you use the phrase “cancel that” as a circuit breaker to intrusive negative thoughts? So often your internal language is not as positive as you intend. Those negative statements seep into your everyday language until those words become the natural and accepted dialogue that you use to describe yourself.

It starts with statements like these:

❌ I’m too tired

❌ I can’t be bothered

❌ I’ll start tomorrow

❌ I’m too busy

❌ It’s not the right time

❌ I’m not ready

❌ I’m afraid

❌ I’m not sure

❌ But what if …

❌ I’m not good enough

I call bullshit on it all. It’s these in-the-moment statements that we say flippantly without first pausing and leaning into how we’re feeling. We just blurt out the first thing that comes to mind, and wham, you’re body and brain respond.

Sometimes you just need a breather, and then get back on the horse with what you were doing, rather than running the survival reaction.

When you catch yourself saying “Cancel that”, you are negating the energy of the negative statement and putting your brain on notice that you can make space for neutral or even better, more positive in your life.

Fair warning — when you first start using this circuit breaker, you can very easily feel overwhelmed with how often you start to say “Cancel that”. But remind yourself of the fact that we can upwards of 60,000 thoughts a day. It shocks my clients when I advise that approximately seventy-five per cent (75%) of those thoughts are negative! And of those thoughts that are negative, ninety-five per cent (95%) of them are simply repeated from yesterday.

So creating change for tomorrow starts with canceling garbage thoughts today! The more you cancel out, the less you repeat tomorrow, and the weaker the emotional energy is to repeat them. It’s also interesting that when you are in a more positive-framed mindset, you feel better (because there is less cortisol being secreted).

You recuperate faster.

You experience less pain.

You change faster.

You get to the best version of you! And you are so worth it!

Conclusion

You too can attempt this simple circuit breaker as often as you dare. I invite you to become curious the next time your life becomes a roller coaster of negative thoughts.

Want to read more like this?

This is My Roarsigned copies of my first published book can be purchased from this website.

  • Self Reflection – A little Look Withinclick here
  • 8 Hot Tips How To Journal – click here
  • Can You Risk Not Stepping Up To Mother yourself?Click here

Prefer to listen to a podcast?

Karen has a free public podcast channel entitled “I Am Changeing” that stores resources for clients.

Click here for this episode.

First published with WORD GARDEN, a Medium Publication. Click here this piece.

About Karen

Change Facilitator

Karen Humphries is an advanced Kinesiology Practitioner, Wellbeing Coach, Hypnotherapist (including psychotherapy), Resource Therapist (Ego State), Intuitive Meditation Facilitator, and trainee Counselor (Mental Health).

Karen is a published author of This Is My Roar.

She is a self-confessed laughaholic.  She loves being of service to the world with her humorous and positive approach to life, encouraging people to ‘choose to change and bloom from within.’ 

Karen Humphries, Change Chick, Change Facilitator, Kinesiology, Wellness Coach, Australian Bush Flower Essences, LEAP Facilitator, Trauma, Public Speaker, Cancer Ambassador, Blooming From Within, Traralgon, Victoria, Gippsland