BUSTING YOURSELF TIP #4: HAVE AN “US” TALK WITH
MONEY.
Whether you realize it or not, you’re having a relationship with money. If
you ain’t got any money, it’s because if you treated the people in your life
with the same regard you treat money, you’d be dining on a Thanksgiving
chicken for one every November. One of the best ways to find out how you
truly feel about money is to write a letter to it as if it were a person. I
personally found this exercise to be a real humdinger and have heard from
clients and readers that they too realized they were acting like total fruit
loops when it came to money. Back in the day, my letter to money went
something along the lines of: Dear money, I love you and wish I had more
of you, but I resent the crap out of needing you. You’re never there for me, I
totally don’t trust you, I feel dirty admitting I want you, but I get so excited
whenever you show up. I worry about you all the time. I wish I didn’t need
you. You suck. Please for the love of God show up in huge quantities soon. I
had such a push/pull relationship with money, as do most people, it’s a
wonder I was able to bring in any at all. My energy was all about blocking
it while trying to welcome it in at the same time.
Here are some snippets of letters sent in by readers to show you that you
are not alone in your money madness:
Dear money,
I feel confident and secure when you’re here, and I like to
spend you when you’re around. I feel generous to others. But
sometimes you leave without saying goodbye. You’re like a lover
who comes and goes on a whim, and yet I always want you back.
It makes me feel resentful and frustrated. I get so scared when
you go because I’m afraid maybe you’ll never come back. It
makes me feel bad about myself. Why can’t you just enjoy being
together?
Dear money,
I love you and respect you and try really hard to use you
wisely, but I often feel like I let you down. Unless I work really
hard I don’t feel I deserve to have more of you in my life. I know
all the wonderful things that we can do together: enjoy amazing
vacations, bless my family, give to charities I believe in, and yet I
often don’t feel I deserve to have more of you in my life.
Dear money,
I love you and I’m scared of you. It would be amazing to have
more of you but I feel weird admitting that. Like it makes me a
bad person somehow. I also don’t know what I would do if I made
tons of you. I feel like I would just give it all away because I don’t
know anything about investing so I’m probably blocking you from
showing up so I don’t have to look stupid.
Dear money,
I love having you around and I want to keep you safe so you
can help me if an emergency comes up in my life. But I’m afraid
if I have too much of you others may be resentful or my husband
will try to take you from me. I don’t have an education or skill set
that will pay me enough to have as much of you as I want.
Dear money,
I really hate you. I hate that you have the ability to literally
cause me physical pain when I look at bills. I hate that my
stomach leaps into my throat whenever I look at my student loan
balance. I hate that you have this much power over me. I actually
would love to dedicate my life to helping people but I feel
beholden to take jobs that I dislike so I can make more of you. I
wish that I could have a clean slate with you. I want to come from
a place of abundance and not one of fear, anger, and regret.
I heard a story about a monkey trap that’s used in certain parts of Africa
and India that’s a great metaphor for how we choose to hold on to our
limiting beliefs about money. What they do is take a box, put a hole in it,
stick a banana inside the box, leave it where the monkeys hang out, and
wait. When a monkey comes along and sees the box, he reaches in and
grabs the banana and gets trapped because his fistful of banana is too big to
pull out through the hole in the box. If he wants to be free all he has to do is
let go, and if he insists on holding on he will be trapped.
I can’t remember where I first heard this story, but it’s made the rounds
in the personal development world for years and I’m pretty sure it’s total
BS. First of all, how would the monkey know there’s a banana in the box?
And second, how do they catch him once he’s sitting there, stuck, holding
onto the banana? Do they hang around all day in the jungle, smoking
cigarettes and playing cards, waiting for the monkey with their nets at the
ready? I went to one Web site that suggested that when they saw the
monkey they quickly put him in a jar. A jar! Lame.
I’ve decided to use this story anyway because:
a. I could be wrong, it could be true.
b. It illustrates a point I’m trying to make really well.
c. The point I’m trying to make is that we make up these total BS stories and all we
have to do is let go of them if we want to change our lives and be free, so what
better story to relate it to than one that also might be total BS?
We choose to stay in our stories because we get what I call false benefits
from them—we get to keep our identities as a broke person, we get to
blame our brokeness on things outside ourselves (I don’t have time, I have
seven kids, the economy sucks, I can’t find a pen to write down my to-do
list with), we don’t have to push ourselves outside our comfort zones and
risk failing, looking like an idiot, losing money, changing and becoming
different from our family and friends—the list goes on and on and it all
comes down to this:
You have to want your dreams more than you want your drama.
As we embark here on busting you on your limiting beliefs, I want to
caution you against getting so wrapped up in processing your blocks that
you don’t take the action necessary to change your life. I’ve seen many
cases where people get so obsessed with their issues that they spend years
journaling, going to retreats, weepily deconstructing their inner selves as an
excuse not to take giant scary leaps forward. So I want to encourage you to
do both at the same time: Investigate your BS and take forward action. I
want to reiterate that taking huge scary leaps into the unknown is the best
way to scare your BS to the surface anyway. It’s like a two-for-one deal—
you make progress and you unearth your shit. The key is to keep moving
forward when you uncover your deep-seated fears and beliefs, not retreat
into endless self-analysis.
I’m not proud to report that when I had my big breakthrough about my
dad at the money seminar, I did exactly what I just told you not to do—I
didn’t take immediate action on getting the $85,000 together and moving
forward with my goal. I shrank back and focused on all my old fear, doubts,
and worries instead of staying focused on how right this opportunity was
for me. I hesitated, and instead of signing up and bravely leaping into the
next chapter of my life, I snuck out of the conference room and went home.
I’d love to blame it on the fact that it was an insane amount of money for
me to come up with at the time, but it was my lack of determination and my
fear that failed me, not the amount (I ended up manifesting that exact
amount one year later to get coaching from someone else).
This is such a key point. When you get a hit on what’s holding you back
and realize what you need to do to move forward, act immediately. You are
battling very deeply ingrained, and up until this moment, extremely
successful limiting beliefs that have been your truths for your entire life. If
you hesitate when you get a knowing hint, you give those familiar, limiting
beliefs the time and space to take over again. Hesitation is the crack that all
your favorite excuses will burst through, drown out your resolve, and sweep
you back to the safety of your comfort zone. Listen to your intuition, trust
Universal Intelligence over your fears, have faith that what you desire
already exists, and leap like the mighty badass that you are. You can
doooooo eeeeeeet!
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