I’m about halfway through a wonderful book, How to Think Like a Millionaire (I hope to have the review up soon!). It’s one of those books where you find yourself, not only taking notes, but closing the book every now and again just to let everything soak in. After this morning’s reading, I was basically a sponge.
I just finished a section on Positive Feedback vs Negative Feedback and the impact they have upon our subconscious mind and the absolute power our subconscious mind has over our lives. Everything rises and falls according to the strength of our subconscious mind, so keeping positive and life-affirming thoughts therein could make ALL the difference.
The Live-Changing Power of Positive Feedback
When I got up from reading to make my husband breakfast, I was still thinking about what I had read. I realized how, in my own life, positive feedback had a huge impact on me. My mom and dad were forever telling me what a “good” child I was, how they never had to worry about me getting into trouble, and so on. That early reinforcement, I’m sure, had a great deal to do with the fact that I never DID get into any trouble. When I was in my 30’s, a few months before I lost my father – my dad told one of his nurses that the only trouble I ever gave him or my mom was one solitary speeding ticket.
I told him at the time that it was because I was perfect – but I’m absolutely sure that’s not completely honest!
I believe that the same scenario plays out for kids who are constantly told that they’re “bad,” “difficult,” or “spoiled.” They live down to those words the way the lucky kids live up to the ones they hear.
As I kept thinking, I realized another area where positive feedback affected me greatly. I believe that one of the reasons I ever fancied myself a writer had to do with things my aunt told me years and years ago. Penny (my mom’s sister and an aunt I’ve always been VERY close to) and her husband (Bobby – LOVE him too!) had to move to another state when I was really young. It was really hard on all of us, but Bobby had an amazing offer in Ohio that he would have been a fool to say no to. He’s the master of corny jokes, but a fool he’s not.
When they left, I missed them terribly, so we started writing a lot of letters to one another – oh, to have had e-mail and social media back then! When they came home for Christmas, she went on and on about how much my letters meant to her and Bobby. She said she always looked forward to them and saved each one. When she said they “made her smile” because they were like visiting with me, I began to associate true, beautiful power with words.
Many years later, when I got married and we had to move to Kansas, I had a lot more letters to write. I still wrote to Penny, but I also wrote to my parents and my grandmother. Each one of them always told me how much they loved reading my letters, how they kept them and often re-read them. My grandmother even told me how she read them to her friends, and that they enjoyed my “way with words.”
Positive Feedback, friends.
Somewhere along the way, I came to believe that all of my loved ones were right and I’ve had a fascination with words and writing since.
When I handed my smiling husband his breakfast, I thought of yet another area of positive feedback touching my life. Early in my marriage, I fell head over heels in love with cooking. I started collecting cookbooks and even began coming up with my own recipes. He’d often have his single friends over to our house for supper. I often overheard him talking about my “wonderful” cooking and it made me believe I was the greatest cook in the world. The fact that he and our daughters are always so complimentary about my meals, desserts, bread, etc. only makes me love cooking more and more.
I am very, very blessed that the people I love most in this world have always made me feel like I could do anything. It makes me very sad to think there are others out there who don’t have this positive feedback in their life.
A Lack of Positive Feedback
I wonder if one of the main reasons people become discouraged and give up is because they don’t get enough positive feedback. Think about the stereotypical scenario of the couple who has been together for several years. She begins to feel he doesn’t love her or think she’s pretty simply because he has stopped saying the words. The positive feedback, early in the relationship, built her confidence up SO high that when the words stopped, she came crashing down, bewildered and even wondering what she’s doing wrong.
The same could be said of children, co-workers, and just about anyone you could name. Children often give up because they don’t feel appreciated. Co-workers and friends get to the point that they quit trying because nothing they do is ever good enough.
