How to Start Over: Rebuild or Just Remodel
You need a change. Something is not right, and you feel unsettled. This is not how life is supposed to be. You need to start over. But what exactly does this mean? Some will advise you to throw out the good with the bad, the manageable with the unmanageable, in the name of a fresh start. Too often we get rid of the uneasy and avoid the uncomfortable in the name of getting healthy or finding success. Avoiding the difficult is not the answer, and avoiding challenge can even hinder your success. Your life is like a building. Sometimes you need to tear down the entire structure and start over in a new location, but other times only a little remodeling is necessary. It makes no sense to demolish a building just because it needs a little paint and patches, and it makes no sense to cut yourself off from everyone and everything you believe in and care about just because your life is not going in the right direction. Sometimes circumstances call for a drastic change, but other times less dramatic changes can produce the confidence and motivation you need to fulfill your life purpose and live happy, healthy, successful, and free. Here are three things to help you start over: help to identify which of the four key parts of life you need to change, help to remove common hinderances to starting over, and encouragements to just do it, whatever this means for you. Create a better you today!
1. Identify exactly how you should start over, and how you should not.
There are many parts of life, but here are four key areas to consider. The following will help you determine what extent you may wish to start over in different aspects of your life, with some cautions along the way.
Mentally
You may need to start over mentally. This can range from changing how you approach only one aspect of life, to changing your entire mental approach to life. If your thoughts are defeating you, change what you think, but do so carefully. Do not allow yourself to be brainwashed by messages, but at the same time, wash your brain. Let me explain. In a sense, we are all brainwashed every day, but when we take control of how this happens, it is an active process, where we deliberately choose who to listen to, and to wash our brain of the thoughts that bring defeat.
For example, when you choose to watch television, commercials innundate you with subliminal messages that will often influence your choice at the supermarket, whether you know it or not. You take that risk, however, because the reward of your show is worth a little product branding to you. Likewise, when you hear comments you did not solicit, you can automatically allow them to alter how you think about yourself, or you can make a conscious choice to evaluate whether they are coming from a credible source and to dismiss those unworthy of consideration.
Everyone has a message, and when you accept and internalize information, you are re-structuring a part of how you think. The difference is in whether you make a conscious choice to screen out what you accept as authority and allow to wash you brain, or whether you allow everyone’s opinions to throw you into confusion. As a child, you should be surrounded by positive mental reinforcement as you learn the confidence to distinguish between the constructive encouragment of loved ones and the destructive malicious attacks of others. Unfortunately, children are often exposed to hurtful ourpourings of anger, internalizing these attacks into their sense of self-worth.
As an adult, if you do not re-write these negative beliefs, or if you accept all other opinions as correct, you will find your life needs a change. Deep inside, you are not happy. You need to know your life has purpose, you have great talent waiting to be developed, and you are valuable to the world and to God. You need to gain confidence and to make conscious choices to dismiss those who do not hold authority in your life. You need to start over. You may just need to re-write your thoughts about your career, and start to dream big dreams. You may only need to change how you view your relationships, and how you handle lonliness. You may need to cut off a destructive relationship, or you may be able to stay close, especially with family, while gaining the confidence to ignore destructive comments. You may also need to change how you see yourself, your worth, and your strengths as a person. You may find, however, that you need to start from scratch, that your mind is filled with negative thoughts. You need to re-learn how to handle stress, how to view life for success, and how to triumph. There is a time for everything, and this is your time. Start now.
Geographically
You may need to start over geographically. If it is for career reasons, the change may be forced upon you, or it may be an exciting achievement and a goal you finally reached. For others, you may need to move to make a fresh start as part of a new you. Ask yourself these questions. Are you moving because it is the best for your life right now, or are you moving because it is the easiest way to start over? A physical move is never easy. Psychology experts generally suggest you requre about two years to adjust to major changes such as moving to a new state.
While it can be difficult to move, sometimes people think a geographical change is the best solution to get away from problems. If this is the only way to be safe, the only way to keep yourself or your loved ones from harm, then it is the best for your life. If, however, you think you have to leave because the pain is just too strong, be sure there are not more effective ways to get through your pain. Remember, when you face your pain, you can conquer it as you heal, but when you run from your pain, you will usually find it follows you, as it grows in the chase.
I once had the chance to move out of state. At first, I did not go, because I knew it was not the right time. It would have been the easiest way to escape my challenges, but I knew I needed to face what was hurting and to leave not because I was trying to escape the pain, but because God opened the doors to a new part of my life. I faced my fears, and stayed where I was, until the time was right. When I did finally move, it was because my career and my life were headed in that direction. Change can be scary, and moving is often scary, but it can be exactly what your life needs. If you think this is you, pray about it, talk about it, and then when you are sure, embrace it. Seize the opportunity and make every opportunity count.
Emotionally
You may need to start over emotionally. Do you fill up with rage and need help controlling your responses? Are you depressed, in despair, and isolating yourself? Do you find yourself managing stress in mostly healthy ways, but one particular aspect of life seems overwhelming? Are you burdened by grief over something and you cannot find joy in what remains? I have included links to some other posts to help in these areas, but the first step is to identify that you need to start over.
