Don’t hit the pole, don’t hit the pole!

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The super-famous motivational speaker Tony Robbins (or Anthony Robbins as I knew him from when I was younger) has always left me feeling conflicted.  He has so many good ideas, but there is something about his high-octane way of delivering those ideas that makes me feel tired and lazy.  I’m not.  Or at least, I have a busy mind in a sedate body.  Still, I always feel as if I should be cartwheeling around the room, screaming, “Give me Y – give me an E – give me a S!” after he finishes making a point, when really I prefer to marinate in his advice, let it slowly infuse into my mind, percolate in such a way that what I like rises to the surface, and what I’m not keen on melts away…

Recently, I saw two of his YouTube videos (via LinkedIn so I can’t find the link to put here – sorry).  The first one was slightly horrifying, the second one had me ALMOST cartwheeling as I saw the truth of it.

Let’s start with the one that annoyed me. 

In this video Tony spoke of how he only allows himself 30 seconds (or maybe it was 15) to feel negative thoughts, then he pushes them aside and keeps going.  It wasn’t really “feel the fear and do it anyway”, it was more, “fear is for losers and is not allowed”.  He said, for example, that when he has a concern, or self-doubt, or sure, a fear, about something, he lets himself feel that emotion, really feel it, for 30 seconds then moves on. 

I GET the idea of not holding onto negative thoughts – they don’t serve you well in most cases – “woe is me” or “it isn’t fair” rarely changes anything and tends to just start a downward spiral that gets pretty dark, pretty quickly.  I think, however, there’s two objections that come to mind with the ‘feel-then-ignore’ approach to negative thoughts.  The first is that some negative thoughts are designed to save you – “ugh, I’m not sure jumping from this height is a good idea… (15 seconds later)… ahhhhhhh…”.  The second objection relates to stored trauma.  “This situation makes me feel uneasy – too bad, too sad – let’s go” is not going to address whatever the underlying issue was that raised that sense of unease.  Surely it can’t hurt to wonder “what is it about this moment that makes me feel this way?” and then journalling your enquiry, or talk to a therapist or counsellor about it.  That way, the niggling-negativity might be resolved, and you might be able to genuinely move on and be happy. 

This first video left me feeling devalued, as if by talking about my chronic pain made me nothing but a Negative Nelly who would probably set Tony’s teeth on edge (which is ironic, because that’s how I was feeling listening to him dismiss my genuine physical and mental health concerns).

The second video, on the other hand, was different.

In the second video, I found myself nodding rather than sighing.  Tony asked the question, “why do so many people go out and buy a fancy car, then a couple of days later, crash it into a pole… even when the pole’s the only thing for miles around?”  He spoke of how, when you come around the corner too fast, you realize that you’re in trouble, so your mind screams “don’t hit the pole, don’t hit the pole, don’t hit the pole!”  Your eyes, your brain, perhaps every cell in your body is focused on the pole… no surprises then – you hit the pole.

Instead, Tony says, you should be thinking “stay on the road, stay on the road, stay on the road!”  In this way, your eyes turn to the road, your hands turn towards the road, your steering wheel turns, your car turns, and you, hopefully, turn towards the road and avoid the pole and stay on the road.

Where your mind goes, you go.

I felt a lot of resonance with this idea.  When I was very sick, about a year ago, in bed with migraine, day after day after day, I started each morning with the same first-thought: “please don’t be there pain, please don’t be there pain, please don’t be there pain!” and low and behold – the pain was there. 

When I switched (even before Tony’s advice) to the notion of concentrating on increasing joy rather than decreasing pain, I started each morning by opening the curtains at dawn and looking for one good thing to be grateful for (the sky looks clear of rainclouds – or – the houses look so clean in the rain).  I even invented a little “today’s going to be a good day” song that I sang to myself on repeat, like a mantra or affirmation, as I went about my morning tasks.  Now, the pain was still there, but it was no longer having a ‘main character moment’, it was not the stand-out-car-crash-obstacle it had been for so long before hand.

Today’s ‘lesson’ is that when it comes to advice, you can take it or leave it (as I’ve written about before (here)) – and a reminder that a little bit of negativity is normal, whilst a little bit of positivity goes a long way.

