I was a mindset coach on a business mastermind (back in my coaching days) and got some questions to prepare the answers to ahead of time. I wrote down some bullet points and decided to share them here. It might appear scattered at times but it’s because it was a rough draft: I never write down a full speech; don’t want it to sound rehearsed.

How to fall in love with yourself?

Here’s an example of conditional love: ‘I’m lazy because I haven’t been going to the gym for a week now and have been watching Netflix instead.’ The condition is: lazy, therefore not worthy of love. But if you’re truly connected to your body, accept yourself, and don’t tie your self-love to your actions, you WILL want to go to the gym. Our bodies have been created to move and you will want to move.

One of the most important steps is to recognize that we have developed multiple parts of self throughout our lives in response to pain, trauma, survival, fear, etc. Those parts become suppressed and show up as unhealthy coping mechanisms, triggers, rigidity, limiting beliefs, and repeating patterns. Biochemically, those emotions that we haven’t fully worked through are stored in our bodies and in time create physical discomfort as well.

So we need to look at all the ‘negative’ things repeating in our lives, identify those parts and start releasing them. There are multiple ways to do that: breath work, internal systems family therapy (IFS) method, therapy, coaching, journaling, and mindfulness.

Something you could do on a day-to-day basis is shift attention inwards. Ask yourself how am I feeling right now. What’s important to me? What do I want to do? When we pay attention inwards, we produce more endorphins. When our attention is outward, we’re under constant stress.

How to overcome fear to move forward and believe in yourself

Evolution built it in such a way that we crave social approval and stay away from disapproval. Fear of moving forward usually relates to failure, judgment from or disappointing others. This keeps our attention outward, but as I said earlier, when our attention is outward we’re stressed out. So the answer is to look inwards.

Oftentimes, however, we have internalized those fears. In that case, look within and ask ‘What exactly am I afraid of?’ ‘What do I think it’s going to happen if I do this?’ etc.

Observe the answers and analyze where they came from. Perhaps it’s your past experience or maybe society. Once you recognize where your fear comes from it becomes easier to move forward.

In terms of believing in yourself.

Self-belief = competency + experience.

Both can be developed through practice. So it’s about going out there and starting it. When I started my coaching business, I went on Facebook and announced that 5 people are getting 2 free sessions. It wasn’t a sales scheme, it was me gaining practice beyond friends & family and it turned out really well. Just do it!

How to recognize limiting beliefs?

Say you want to start a business. Sit down and write all of your beliefs around that topic. My examples would be:

Then go through each belief and check whether it’s true about yourself and reality. For example, only smart people can create a business. Reality check? Richard Branson – a dyslexic, barely graduated, not coming from a rich family. Therefore, being ‘smart’ is not a prerequisite in the real world.


How to release mental blocks that refrain us from preferred outcomes?

I look at mental blocks as suppressed parts of ourselves from our past experiences

Some events that happen in our childhood can be too overwhelming for us to digest as we might not have had the emotional and neural capacity to deal with them. As a result, parts of ourselves are stuck in the past, oftentimes in that very age when it happened. So you could be a 30-year-old having beliefs of friendships as a 10-year-old.

For example, when you were 10, your best friend publicly humiliated you in front of your classmates. It would have been too painful of an experience to deal with (not enough emotional maturity + prefrontal cortex not developed). To protect you from pain, your psyche would have suppressed the emotions and on top of it, created another part that’s protecting the suppressed part. So that no one would ever hurt you that much again.

The problem is that these two parts are still alive and running within you when you’re an adult making friends. This could manifest in many ways such as not letting anyone close to you, not trusting people around you, and feeling like you can’t connect with others.

Internal Family Systems therapy might be a great solution. Or finding a coach/therapist.

How to stop the vicious cycle?

Feeling stuck is our body’s way of telling us something is wrong. There are emotions that have not been looked at, and ways of being that are no longer working and we need to take a serious look. When we’re in a vicious cycle we feel negative emotions but the point of them is evolution.

To step off the roller coaster then, we have to look inside. Grab a journal:

Look at it with curiosity and not judgment. And, be brutally honest with yourself.

Some notes on True Self


First published here.