Self-imposed limitations

by Rusty Lindquist on February 20, 2008 · 4 comments

 limitations.jpg

When elephants are freshly caught in the wild and taken into training, their trainers will take a strong chain and tie their leg to a long steel pole which they drive deep into the ground.  The elephant will pull and fight, for a while.  Then they stop because they learn that they can’t pull away.  Over time the pole becomes smaller and smaller because the elephant doesn’t pull as hard.  The chain becomes a rope, the pole becomes a stake, and pretty soon they stop fighting altogether.  With a fully trained elephant, a trainer will simply tie a rope to its leg and toss it to the ground, or attach it to a very small tent stake, and they won’t move.

So strong is this belief that they’re helpless, that in 1967 at a well known circus in Manheim Germany, 6 elephants died in a tent fire.  They were all tied to very small stakes hammered into the ground.

Similarly, if you take a jar full of fleas, they will jump and crash into the lid of the jar (very small crashes, mind you), but in time they begin to jump only so high as to just miss the lid.  After that, if you remove the lid, they will not jump out.  They’ve developed a belief that jumping out is impossible.  They’ve convinced themselves they cannot do it.

Our own lives are similarly encumbered by such self-imposed limitations.  Perhaps we’ve tried something and failed.  Perhaps we’ve failed several times.  Perhaps we never even did try, because we were too afraid to fail.  Either way, we’ve each built beliefs that we simply cannot do some things, and these beliefs hamper our actions.  They prevent us from maximizing our potential.  They thwart our efforts to be remarkable, and most of them, are simply self-imposed.

The power of belief is strong.  The Placebo effect is testament of that.  Our beliefs shape our actions, and our actions create results and affect change.  So if you want to change the results of your life, if you want to be more, do more, to step higher, and raise the bar then don’t try to change your actions, change your beliefs.  The rest follows naturally. 

Because as your newfound beliefs impact your actions, your actions create results that reinforce your beliefs.  It’s a self-propelling cycle (shown below).  Success begets success, if you can just get beyond those self-imposed limitations and believe in yourself.

Look hard at the things at which you frequently fail.  Look hard at the things you’ve just stopped reaching for.  Ask yourself what beliefs you’ve developed that are preventing you from achieving, and change them.

You can do more, you can be remarkable…  Just believe.

Rusty

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{ 2 trackbacks }

The Blind Painter « Ongofu - an LDS (Mormon) blog
March 21, 2008 at 4:54 pm
A brief history of me - why I think we’re not limited by our past « Ongofu - an LDS (Mormon) blog
April 10, 2008 at 9:45 am

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Harrison February 21, 2008 at 12:34 am

Better still, don’t believe anything, and let the power of deep knowledge move you in your life.

Reply

2 Rusty Lindquist February 21, 2008 at 11:20 am

Yes, nothing is more moving than pure knowlege. It’s just it seems belief always precedes it.

Reply

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