Who or What Is Causing Your Problems?

Is the economy, the banks or the stock market causing you problems? Did your parents do a bad job of raising you? Is your job or your government ruining your life?

When people fail, they often blame someone else for their failure.

“My parents argued all the time which is why I’m now divorced.” “If I hadn’t listened to my accountant’s advice, I’d be rich.” “This city has ruined me.”

People blame others when they do poorly at work.

“My boss is such a jerk, I’m too stressed to get my work done.” “I don’t get paid enough to be nice to EVERY customer.” “If everyone else wasn’t so lazy, I’d be more energetic.”

Blame is also used for personal problems.

“I’m depressed because of the tragedies on television.” “I can’t be faithful to my wife because I have a chemical imbalance.” “I can’t stop smoking because my father used to spank me.”

Why You Can’t Win the Blame Game

When you blame someone or something else, you actually make yourself weak and ineffective. You make yourself “effect” instead of being the “cause” of the situation. You give power to the person or thing you blame.

“Blaming something else makes that something else cause; and as that cause takes on power, the individual in the same act loses control and becomes effect.” — L. Ron Hubbard

For example, your business is failing and you blame your assistant. You are making your assistant more powerful than you. You might say, “My assistant messed up my business, ” which is just another way of saying, “My assistant determines if my business succeeds or fails.”

If you take responsibility for your business, you would say, “I need to train my assistant so he doesn’t make mistakes” or “I’d better fire my assistant so he doesn’t block my business success.”

As another example, you might blame your parents for your stress and anxiety. This makes your parents responsible for your feelings. If you say, “My parents ruined my life,” you are actually saying, “My parents are so powerful, they control my emotions. I have no control over my anxiety.”

How You Win

Stopping the blame game and accepting responsibility for yourself gives you new hope. “My parents didn’t ruin my life. I ruined my life by being lazy and unemployed. I need to improve my opinion about myself and get busy.”

While blaming people for your problems is silly, blaming physical objects is even sillier. “My house is so ugly, I feel depressed.” “The stock market crash makes me go crazy!” “My body has a disorder which makes me fat.” In these cases, you are actually saying, “My life is controlled by _______.”

If you wish to succeed, you have to end the blame game. You only get ahead when you become “cause” over the situation. ” I’ll stop watching TV and paint my house a nice color.” “I’ll work hard and increase my income so the stock market doesn’t bother me.” “I’m fat because I eat tons of junk food and don’t exercise.”

Five Steps for Ending the Blame Game

1. Make four columns on a sheet of paper.

2. In the first column, list all of the problems or conditions you blame on others or things. Example: “I can’t stop smoking because I’m addicted to nicotine.”

3. In the next column, write how you are responsible for each problem or condition. Example: “I am the one who decided to become a smoker.”

4. Write how you can take more responsibility for each. Example: “I could be more determined to quit smoking.”

5. In the last column, write down an action step you can take for each problem or condition. Example: “Each time I want a cigarette this week, take a 15-minute walk first.”

Five Benefits of Taking More Responsibility

* Other people and things have less control over your destiny.

* Poor conditions start to improve.

* You make fewer mistakes.

* No one can control you without your consent.

* You become the most powerful force in your life.


Copyright © 2008 TipsForSuccess.org. All rights reserved. Grateful acknowledgment is made to L. Ron Hubbard Library for permission to reproduce selections from the copyrighted works of L. Ron Hubbard.

Responsibility

Responsibility

When my youngest son Mick was 10 years old, he was leading his hockey team in assists. His coach told my wife and I that he needs take more of a leadership role on the team and to talk more to the other players on the ice.

When I told Mick what his coach told us, he said “he didn’t want to”.  I could tell he was uncomfortable being asked to be responsible for more than just his position on the ice.

I then wondered how I would communicate to a 10 year old, the concept of and the need to take full responsibility for something.

Then I thought of the word “Responsibility”. It actually comes from two words; “Response” and “Ability”. Therefore, if we apply the definitions of these two words, we can possibly understand and communicate the concept better.

If you have the ability to do something and you don’t respond to a situation in a manner to which you are able, you are acting irresponsible. If you do respond to a situation based on your abilities, you are being responsible.

So, if Mick has the ability to set plays up and knows where his fellow teammates should be, and then doesn’t help them and ensure they know where to go and what to do, then theoretically, the outcome of the game is very much Mick’s responsibility.

Sounds harsh but that is the way life goes.

So we have two options. Either lower our awareness and ability so that we don’t actually see what we truly see or we can take full responsibility for what we know and respond in the manner in which we are able.

Take a look at your own life and see if there are some areas or situations that you actually could respond to in a better way. If you do, things will go better and you will be more in control of your life.