Take care taking care, Linda x

PS – Here’s Tony’s website and some free tools (but note that he almost always asks for your email address (including at the conclusion of taking a quiz so you can see the results)): Get Free Tony Robbins Personal Development Tools & Resources

PPS – because I’m feeling the fear and doing it anyway – here’s a sound recording of me whisper-singing my homemade song of positivity – feel free to borrow it, or roll around on the floor laughing; either way, my job is done!


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34 responses to “Don’t hit the pole, don’t hit the pole!”

  1. Three wishes – The Mindful Migraine Avatar

    […] the same way that I have written about focusing on the good not the bad (“don’t hit the pole!”), the wishes that we choose to manifest ought to be as positive as possible. ‘More […]

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  2. Content Catnip Avatar

    I feel exactly the same about Robbins and there are other motivational speakers that make me want to say sweary words and open up a bag of crisps. Something about them is so shrill, fake and annoying. I prefer when people talk about their pain honestly and the wisdom this brought them and what they learned from it and how the light came on for them ✨️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Music to my ears… including the sweary words set to a soundtrack of crunchy-chips… so relateable!!

      Thanks for being here – you’re always welcome! Linda xox

      (PS – hopefully my writing is more on the ‘honest’ side of the ledger, rather than the ‘annoying’ side!!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Content Catnip Avatar

        Yes it really is honest and I enjoy it 😊

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          How wonderful! Thank you so much, L xx

          Liked by 1 person

  3. festo_sanjo Avatar

    Wonderful post Linda, both methods by Robbins are great! Even the first one, but it depends on a situation you’re dealing with, especially if it’s trauma then 15 seconds aren’t enough! But momentary decisions it’s so effective… loved that mantra especially the last whooo whooo part lol 😂. Keep your vibration high my friend

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      🤣woo-hoo!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Destiny Avatar

    “Still, I always feel as if I should be cartwheeling around the room, screaming, “Give me Y – give me an E – give me a S!””
    this gave a broad smile lol…

    we do really underestimate the power of our mind and thoughts at times…🤍

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Yes, I do underestimate the power of positivity… but not my inability to cartwheel! 🤣

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Destiny Avatar

        lol, Linda ..
        we’ll use this for play pretend 🤸‍♀️…😂

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          Perfect! You saved me from a face-plant – you’re the best! xx

          Like

  5. sedge808 Avatar

    I hear you.

    I followed people in the 80’s, but not these days.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I feel like a bit of a traitor… I used to listen to him all the time (in the early 90s it was for me)… now he “gives me the ick” as my teenage daughters say!! (sorry – not – sorry!)

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Astrid's Words Avatar

    Living my life led me to take fear as a sign that there’s something to learn. I acknowledge it then become curious to not turn away. With negativity, I believe it’s important to acknowledge but not elaborate. Knowing a root goal makes it easier to not stick to momentary reactions.
    Elaboration is a focus and best saved for what we want. Switching to what we want is our decision to go after what we want. It doesn’t have to cover or ignore what we feel, I look at it as our choice to create.
    Sometimes what we choose doesn’t happen immediately but it plants the seed for the future.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Ohhh… I love your distinction between acknowledging and elaborating – that is very wise. I also resonate with your idea of being patient, things take time – perhaps that’s why Tony’s words unsettled me a little… they imply a haste that I can’t relate to at the moment. Thanks for sharing your insight! xx

      Liked by 1 person

  7. markbialczak Avatar

    I will tell myself to think of the roads and not the pole and thank you, Linda, with a footnote nod to Tony because well I should.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Always a pleasure! 🙂

      Like

  8. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

    You can watch your attention and see how it moves by doing something like walking down the street. Try to empty your mind, then watch as something catches your attention, bird flying past, car noise in the distance, whatever. Might even be another thought. You will be caught for a period and time, then realise you’ve been lost in that attention and can come back and do it again. It’s the capture of attention which draws your mind away and down that hole. We can only focus on one thing at a time despite what most people say, we just keep going back to our list.

    No-one is going to remember to only think of their problem for 30 seconds, unless you but an alarm on every thought. We can’t even hold onto a mantra for 2 seconds without going somewhere else, our mind will wander to everything related. Plus if there is a worry, it will be constant until it’s resolved or worked out to be minimised until you can almost forget about it.

