You are far more likely to receive the kind of treatment you expect than that which you do not expect.
In my last post, I said that “relationships are negotiated, even if no words are exchanged. In addition, the negotiations are constant…” This means that how you relate with other people is not pre-determined, and can be changed at any time, by either party. (We all have relationships with everything in our worlds, but for the purposes of this post, the conversation is limited to relationships with people.)
Let’s say you go to dinner at an upscale restaurant. Long before you arrive, you will have created certain expectations about how you will be treated by the staff of the restaurant – from the parking valets on up.
Those expectations are based on many things; previous experiences with that particular restaurant, or similar; input you’ve received from sources such as friends, media reviews of the restaurant, or even TV shows.
But, just as importantly, your self-image, and the way you view your place in the world, will pre-determine your expectations. If you see yourself as a victim, or somehow unworthy of dining at a restaurant of that caliber, you will carry yourself differently than if you see yourself as worthy of the finest that life has to offer.
That viewpoint will broadcast itself to everyone you come into contact with during this event, through body language, speech patterns, eye contact, etc. Unfortunately, animals (and humans are animals) seem to be wired to take advantage of situations when there is an opportunity. So, if you’re broadcasting weakness or uncertainty, others will pick up on it and exploit it.
This might be evidenced by the valet speeding off in your car right in front of you, spinning the tires and revving the engine. Inside, the maitre d’ might treat you a bit less personally than other diners, and seat you at a table near the kitchen. Then, it might be an unusually long time before your waiter arrives, or for your food to arrive, once you’ve ordered. You get the picture…
After a night like this, you might leave thinking, “I’ll never go back there again. The service was crappy. I don’t know what all the hype is about.”
So, who’s to blame? (Blame is a good topic for another discussion.) Should anyone you encountered during the evening have treated you any less spectacularly than they treated anyone else there? No, of course not. But they did because you invited them to do it. You showed weakness, and the pack took advantage of it. It’s what happens.
So, the natural question is, “How do I avoid this in the future?”
If you’re interested in an answer from a metaphysical standpoint, look for information on the Law Of Attraction. I have a blog called What’s Your Path? that gives my interpretations of it.
In more (apparently) practical terms, your self-image is the problem. If you think you’re a failure; you can’t do anything right; you never win; life is hard; you don’t earn enough money; you don’t have a nice enough car, or house, or watch, or clothes… All of those mindsets are prescriptions for failure.
What to do? Anything! Anything that gives you a strong possibility for success. Find some kind of activity that holds a certain amount of challenge for you, but one that you also believe you have a good chance of accomplishing.
The goal here is to do something that makes you feel good about yourself for having done it; something you can be proud of, even in a small way. If you’re overweight because you don’t eat right and don’t exercise, get up and do something. Go walk a mile. Or ride a bike for 5. Anything that will make you feel better about yourself for having done it.
Once you believe that you can accomplish that goal at will, that there is no more challenge, no more question, it’s time to step up to something harder. To stay with the example above, increase your target to 2 miles on foot, or 10 miles on the bike. Whatever! The numbers aren’t important. What is important is to give yourself obtainable goals.
What will happen is that as you reach your goals, you will begin to develop more and more confidence that you can reach bigger goals, and you will begin to set more difficult, but still believable, targets for yourself.
With time, you’ll look forward to the act of tackling the challenge as much as achieving the goal, because it’s the journey that makes the goal feel worthwhile. It’s the effort that gives the goal value.
When you regularly accomplish those things which you set out to do, your self-image will be far improved over what it is currently. And, it won’t be inflated ego. It will be self-confidence based on proven performance and tangible results.
And, somewhere along the line, your experience at that upscale restaurant will be very different, and much more pleasant.
In my next post, I’ll talk about a different kind of method to use to improve the way your relationships with people develop.