A guide to growing your mindset and building your self esteem
GROWING YOUR MINDSET
Your mindset describes your outlook on life, your resilience and coping skills, as well as how easily you find it to maintain a positive stance even when things go wrong.
Imagine the age-old analogy of the half-full/ empty glass. Simply speaking if you see your glass as half full you may have a more positive outlook on life and will make the best with what you have. However, people with a negative mindset tend to see their glass as half-empty, they don’t believe they have enough (whether it be money, a big enough house or scoring highly enough in an exam) and therefore are more likely to feel hard done by.
Having a positive mindset helps you to see the best in every circumstance and enables you to be more resilient when things go wrong. Growing your mindset is about becoming more positive and resilient, which in turn will improve your emotional well being.
You are what you think:
Imagine a huge fishing net cast out along the ocean bed full of hundreds of fish and lots of rubbish too.
Some of the fish caught in the net are valuable, they are kept and sold. However, amongst the prize fish are lots of rubbish and worthless inedible sea life, these are thrown back into the ocean (like negative thoughts THEY are unhelpful). Our thoughts are like those fish; we have millions of helpful and unhelpful thoughts each day. To improve your mindset, you need to recognise and choose the helpful and positive thoughts to focus on and recognise the negative thoughts to overcome and throw away.
The human brain is made up of millions of pathways and junctions called synapses and neurons. You can think of these pathways like road networks of different sizes and that all our thoughts are carried on these interlinking networks. The more frequently you have a thought the wider and smoother the neuronal pathway becomes, and the easier it becomes for your brain to choose that thought pathway. Over time the repetitive thoughts become the motorways of your brain. In contrast, things you think about infrequently are like the B-roads of your brain, it is more effort for your brain to choose these pathways as they are smaller and narrower. If you are constantly having negative thoughts, these pathways become the motorways of your brain and when faced with two options your brain will choose the wider road making it easier for you to have a negative thought.
You can retrain your brain by choosing the positive and overcoming thoughts.
It takes daily practice and perseverance but as you, day in day out choose a positive stance and shut down negative thoughts your neuronal pathways can rewire. As you do so the positive pathways and choices will become the motorways of your brain.
Do your thoughts pass the litmus paper test?
If you remember back to senior school science lessons; you may remember learning about litmus paper. Litmus paper is used in chemistry to test if a substance is an acid or alkali. It turns blue in alkali and pink in acid. Amazingly, in nature, the plant’s hydrangeas do the same thing. If they are planted in alkali soil they grow blue flowers, and if they are in acidic soil they produce pink flowers.
TRY and evaluate your thoughts to see if they are in line with a positive benchmark. Are your thoughts TRUE, KIND and HELPFUL?
Many negative thoughts we have are simply not true eg. I have a headache, therefore, I have brain cancer or my friend didn’t reply to my message means that they don’t like me anymore. However, other thoughts may be true (eg. I failed my driving test) but dwelling on them is neither kind nor helpful. If they don't pass the test (are they true, kind and helpful) then rather than dwelling on them, it is better to try and replace them with something more positive. It’s really worth spending some time on this as If these negative thoughts are left unchecked they will pollute your mindset and make you feel more negative.