HiĀ friend! Last week I shared the story of how I asked the Universe for a business bestieā¦and then hesitated when I got a coffee invite from someone who checked several of the exact boxes Iād been journaling about. š
If you missed it, you can catch up here. I shared ā7 signs your subconscious might be running the showā without you even realizing it.
So, what can we do once we spot those patterns and realize our old belief system is still trying to take the lead?
Hereās the good news: You donāt have to ignore it. And you donāt have to force yourself to try to believe something shiny and new.
You just have to loosen the grip a little and get curious.
3 steps I teach (and use myself) to interrupt and reframe automatic negative thoughts:
1. Call it what it is.
Have you ever heard the phrase, āName it to tame it?ā Thatās what weāre doing here.
Youāre taking a thought from, āThis is true,ā to āOh, itās this old story again.ā
In my case, when I caught the thought, āYou should be working instead of going out to coffee,ā I called it out: āAh. This is that old familiar story that says my value comes from being āproductive.ā And going out to coffee isnāt productive.ā
I love the BrenĆ© Brown phrase, āThe story Iām telling myself isā¦ā
It helps create space between you and the thought/belief.
2. Invite in an alternate possibility.
You donāt need to argue with the thought or prove it wrong. Just ask questions.
Then play Devilās Advocate and try the complete opposite thought to see how it feels. āGoing to coffee IS productive.ā
Could that feel true, even a little?
Absolutely. Connection is part of my work. And it feels like something my future self would say yes to.
The following questions come from Byron Katieās The Work: four simple but powerful prompts I come back to often:
3. Choose one small aligned action.
You donāt have to fully believe the new thought. Just actĀ as ifĀ it might be true.
After I sent last weekās newsletter, I picked up my phone, sent her a message, and now weāve got coffee on the calendar.
I know. š This isnāt a dramatic, life-changing story, but thatās the point! It was just one small yes that honored what I said I wanted.
At the end of every workshop and coaching session I lead, I ask you to choose an MVEāa Minimum Viable Experiment. This is one tiny, doable action you can take right away to move an idea into motion.
This comes from my background in Positive Psychology, where we talk about how even one small step can:
When it comes to shifting beliefs, itās not about āpositive thinkingā or pushing through.
Itās about pausing long enough to notice the moment, and deciding:
Is this the thought I want to keep following? Or is it time to try something different?
This week, I invite you to:
1) Choose a Minimum Viable Experiment: one small action that aligns with the version of you youāre becoming (or dreaming about becoming).
It doesnāt have to be perfect, just something that nudges you closer.
2) Then, hit reply, and share it with me.
No pressure. No judgment.
Sharing helps you get clear, adds a little accountability, and lets me know what youāre working toward, so I can shape future emails and resources around what really matters to you.
Next week, Iāll share what to do after the first stepāhow to keep the momentum going even when you donāt fully believe the new story yet.
– Nicole
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