Bringing You Back Into Balance

Are You Always Shoulding On Yourself?

March 19, 2022 Harinder Ghatora
Bringing You Back Into Balance
Are You Always Shoulding On Yourself?
Show Notes Transcript

In this episode I talk about something that causes a lot of misery in the lives of many people. 

If I had the power to introduce a global law, I would banish this thing! 

What am I talking about?

The word  ‘should’.

Do you live in the ‘land of should’?

Do you find yourself doing what you should be doing and not what you want to be doing all the time?

Are you the one always doing the ‘right thing’ by everyone else? So much so that you have lost touch with your innate sense of fun, creativity and spontaneity?

Or, maybe on the odd occasion you have tried to do what you like, only to find yourself riddled with feelings of guilt.

If this is you, then discover a new way of being with a simple transformative technique that I share in this podcast. 

It will help you regain your inner peace and personal power.

Thanks for listening!

You can discover more about my work on my website: https://www.harinderghatora.co.uk

Follow me on Instagram for free information on healthy, balanced living: https://www.instagram.com/harinder_ghatora/

Hello,

It’s Harinder here, Holistic Life Coach....helping you to bring peace and balance back into your life. 

I’d like to talk about something that causes a lot of misery in the lives of many people. I see a lot of this in my practice. I’ve personally had to do a lot of work on myself around this issue. If I had the power to introduce a global law I would banish this thing! What am I talking about?

The word of ‘should’.

Do you live in the ‘land of should’?

Do you find yourself doing what you should be doing and not what you want to be doing all the time?

Are you the one always doing the ‘right thing’ by everyone else? So much so that you have lost touch with your innate sense of fun, creativity and spontaneity?

Or, maybe on the odd occasion you have tried to do what you like, only to find yourself riddled with feelings of guilt.

We’ve all been there. I’m guessing that if you share my background, you know this land very well. I lived there during my younger adult life:

  •  Always looking happy when really I was stressed and very unhappy;
  • Always being hospitable when I just wanted to be left alone;
  • Always cooking proper meals from scratch even when I was exhausted;
  • Cleaning when I really just wanted to sit and watch TV;
  • Attending family events when I wanted quiet weekends at home.

The list goes on.

Over the years I realised that there is only one road in the land of ‘should’; a one-way road that leads to misery, anxiety and despair.

Thankfully, I left the 'land of should' a long time ago.

Nowadays I get to visit this miserable place through my work. 

If there is one word that crops up again and again with clients when we’re focusing on their unhappiness, it is the word ‘should’. And, where there is a ‘should’ there is usually ‘guilt’ just a breath away. 

I repeatedly see this word linked to feelings of:

  • frustration
  • tension
  • resentment
  •  and, powerlessness.

I struggle to find any positive uses for this word. The only thing it appears to do is deprive people of their freedom, power and happiness.

So What Does ‘Should’ Mean?

A dictionary definition is:

I quote “(a word) used to indicate obligation, duty, or correctness, typically when criticising someone’s actions.” Unquote.

That in it itself doesn’t sound very positive at all!

There are two issues here: there’s the matter of ‘shoulding’ on others, and the matter of ‘shoulding’ on yourself.

Let’s talk about ‘Shoulding’ on Others First

I’m guessing we all have people in our lives who think they can should on us. You know the ones … they spend all their time telling you:

  • how you should be behaving
  • what you should be doing
  • what you should be eating
  • what you should be wearing
  • where you should be going
  • who you should be hanging around with
  • even what you should be thinking.

I don’t like being ‘shoulded’ on so I try very hard not to ‘should’ on others.

When we ‘should’ on someone else, we impose our beliefs onto them. We don’t truly understand where the other person is in their life; the challenges they are facing, their experiences to date, or their beliefs and desires.

Fundamentally, ‘shoulding’ is a matter of power; you strip the other person of their power and, worse still, you try to yield power over them by imposing your beliefs onto them. 

‘Shoulding’ on someone comes from the position of:

“I am not OK with you the way you are, I understand your situation better than you do, and I am an authority on this.”

This can be translated as:

“I’m cleverer than you and I know what is best for you.”

The subliminal message underneath all this is “You are stupid.”

This is not respectful or empathic. Is it a surprise that we all instinctively react defensively and negatively to a ‘should’?

The second issue here is the business of ‘Shoulding’ on Yourself

This is something I witness a lot of in my work. 

“I should be better”

“I should really go visit”

“I should have done x,y and z”

I think many of us can recognise that pesky little voice in our head always making us feel bad about ourselves.

If we 'should' a lot on ourselves then chances are that we’ve been ‘shoulded’ on so much by others (family/friends/media) that we’ve internalised other people’s wishes and ideals, and then, worst still, have started to judge ourselves against these wishes and ideals. 

We’ve become our own worst enemy. We impose exceptionally high standards of behaviour onto ourselves and then proceed to judge ourselves harshly whenever we fall short. And, as the expectations are often unrealistic, this happens quite often.

When we use the word “should” on ourselves, we want things to be different to how they actually are and, furthermore, we feel guilty about them not being that way. This subtly begins to erode our self-image and can, over a period of time, lead to feelings of powerlessness and low self-esteem. We begin to feel bad about ourselves; inadequate, imperfect and unhappy.

