Article Title:
Are You Starving Yourself of Success?
Author: Noah St. John
Additional Comments: Do you feel like you're going through life with
one foot on the brake and one on the gas? Learn why we stop ourselves
from success and how to stop pushing away the success you deserve.
Are
You Starving Yourself of Success?
October
20, 1997 dawned like any other day in the New England college
town where I attended school. As a 30-year-old Literature major,
I was two semesters away from graduation and working on my first
book. What I didn't know was that by the end of the day, my life
would be changed forever. That night, I went to a seminar on eating
disorders. Although I didn't have an eating disorder, I'd known
many people who had suffered from anorexia or bulimia, and I thought
the seminar might shed some light on what caused these conditions.
The speaker at the seminar began to describe why someone develops
an eating disorder, and said that these individuals are not merely
trying to lose weight or look like a supermodel. Rather, she described
a person who was hypersensitive, felt overly responsible for everyone
else's feelings, and suffered from a deeply negative self-image.
All these factors combined to cause the person to simply refuse
to eat.
In short, the person wasn't starving herself to lose weight -- but
in attempt to "not be here." Her research had also shown that eight
times as many women develop eating disorders as men.
The Moment My Life Changed Forever
After I heard this description, I said to myself, "Wow, that sounds
just like me!" Even though I'd won numerous scholarships, awards
and accolades, I had often wondered what I was doing on Earth and
certainly felt responsible for everyone else's happiness.
"Why, then," I asked myself, "did I not develop an eating disorder?
And why do eight times as many women develop eating disorders as
men?" All of a sudden, I knew the answer to both questions. It was
the moment my life made sense for the first time.
I suddenly realized that women in Western culture have been told
-- and believe unconsciously -- that their worth or value as a person
comes from their physical appearance. (Notice how this message is
reinforced by an unforgiving media.) At the same time, men are taught
that their worth comes from their material possessions, status,
or level of success. (Neither of these, of course, is where a person's
true worth comes from; it's just where both sexes have been TOLD
their worth comes from.)
In that instant, I realized that rather than starving myself of
food (attacking my physical body), I was starving myself of *success*
-- attacking my _material body_ -- because of this dangerously negative
self-image. I sat there, stunned, because I realized that I had
just discovered what really causes the so-called "fear of success"
and "self-sabotage." The cause was a condition that no one had ever
identified before, and that therefore didn't even have a name.
I realized that the most accurate name for this condition would
be *success anorexia* -- because rather than not being smart or
talented enough to achieve success, the person is literally *starving
themselves of success.*
"How Do I Know If I'm Starving Myself Of Success?"
Here is a simple way to see if you may be suffering from success
anorexia (starving yourself of success). How many of the following
descriptions you can identify with?
1. I read lots of self-help books but can't seem to use them to
improve my own life.
2. I'm insecure about money or making much less than I should be
making.
3. I'm in a job that doesn't allow me to express my real talents
or level of true abilities.
4. I expect myself to be perfect all the time.
5. I try to be all things to all people.
6. I find it very easy to start projects and very hard to finish
them.
7. I feel guilty saying "no" to other people.
8. I'm more comfortable watching others succeed than letting myself
succeed.
9. I usually feel like I'm not doing enough, even when I'm doing
all I can.
10. I feel responsible for everyone else's feelings.
11. I often let others win, even when I could easily win.
12. I have a very low opinion of myself, even though other people
tell me I'm smart, funny, and capable.
13. I usually settle for crumbs, even though I know I deserve better.
If you can identify with 6 or more of these warning signs, you may
be at risk for success anorexia.
(By the way, just as many women suffer from success anorexia as
men, because women today are being told that their worth lies not
only in their physical bodies, but also in their level of success.)
How To Stop Starving Yourself of Success
In my book,_Permission To Succeed: Unlocking The Mystery of Success
Anorexia_, I identify seven steps you can take to reverse success
anorexia and allow yourself to succeed. Here are a few steps you
can begin today:
1. Identify your Loving Mirrors.
A Loving Mirror is someone who can see you for who you really are,
someone who can love and support you unconditionally. While this
may sound "touchy-feely," we all need the loving encouragement of
someone like a coach, teacher, or mentor to become all we can be.
Make a list of the people in your life who can offer you unconditional
support. If you want free resources to help you find Loving Mirrors
in your life, go to www.PermissionToSucceed.com
for more information.
2. Become willing to succeed.
Few people realize that what we want is also what we fear. If you're
afraid of success, no matter how many "how-to's" of success you
know, you still won't let yourself succeed.
How do we overcome this? Do a Ben Franklin on yourself. Whenever
Benjamin Franklin had a difficult decision to make, he would make
a list of the pros and cons of the decision. Do the same thing with
success.
What could possibly be a drawback to succeeding? For one thing,
you may have to face your fear of the unfamiliar or people being
jealous of you. What if people expect you to do and be more than
you think you can?
Get the drawbacks and benefits to success down on paper and you
can finally face and overcome your fears.
3. Establish Goal-Free Zones.
Set a time and place where you don't do anything. This is vital,
because many of us are overwhelmed by our "to-do" lists every day.
In addition, people who starve themselves of success are literally
addicted to goal-setting, and feel incredibly guilt-tripped if they
stop, even for a moment, to take time for themselves.
I counsel my students to establish Goal-Free Zones, because this
is the only way we can learn that the world won't end if we take
time for ourselves. Astonishingly, this can be one of the hardest
steps for people to take because of the overwhelming guilt they
feel when they do something "selfish."
We are victims of circumstances within our control. One of the greatest
realizations of my life was that stopping myself from success not
only wasn't helping others, it was actually hurting those I care
about most. Please don't wait as long as I did. Use these tools
and give yourself permission to succeed.
About The Author:
Read a chapter from Noah St. John's book _Permission To Succeed:
Unlocking The Mystery of Success Anorexia_ and sign up for his FREE
newsletter at www.PermissionToSucceed.com
.
Top self-help experts including John Gray, Joan Borysenko, Jack
Canfield, and others are already calling Noah's work "one of the
most significant breakthroughs in the study of success in years."
Noah works with people who want to stop limiting their own success
and with a select number of companies that want to increase their
profits while fulfilling their mission and purpose. Visit www.PermissionToSucceed.com
or call (413) 587-0514.
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