This month I am traveling more than normal. I will be
visiting 5 cities in less than 6 weeks.
Four of the five trips involve airline travel and one is a road
trip. I am traveling for both work
and personal reasons, but 5 trips in a row is a lot of traveling for me.
When I am traveling I love to use the travel time to read,
unless I am driving of course, and in those cases I like to read audio
books. This weekend I am on trip
number two and I am reading a book called, “The Big Leap” by Gay
Hendricks. It is well written and
presents a super interesting concept.
We all have one barrier to living a successful and fulfilled
life. Gay calls it the “upper limit problem”.
The “upper limit problem” is our innate intolerance for
feeling good. It is the idea that
our brain wants to sabotage us if we sense that things are going too well or we
start to feel too good. I found
this so fascinating. Who doesn’t
want to feel good or be successful right?
I am mostly a positive person, but when I really started to work through
this concept while reading the book, I realized that I do it all the time.
Have you ever diagnosed a complicated case and felt very
proud of yourself? Did you feel
the extraordinary exhilaration of being a Super Vet? You feel great KNOWING that you came up with the right diagnosis
and chose the very best treatment for the pet. You felt wonderful about that right? Then, did you go home later and Google,
VIN, and research the snot out of that particular disease until you filled your
head with doubts. You read until
you feel terrified that you made a big mistake and the pet was surely going to
be dead by morning? Yep! That is the “upper limit problem”.
Hendricks writes that we each have an internal meter that is
the keeper of our joy. We have
these well-established beliefs that we are only so worthy. It may be something that we developed
in childhood or something that we were born with, but it is deeply ingrained in
us. We have this feeling that we
can only be so successful or so happy. When good things do happen and we should be exceedingly
happy, our brain brings up problems to keep us “in our place”, so to speak.
First we need to recognize the thoughts when they occur. If you have a success and all of a
sudden you start feeling critical towards yourself, a client or colleague; that
is your brain bringing up an upper limit thought. Deflecting compliments can be a sign of an upper limit
thought. When you are brilliant
and someone tells you that you are brilliant you may deflect the compliment
with claims of inferiority. That
is upper limit deflection. You can work to recognize these sabotage thoughts in
your head and work to change them before they destroy your happiness. That is the point of “The Big Leap”. Taking a big mental leap to destroy
your upper limits and stay in your zone of success, abundance and joy.
There is a lot more to the book than what I can explain
here, so I would encourage you to read it. Perhaps I can help you get a head start by noticing your
upper limit thinking so together we can leap over our negativity and open us up
to feelings of abundant success.
Have a beautiful week and safe travels to you all.
Dr. Julie Cappel