A more subtle implication is that we are not taking full personal responsibility for our own life; we are assessing everything from an external reference point (someone else’s opinion on how things should be) as opposed to an internal one (how we want things to be). 

It is dramatically more useful and powerful to make a decision to do something from a place of genuine desire than from a place of obligation.

We’re also taken so far away from our true selves, because we are living life from someone else’s perspective, that we lose touch with who we truly are. We no longer know what makes us happy, or how to have fun.

  • Our responsibilities begin to feel overwhelming, burdensome, and start to weigh us down.
  • We feel tense all the time for no apparent reason. (It is hard work keeping up the act. This internal tension creates anxiety and stress.)
  • Our power is taken away from us because we are living someone else’s life.
  • We begin to feel trapped.
  • We begin to feel despair.
  • We begin to ask ourselves: What is the point of life? What am I getting out of this?
  • We start to resent the people around us. Does anyone even notice or care that I am sacrificing so much of myself for them?
  • Ultimately, all this culminates in feelings of confusion, anguish and internal turmoil.

That’s not a good place to find yourself in at any stage of your life.

So, how did we get into the ‘Land of Should’?

For many of us, the root of this issue can be found in our upbringing. We have been given crystal-clear instructions on what the expected norms of behaviour are if we are to get any positive regard from anyone. And, coupled with the misguided belief that what others think of us is of the utmost importance, we unwittingly walk into the land of should and then can’t find a way out.

I have first-hand experience of this process. As an example, somewhere along the line I internalised a belief that ‘I should always appear to be happy and accommodating of others no matter what is going on in my internal or external world’. 

Now, how realistic is that? Is it possible for a human being to always be happy? To always be accommodating? I think not.

This single misbelief led me to subject myself to a ridiculous amount of pressure which all eventually culminated in generalised anxiety and panic disorder in my teens and twenties.  

So, how do you get out of the ‘Land of Should’?

There are lots of ways of regaining your personal power.

Simply understanding the process I’ve just spoken about is enough to raise self-awareness and draw attention to the prevalence of this issue in your life.

But, if you’re looking for something specific you can do, here is a very simple technique that can kick-start the process.

Let’s use the following example:

A friend, who is a single parent, texts and asks you to look after her four-year old daughter at the last minute. You had already planned to go out shopping on that day.

1) Notice any feelings of unrest that this request may trigger.

You may be perfectly content in saying ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to this request, in which case there is no problem. But, if there is any internal conflict between ‘wanting to go shopping’ and ‘babysitting’ you will experience some sort of negative internal sensation.

2) If you do notice any tension within yourself, identify the ‘should’ in the situation.

Sometimes you may have to think about it for a moment but it will be there somewhere. In this case it could simply be: “She’s my friend, she has no-one else and I should help her.”

3) Now in your mind rephrase the statement by replacing the ‘should’ with a ‘could’. “She’s my friend and I could help her.”

Can you feel the energetic difference between these two sentences?

“I should help her”  feels tight, rigid, almost like being in a straitjacket. There is no room for manoeuvre; no way out; no choice. It leaves you feeling powerless.

Whereas “I could help her”  feels very different. It feels lighter, freer and, most importantly, it feels like suddenly there is a choice. There is a real decision to be made, and where there is a decision there is scope for exercising (and reclaiming) your personal power. You may still end up saying ‘yes’ but this time your decision has come from an empowered place and not a disempowered place.

4) Now spend a moment or two seriously considering the pros and cons of each scenario:

“I could help her. She is my friend. She is a single parent. She has no one else to turn to. She is always there for me when I need help. I suppose I could always go shopping tomorrow. Anyway I like spending time with her daughter. We could go out and have some fun. Okay… I’ll say ‘yes’.”

Or

“I could help her but I have an interview on Monday and I don’t have anything appropriate to wear. I really need to go shopping.  If I had known earlier in the week I would have gone then and been free to help today. She may get upset with me but I’ll just have to live with it until it blows over. I’ll have to say ‘no’.”

Do you notice the difference the word ‘could’ made?

When we have consciously decided to do something because we have weighed up the advantages and disadvantages, then we are operating in the realms of our power. When we just respond to a ‘should’ from a place of obligation, we are not.

Furthermore, if we do things out of a sense of duty, more often than not, we resent the fact (resent ourselves for giving in and resent the other person for putting us in that position).

Our feelings are always a giveaway. Where there is some sort of internal conflict, you will feel it in your body. It can show up as irritation, anger, resentment, anxiety, sadness, despair, guilt, even fear.

So next time you feel this kind of tension welling up inside yourself, identify and eliminate the ‘should’. It may take a little practice, but it will over time gently escort you out of the ‘land of should’ into the land of joy and empowerment.

There’s a lot of truth in the Chinese proverb: “Tension is who you think you should be. Relaxation is who you are”.

Okay…that’s it for now. Enjoy the rest of your day.

And, remember stay in your power, and take good care of yourself… because we both know that if you don’t, no one else will. 

Bye for now.