The Pitfalls of Negative Feedback
The only thing more dangerous than a lack of positive feedback is a steady stream of negative feedback. When a spouse, daughter, son, friend, co-worker, etc. only hears negative comments – they begin to believe the words and come to believe that they are as worthless as the comments say they are. Many even tune the negativity out to a certain degree, after all, who wants to constantly hear how worthless, stupid, wrong, irresponsible, or bad they are?!?! But it goes much deeper than them tuning it out. They begin to believe it. When someone believes the worst about themselves, they stop even trying.
However, if they get positive feedback – even if it’s for the smallest possible thing – their confidence and self worth begin to grow. After they’ve gotten enough positive feedback, they begin to give themselves MORE of the same feedback, then… look out!
The Most Important Feedback of All
As important as the feedback we get from others is, it’s not the most vital feedback. That feedback is the one we feed ourselves. The words we say to ourselves, usually inside our own minds, determine how successful we will or will not be. We are, basically, what we think we are.
The words below are just some of the words we use to cripple ourselves:
- I’m too old
- I’m too fat
- I’m not smart enough
- I never catch any breaks
- I don’t have enough money
- Nobody loves me
- I’m lonely
- I can’t do anything
- I’m so depressed
- I am so sick and tired of…
- My live sucks!
When we feed ourselves words like this, we’re feeding ourselves a type of poison. Anyone who feeds these words to another person (especially someone they supposedly love) should be even more ashamed.
Start thinking more about the feedback you give to others and to yourself. The words you say to and about the people around you makes them better or makes them worse. If you beat them down, that’s where they’ll stay. If you build them up, that’s the direction in which they’ll grow.
Now let’s change the pronouns a little: If you beat yourself down, that’s where you’ll stay. If you build yourself up, that’s the direction in which you’ll grow. How far can you and I grow? As far as we want to!
How to Think Like a Millionaire
The book below, How to Think Like a Millionaire is a must-read as far as I’m concerned. It’s all about altering your mindset – the millionaire part has absolutely nothing to do with it. What matters is believing that you deserved the best from life… because you absolutely do.
Elizabeth says
I’ve become very interested in self-help, self-awareness and self-discovery, which, of course, takes in positive and negative feedback. Have you ever heard of Dana Dorfman and her book, The Pink Forest? The theme is a woman’s courageous passage through her moments, and who visits these moments and finds, she exists. It’s the way it’s done that is so interesting — plus Dorman employs two new and interesting terms: “momentology,” the renaissance of awareness, and “femaleosophy, about women and their love of wisdom.
JeanetteCFLC says
It’s funny…I have very nice parents. They never put me down (more on that in a second) but they also didn’t know how much attention and affection I needed as a kid because when I look back on my childhood I think that my parents were cold fishes. They weren’t, it’s just that I had a need and didn’t know how to ask for it to be met, so I grew up feeling like they never gave me any positive feedback!
My dad, bless him, did call me fat when I was 12. I wasn’t fat, he just didn’t want to buy anymore clothes for his growing daughter. I think that was the only negative feedback I ever got…My dad said “You’re fat” ONCE, but I have repeated it back to myself a million more times. Isn’t it interesting how two words said once can chip away at someone.
(I’ve since forgiven both him and myself) 🙂
(ps. Nice blog!)
joi says
Elizabeth – sounds like a great book. I’m going to try to get my hands (and eyes) on it! Thanks for telling me about it.
Jeanette – It’s wonderful that you’ve forgiven him. We all say things we regret, sometimes. But, wow, I can’t think of many more harmful and hurtful words for a young girl to hear!!
My husband grew up without much (if any) positive feedback. He actually became a world class expert at giving himself his own positive feedback!
Thanks SO MUCH for your kind words, they mean a lot. – Joi
susan sherman says
Dana Dorfman’s book The Pink Forest is very unique. I read it twice. I liked it because Dorfman’s interactive writing takes you into the book through the characters. I learned many things while reading this book-one of which the way I look at myself. What an intriguing book-what a wonderful way of words this author has developed.