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The Top 10 Reasons Why We Think We Don't Have ChoiceCategory: Symptoms/Signs of Problems, Conditions, Addictions, Behavior (BG17)Originally Submitted on 1/1/00. Sometimes when we say or think that we have no choice, we really do. There are two main sources of this misbelief. One is our own thinking, the other is the behavior of those around us. A third may lie in what we believe about the behavior of those around us. If we can identify WHY we think we have no choice it becomes easier to see the reality. 1. Family training. When we were very young it was often in our parents' best interests, and, in some ways, in our best interests, too, to convince us that we, willful and unguided as we were, did not have a choice as to whether we followed their advice/commands. 2. Fear of responsibility. Having no choice means having no responsibility. If we have no responsibility, we cannot be blamed if things do not go as hoped. 3. Fear of knowing we are in a rut. Facing the fact that we have a choice might be to face the fact that we have become settled and unchanging. To face this is to accept that we have given up on our youthful dreams of adventure and excitement. Perhaps it is time to face our unwillingness to accept the challenge of those dreams, and to ask 'If not now, then when?' 4. Fear of the unknown. Often the choices that we pretend we don't see represent a step into the unpredictable. Sometimes what is familiar, even if it is not what we would choose for ourselves, seems more desirable than the gamble that is the unknown. The question to ask yourself is, is what you have now what you would choose to look back on at the end of your life? 5. People around us have an agenda that does not allow us to choose. It is not uncommon for people to have an agenda that does not include allowing you to exercise choice. To take an extreme example, the abusive spouse will often go to great lengths to convince the victim spouse that s/he has no alternative but to stay in the relationship. In less extreme ways, others may attempt to brainwash us that their way is the only possible way. To counter this we need to maintain our mental and emotional independence. 6. The present situation serves our purpose. Others are not the only ones who can play mind games. We may play mind games with ourselves, and believe that we would like to have a choice when in fact we don't want to change. If we say we don't like what we have, yet we fail to change it, perhaps we should consider what we are getting out of it? There must be something or we would go ahead and make the change. It is important to identify what is holding us back from what we think we want. 7. Lack of practice in considering alternatives. Some of us have never learned to consider alternatives, or to think critically about our situations and the alternatives. Life just IS and that is the end of it. Sometimes such people can learn to make choices for themselves, and be empowered thereby. Sometimes the change is too difficult. 8. The alternatives are possibilities we don't want to consider. Sometimes when we say we don't have a choice we mean that none of the alternatives is acceptable to us. Sometimes those alternatives have been rejected for good reason, sometimes for one of the reasons listed above. Before you say you have no choice, write a list of alternatives, however crazy and unacceptable. Then write down the reason for rejecting each one. 9. Fear of losing someone. Perhaps we are used to someone else making all the choices, and feel that the relationship would be threatened if we start to choose for ourselves. Perhaps we believe that our alternatives would be unacceptable to that person. Before jumping to that conclusion, try clear communication to find out for sure what their reaction would be to your various alternatives. If they are not willing to allow your choices, consider seriously if the relationship is worth the loss of your freedom. 10. Believing that whatever is happening to us is God's will, or Your religious belief is your belief, and that is up to you. But most religions indicate that one of the greatest gifts that we, as human beings, have been given is free will, which is the ability to make choices, and to alter our circumstances. If this gift has been given to us, it seems a bit ungrateful not to use it, doesn't it?
This piece was originally submitted by Diana Robinson, Ph.D., Personal Development Coach, who can be reached at Diana@ChoiceCoach.com, or visited on the web. Diana Robinson wants you to know: I call myself "the coach of choice" because one focus of my work is to help clients to explore the choices that are open to them, and to develop strategies for working with the choice that will bring them the greatest joy and fulfillment. I offer you the gift of a half-hour of free coaching by phone, with no obligation, so that you may explore whether my coaching would work for you. To learn more, and/or to subscribe to either/both of my two e-mail free newsletters, please visit my web site. |