    Your pain is not just a thought, so it’s a little different to that. If someone had a spear through their leg, I’m sure it would be very hard to forget about, they would do all they could to reduce the pain, and maybe thinking of something else helps somewhat.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I guess it’s all relative… the spear in the leg is pretty dramatic… until the person who threw it is bearing down on you, then, I bet you can forget about it pretty quickly as your mind focuses on the new threat.

      Pain is sometimes the same – walk through the woods, as you suggest, or watch a gripping TV show… and you forget.

      I agree though, one thing at a time seems to be all that my mind can handle – sometimes I can almost feel the train track shift over: pavement – bird – pavement again… there’s almost a clunk or recognition! On the bright side – there’s movement on them there tracks… so I’ll take that as a good thing!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

        Yeah, attention seems so simple, one thing, then something catches, then something catches.

        By the way, I love your movement from ‘clunk’ to ‘there’s movement on them there tracks’, you’ve managed to make those words sing, you’ve re-appropriated majestically! (There’s gold in them thar hills?? I think??) Love this:-) Hehe, just my thrills.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

          he he – I like that you get where I’m coming from… I tend to make things up as I go along, but the more I write, the more I seem to be mining my own quarry of thoughts and sayings and other writer’s work… it’s a bit of a patchwork quilt of quotes, but it works for me!

          Liked by 1 person

          1. thingsihavethoughtof Avatar

            Yeah, it’s really cool how it comes out. Like ‘clunk’ to ‘bright’ to a vintage old style saying repurposed for that tinge, to an inevitable good thing. And yeah, you have these hidden gems in your writing, it flows nicely, you’re a bit of an artist in that way. But I don’t wanna say too much because it will mess you up, be you!

            Liked by 1 person

            1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

              Funny you say that – if I think about how I write too much I start to overthink it, and it doesn’t seem to work as well. First go is usually pretty much it, and then just a spell check to tidy it up. Walking the dogs helps too… lots of ideas seem to coalesce as I’m walking. (Anyway – thanks for the compliment!)

              Liked by 1 person

  9. Sunshine Avatar

    Its our mind that rules everything

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I was always super-aware of my thoughts, but never really noticed how much my thoughts affected my feelings and actions… seems ‘obvious’ in hindsight! xx

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Sunshine Avatar

        Absolutely 💯

        Liked by 1 person

  10. Silk Cords Avatar

    Thank you. You wrote something that prodded me out of my funk and got me writing again.

    First, Tony’s approach is high energy because nobody responses to anything less. It’s been that way for quite a while. Maybe forever, but it SEEMS like quiet reason used to work decades ago… *shrug*

    That first point that bothered you… Robbins and other NLP practitioners, and some new agers will say that 15 seconds is an ideal amount of time to sort through the feeling, see if it’s rational and if it truly serves you. If it is / does, then take action on it instead of stewing in it. If it’s harmful and serves no purpose, then release it.

    That second point… Well, that is indeed how you manage the chronic pain. Part of it anyway. I’m talking from personal experience too. A neck injury gave me severe headaches for decades (common ground in effect if not cause). There’s Zen principles about it, but the best quote on the general idea comes from Hawaiian Huna: “Energy Flows Where Attention Goes”. That can be taken on a strictly psychological standpoint, or viewed spiritually where we’re literally putting our spiritual energy into reinforcing our thoughts and making them manifest. You can’t stop thinking about the purple elephant if you tell yourself ignore the purple elephant. Focus on something else though, and poof.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      This is so good! Thank you for the feedback! I ‘get’ Tony a bit more now… and I just love the Hawaiian saying – it’s perfect.

      Glad that I got you thinking, and that your headaches are gone (or at least I hope they are – you used the past term for them.)

      Super happy to have you visit – now you’ve given me more to think about too! 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  11. joannerambling Avatar

    I often sing silly little songs like yours during the day to help remind myself that life is good and things will be better when I stop being negative.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      That makes me so happy – tomorrow when I’m singing, I’ll think of you singing somewhere in unison! xx

      Like

  12.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Negative talk is the source of ALL my problems. Will have to delve into this more deeply.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I think it’s completely and utterly normal… but it really doesn’t help! Good luck with your delving! L xx

      Like

  13. Mary K. Doyle Avatar

    Our thoughts become our actions.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Exactly!
      You get it!
      L xx

      Like

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