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Happiness
Happy With Yourself
Positive Thinking
Shift Your Thinking Change Your Life

Shift Your Thinking Change Your Life
In this practical and encouraging book, MO Shapiro shows you how to achieve what you want. By shifting the way you think about both yourself and the world, you can make radical changes to your life. By following Mo's advice you can transform your
- social life
- relationships
- finances
- health
- leisure
- spiritual life
Caryn Franklin, Journalist and Broadcaster
MO Shapiro is a personal development coach who specialises in relationships, assertiveness and positive thinking.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
- Shift 1 What do you really want?
- Shift 2 Who says you should?
- Shift 3 Time for a clear out
- Shift 4 What are you telling yourself?
- Shift 5 Create more confidence
- Shift 6 Behave yourself
- Shift 7 Increase prosperity through small change
Contact the author
Index
Thank you for choosing to read Shift your thinking change your
life. However this book has reached you, whether you bought
it, were given it or have borrowed it, you have done so because
now is the right time for you to be reading it. I know there
is something in it especially for you, to help you get to where
you want to be. Enjoy the journey and look forward to the changes
you want to create.
I have described the sections as 'Shifts', rather than chapters,
because they represent movement and activity which give you
opportunities to increase the flexibility of your thinking.
Some parts of the book will resonate and feel right for you
and some bits won't. Feel free to dip in and out as you fancy.
Some will immediately provoke a 'yes' reaction, others will
take time. You may even buy the book and just skim through it
at first. Trust yourself to know when you're ready to go deeper
into it.
I have used a number of techniques to generate action into the
process. I want to encourage you to be dynamic as well as reading
the theories. At various stages I have suggested certain questions
you might ask yourself and created some activities to help you
delve deeper into your specific understanding and personal relationship
to the issues. In some places I have suggested you use your
imagination to create things the way you want them to be. You
can do this with pictures, words, sounds or just by experiencing
the ideas. Whatever works for you is the way to do it. If you
record the imagination exercises you can re-use them anytime.
You may want to involve some friends and make these social activities,
too.
As you journey through the shifts, be aware that you have a
choice about what you do with what you read. The more you feel
able to exercise choice here, the more you feel enabled to do
so in any area of your life. I have used the notion of 'moments
of choice' throughout the book. These are there to remind you
that if you stop and think, you have more responses available
than you might previously have realized. A lot of us make our
choices at an unconscious level. The more you bring them into
your consciousness, the more empowered you become. You may decide
sometimes that you are going to respond to a particular situation
with a moan and groan, rather than a straightforward response.
This is fine as long as you know that it's your decision and
that you understand the effect that the behaviour will have.
I have also made use of many affirmations to reinforce the messages
you give yourself about your life. Affirmations are positive,
simple and present-tense statements that you can repeat regularly
to yourself with the intention of retraining your mind to think
in a way you choose, or to change the way you think and therefore
the way you act. I sometimes sing mine when I am on a long car
journey; other people draw and decorate theirs and hang them
around their houses. Repeating positive affirmations can reverse
the negativity of the tapes that we play more often in our minds.
As you go through the book you will begin to recognize your
'starters' and 'stoppers'. The more you realize what prevents
you from being the you you want to be, or from doing the things
you want to do, the greater chance you have to change. In addition,
you will acknowledge the ways you motivate yourself and the
key ways you get yourself started on projects. Then you can
increase the times you bring those into helping you move the
way you want. Everyone has examples of some time in their lives
when they have got themselves going. With this knowledge you
too can go on to repeat your successful strategies in different
situations.
This is a play book, not a work book. I want it to be as much
fun for you to read and use as writing it has been for me. I
have enjoyed researching and reminding myself of the bits that
I need to learn about myself and my reactions to life. I know
there are days when I need to get a grip of myself, think positively
and be grateful that the techniques are there for me. I have
plenty of dear friends and acquaintances who are quick to point
out when I am living my life along the 'do as I say, not do
as I do' lines (not walking the talk). In the main I can laugh
and agree; when I can't, and feel myself tensing up. I know
they've hit a nerve and identified an area for investigation.
This book is about change, and the only thing that doesn't change
about change is change itself. It is often challenging. For
some people this means that the sense of achievement felt is
greater once the change is successful. There are a number of
theories about how long and how many times you need to repeat
a new action or behaviour before it becomes part of your make-up.
It takes three weeks to replace an old habit with a new skill
and at least another nine weeks to turn that new skill into
a new habit.
(Taylor, 2000)
Please use this book to help you change, and don't use it to
beat - yourself up if the changes aren't as immediate as you
would like. It may be that part of you is resistant because
you have become so used to being the way you are — even
if you don't like it. It's a familiar and, in an odd way, almost
a 'safe' route to take. You know the routine, and the results.
How would you feel if you were successful in your change? Perhaps
a bit scared at first. Go at your own pace and trust yourself
to know that something will happen when you are ready. It may
take time. Be kind enough to yourself to take the time to understand
yourself and understand why you are the way you are. Give yourself
the same time, patience and compassion you would give your best
friend if they were in the same place.
Make a commitment to do something active, and let the changes
begin.
About
the author
MO Shapiro is a Managing Partner of INFORM Training
& Communication. She has a proven and outstanding track
record as a personal development coach, psychological counsellor,
management trainer and public speaker. MO is a sought-after
broadcaster on radio and television. She is the author of four
personal development books for the Institute of Management and
is on the expert panel of Real Health and Beauty magazine, for
which she writes regular features. MO regularly offers her expert
advice and coaching input to all popular media. Her mission
is to help people achieve their dreams and enjoy them for as
long as possible.