Do you need a drastic change in how you respond, setting yourself free from addictive or other destructive patterns? Do you just need some minor adjustments in how your life flows, to make a conscious decision to fight for the peace you once had in one particular area of life? This emotional area often feeds into your mental area, and vice versa. Are your emotions swinging because of your mental messages? Are you frozen by fear and inhibited by uncertainty? You can start over, in the big and little ways your emotions impact every day. Start today, to get healthy for a new you.
Spiritually
You may need to start over spiritually. Parents generally want their children to follow their religious affiliations. As a Christian, I also want my children to learn the Bible and to love God. Some pastors say between 60 and 90% of graduates stop attending church, while a recent UT Austin study suggests what changes is participation, where 62% of Protestants attend church less often after graduating. The point is that many times college is where students first consider what they really believe in life, apart from their parents.
When you think about starting over spiritually, listen to your heart, where your spiritual life begins. I believe God calls to you, so search out when you have questions. My caution, an important one, is to consider why you are making a change. If, for example, you are a Christian dismissing your religion because of the poor example from your parents or after seeing hypocrates, you need to realize they are imperfect people representing a perfect God. No religion has perfect people. Not one. If, however, you are living in a belief system and feeling deep within that God is teaching you to seek out the truth elsewhere, seek wise counsel, listen, and learn. Do not neglect your spiritual life, and have the courage to start over when you feel led.
2. Remove the hinderances to starting over.
Now that you know what areas need a new you, how do you motivate yourself to make practical changes? To start over and remove the hinderances to your success, you need to do three things:
change your sense of what is fair
Fair is not always equal, and life is not always fair. Many people never make changes or start over because it is easier to blame circumstances or people and sit in the “poor me” spot. Life is not fair. Sometimes it hits you hard, and you should never have to deal with the pain or troubles you face. But they are there. Face them anyway, and triumph despite your challenges. Change your expectation of fairness, and realize comparing to others only hinders you. Push through your sense of what is fair and focus on the future instead.
challenge your sense of effort
You may not want to do what it will take, you may not think you should have to, but if it is really worth it, do it anyway. Put forth the effort, and re-define what this means. Effort is not the amount of energy that you think something should require, it is the amount of energy required to accomplish that something, no matter what. If your diet, exercise, or stop-smoking plan is harder than you think, instead of saying it is too hard and using this as an excuse to quit, if it is truly a worthwhile goal, then decide it is worth this effort, the effort that challenges you beyond what you imagined possible, and keep going or start over again: do it anyway. You can do it!
I just applied this to my own life in writing my dissertation. I did it. I finished and passed my dissertation defense! For those who are not familiar with the Ph.D. requirements, after coursework is finished and your dissertation proposal is successfully completed, you advance to candidacy and write “the book”, your original research of 200-300 pages. Then comes the final defense examination where you pass or fail. After you pass, you turn in the final version, and graduate. Yeah! I am so excited, and I thank God for all the ways I found strength I never thought I had to make it. You see, I had to revise my sense of effort.
I expended more than twice as much energy and time than I had planned to complete my dissertation. I always found the failure statistics amazing for PhD candidates– over 50% never finish their dissertation! On this side, I can see how hard it really is. When people ask me how I did it, with a husband, three young children, and a busy life, I say I am special, but no more or less special than any other candidate. The difference is I did not let my sense of fairness, my sense of what effort it should take, prevent me from expending the effort it did take. I pushed on, doing whatever necessary to complete it. Persistence and a positive attitude in the face of challenge makes a difference and creates your success!
choose your sphere of influence
Help others and find new ways to influence other people. At the same time, be selective about who you allow to influence you. Ignore those who say you can’t, and believe you can. Start over today!
3. Just do it!
For practical ways to take action now, visit some of our other articles such as four steps to make it happen, start a new habit or break a bad one, managing stress, and dream your dreams to achieve greatness, or browse our archives for other inspirations.
You can think and plan and think and plan, but there comes a time to just do it. Think big, dream wide, and act small. Keep your eyes on the big picture, but at the same time take each day one moment at a time. No more excuses. If you know what is required for a better you, start over today. Start from where you are, or start from scratch, but wherever you need a change, start over as if you can create who you want to become, because you can. You can do it!
Do you have any suggestions to help people start over? Share with us what works for you. Towards a better you,
Patricia
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Change is good. It keeps life fresh and interesting. But many of us are a little hesitant to go through with it because it’s totally different. It’s not only the physical things but also the mental, emotional and spiritual as well. The feeling we have when confronted with change is so alien. But that’s precisely the point. It’s like being doused with water in the inside.
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Living by Design Blog Carnival No.20…
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Thank you, Patricia.
Be careful when you cast out your demons that you don’t throw away the best of yourself.
~ Friedrich Nietzsche
Peace and wonder,
CG
Wow, what can I say? A very indepth article, I really got a lot out of it.
Cheers,
Albert | UrbanMonk.Net
Modern personal development, entwined with ancient spirituality.
What a very inspiring post. You make starting over easy and almost painless.
A lot to digest. In general I find that people are uncomfortable with change, even if it’s for the better. They would rather have what they know than what is unfamiliar.