Getting UnStuck

Category : fear, resistance, unstuck

So many people come to counseling because they feel stuck, stuck in a job that offers little challenge and is going nowhere, stuck because of getting laid off and not feeling motivated to do anything, stuck because they don’t know what to do or how to do it. 

The first step and often most important is to examine what is behind the feeling of being stuck.  Is there unfinished business such as feelings of grief and loss as a result of losing a job and the relationships that are left behind?  Could it be fear?  Perhaps fear of going for the job of your dreams and not landing it.  Maybe you have always dreamed of starting your own business.  What if you do it and the business fails? 

No matter how bad the situation, you always have choices.  And allowing yourself to be stuck is a choice.  If you can’t change the situation, then change how you think about the situation. 

The challenge is to identify any self defeating-filters through which you’ve been seeing the world and start to work at changing those filters.  No matter how well you live your life; there will always be new setbacks and stressors.  It’s not possible to get rid of all the painful emotions once and for all.  There will always be triggers, so step outside you and be the observer.  Identify the trigger and the feelings.  By doing so, you’re less likely to label each problem a crisis, and you will become better at getting unstuck and managing setbacks. 

When you are feeling stuck or unable to move forward try one or more of these strategies, which have helped many of my clients.

  •  When you feel anxious about something you plan to do, reconnect with a past success.  Remember who you are and what you have achieved.  Remember the strength you have developed through hard times.  If you do that, you can do anything.
  • Be willing to experience the discomfort of change
  • Go where you fear – The most important question to ask yourself is, “What do I want?”  If you want more money, what do you want your money to do and what do you want to use your money for?  When you start getting clarity about any issue, there is bound to be a gap between where you are and what you want.  The key is to allow you to stay with the questions and the tension and to create new behaviors and habits in spite of the tension.
  • Work through personal issues
  • Take responsibility
  • Start somewhere
  • Avoid either/or thinking, which is believing there is only one right path.  If I quit my job, I won’t have financial security.  In truth there are always many more options and outcomes than we imagined.  Too often we look at the future through the eyes of the past, or through the eyes of limited thinking.  Changing your attitude to curiosity about the opportunities that will come no matter which path you choose is the most liberating action you can take.
  • Lean into resistance – When we hit a wall in external situations or within ourselves, we want to run away or break through.  One of the best attitudes when you’re stuck is just to accept that it’s what’s happening right now.  It’s where you are and there’s a reason for it. Accepting where we are brings us back into the present moment, where we no longer blame anyone, including ourselves.  Being open to the present moment gives us the viewpoint of the explorer.  Resistance is a tool of fear.  Perhaps it gives us time to get to know our fear and find out what our fear is saying or wanting us to do.