Seattle Community

Generally helpful
6.0
out of 10
1 vote

Making Shift Happen: 5 Ways to Get Unstuck

What do you do when you're just plain stuck? How come shift doesn't happen when you want it to? Here’s how to cut a few turns out of the spiral of stuckness without being any better than you are. ;-)

Written Jun 01, 2008, read 329 times since then.

 

Shift happens until you want it, have you noticed?

Maybe it’s just me, but there are times when I feel so stuck that the notion of shifting seems ridiculous. Worse, I suspect myself of being the source of the problem, an assessment that is generally accurate but not helpful.

Odds are that, like me, you know that willingness is the key to getting unstuck. When we’re willing to shift our attitudes and attention, shift happens.

But perhaps you’ve noticed that we’ll go to great lengths before we’re willing to shift out of discomfort. For my part, when I look more closely, I often find that I’ve confused willingness to shift with a declaration that I’m a bad girl who needs to turn good.

Perhaps admitting error wouldn’t be such a big deal if I hadn’t made a career of it for so long. That is, I made a career of self-criticism, which is not to be confused with accepting the criticism of others.

If you’re starting to feel confused, you aren’t alone. These first few paragraphs mirror the spiral of self-criticism, complaint, and self-doubt that can keep us stuck for a long time. Examine that spiral too closely and you can end up pretty dizzy.

How do we get out of this spiral?

Pain works, eventually. When we are sufficiently miserable, we generally do what it takes to feel better. And it would be nice to shorten the cycle, don’t you think?

Here’s how to cut a few turns out of the spiral of stuckness without being any better than you are. ;-)

  • Check out your assumptions about what being stuck means.
  • Play with the possibility that being stuck is a good thing.
  • Notice the objections that arise as you play with that possibility.
  • Make a list of everything awful that will happen if you stay stuck.
  • Talk to somebody without looking for a solution.

We develop willingness to shift by being curious about our assumptions rather than attacking them. There is a crucial difference between questioning  stressful thoughts and debating them!

When we debate our assumptions or, worse, attack them, we often become more entrenched. I think that’s a sign of health, albeit a clumsy one. There is no part of us that is going to agree to lie down and be stepped on. That’s a good thing.

So the trick is to open a real conversation rather than launch a campaign. That means giving up the conviction that there is a right answer that can be known if only we think right. It means letting go of the fantasy of doing “it” right - whatever it may be.

It means opening up to - gasp - grace.

The Unearned Shift
Grace is free of charge. Gratis.

It is unearned. By definition, grace is something we do not deserve. (This would explain why trying harder to be good can lead to the paradoxical result of being locked out in the spiritual cold.)

The five steps I outlined above are ways to get in line for grace. They aren’t intended to be a magic formula that will make you feel better. For all I know, they’ll make you feel worse.

They’re something to keep you busy while grace happens.

Trust in God and Tie Up Your Camel
That said, those steps are not mere busywork. While I haven’t found that I have the power to shift mood-mountains with my thoughts, it’s been my experience that I can open or close the channel to the Power that does.

The remedy for being stuck and lacking the willingness to change is to open that channel. We do that when we question (not debate) our assumptions and surrender our expectations. Fortunately, even that does not have to be done perfectly.

Just get in line and let grace happen.

Molly Gordon

How do you succeed at self-employment when business feels like an alien world? Subscribe to Authentic Promotion, a free ezine that shows you the way. http://www.authenticpromotion.com/

Learn more about the author, Molly Gordon.

Comment on this article

No one has posted a comment yet. Be the first!

Get Published

Article tags

  • shift
  • productivity
  • gtd
  • grace
  • change

Molly's other articles

Related articles