Can you change?

Can you change
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Can you change? This isn’t a dumb question.

Most of us aren’t content with where we are in life. That’s not a negative statement. It’s just an acknowledgement that we could be and do better.

To move from where we are to where we’d like to be involves change. Can you change? Yes indeed.

First, however, is the mandatory reality check.

People spend billions of dollars and millions of hours trying to change themselves and usually fail.

Tony Martin? Guilty as charged.

Over the decades I’ve been sort of a student of personal development. I’ve ransacked the catalogue of Nightingale-Conant. I feel I’m on a first-name basis with Jim Rohn, Brian Tracy, Zig Ziglar, and a host of others.

These are good resources. Even excellent.

But in trying to change, in trying to answer the question for myself – “Can you change?” – the answer is, “Yes, I can, but I can easily slide back into old habits and thought patterns.”

The term, I believe, is “backsliding.” (That word is found nowhere in scripture, by the way.) In its broadest sense, it means relapsing into old bad ways.

Want to talk weight loss? Want to talk money management? How about using time wisely?

Make your own list. Can you change? “Well,” you say, “I’ve tried.”

To put an even uglier twist on things, how about your desire to change your mind set or emotions? What if you’ve found yourself in the grips of depression? Perhaps you are crippled with anxiety. Maybe regrets have you despondent.

Can you change? It seems unlikely, doesn’t it? Because you and I have tried to change before. We may have lasted a while, but the allure of the comfortable calls us back.

What an awful irony. The very thing we’re trying to escape is what we continually return to.

Now, I’d be terribly amiss if I told you I’d hit on the secret to actual life change. But I can say that, dang it, I know what will bring about change.

I’ve given this a lot of thought. Okay, actually, I’ve overthought this.

Scientists have been busy trying to find out why some people can change and others stay stuck. So if you want to renovate and renew your life, the consensus is that it is indeed possible. Can you change?

You will change if you choose to.

That’s scary news, because the ability to make choices is inherent in each of us.

I’m going to give you three simple truths.

1. Small steps work.

I’ll share further down what needs to happen in order for you to identify those small steps. Our tendency is to look at ourselves, our problems, our shortcomings, and literally freak out. It all seems so overwhelming, right?

2. Consistent effort works.

Those small steps? Consistently take them. Stay with each step until it bears fruit. If you slow down, so what? Just keep moving, and keep moving especially if you don’t see any change.

3. Group support works.

This is a hard one for me, because I simply don’t want to be a burden on anyone else. Still. You never walk alone. As you read this, there are potentially hundreds who are reading the same thing, facing the same ordeals as you. That’s one reason I started the Transformational Encouragement group on Facebook. There are hundreds of others who “get it.”

Can you change? Are you up for that?

Fact: Once you choose to change, and you follow three incredibly difficult steps I’m asking you to take, you will probably achieve what you want. You may not be “cured,” as it were, but you will have a grasp on what you need to be a different person.

Here are your three steps. You don’t have to like them.

First, accept that in order for you to change, you have to determine what it is you want to change.

Think of this as a type of goal-setting. If you don’t specifically choose what it is you want, then you’re going to stumble through life like a blind dog in a packing plant.

Choosing one thing means not choosing another. It means you have to identify what really matters to you.

Second, after choosing from among the many things you say you want and need, you have to determine which ones of those you’re actually willing to work to achieve.

Want more stability in your family? Want to be done with a destructive habit? Can you see yourself being able to constructively deal with depression and darkness? Will you confront who you really are?

Pick one issue to treat as a goal. Write it down. And ask yourself the hardest of hard questions. “Am I going to work to achieve this?”

And third, stick with it.

We’re afraid to set goals because we’re afraid. We’re afraid of committing to working a goal because we’re afraid we’ll fail. We’ve failed in the past, right? What makes this time around any different?

I don’t know what will make this time different for you. I really don’t.

Here’s what I do know in my own life (and this is my autobiography, not yours. You have to write your own.)

I have been afraid of setting a goal because reaching it would mean my life would change. Change is so often at the center of our fear.

All this simply means that you will have to determine what really matters to you.

You are responsible for your future.

You are responsible for your happiness.

But God is responsible for what happens when you’re faithful. Which is the way it should be.

If you’re willing to hide out, willing to lie to yourself about what matters, and willing to play games – you get just exactly what you deserve.

But when you quit the bad stuff, embrace your faith, obstacles will disappear and, almost magically, things will change for the best. Just watch.

One thought on “Can you change?

  1. This would PREACH all day! I think it’s so easy to get in the flesh, and then everything seems so much harder. When we walk with God in the spirit, then we have the way to truly change! Not sure my comments all relate to your blog, but it’s really good! Thank you, Tony!

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