How To Make Your Mood So Bad It Sucks Pears

Victim “thinking” is a lifestyle based on a narrow-minded and selective way of thinking and perceiving that life owes you because you’ve been wronged. Here are the biggest “mental downers” in mood you will face when you come face-to-face with a victim (including you) who has decades of negative attitude at work seniority:

1. It’s not fair!
2. I’m owed because I’m the victim here!
3. Pay up or I will punish you!
4. It’s not my fault!
5. It’s my way or the highway!
6. I told you that life’s not fair!
7. What d’ya expect me to do about it?!

The victims (including you) of “victim talkers” and “victim doers” (including you) will feel VERY angry at that barrage of depressive miscommunication that goes on and on and on and on…like a road trailing into nowhere.

WHEN LIFE TOSSES LEMONS AT YOUR HEAD…DUCK…OR TOSS THEM BACK

You aren’t thinking straight when you put your life on hold to take care of “The Unhappy Depressive One.” You can’t force someone to change…they may not see the need to…they may not want to. Either way, when life tosses lemons at your head…you still have many mega-choices…you can duck…be glad you don’t suck…you can throw the lemons back…toss the lemons aside…learn to juggle lemons and get paid for it. Why turn lemons into lemonade…that takes way TOO much sugar. And you’re not being genuine if you pretend to be sugar and spice and everything that’s only nice.

LET’S TALK: DO WHAT’S GOOD FOR YOU

Dr. Dennis O’Grady is a professional keynote speaker and professional coach psychologist from Dayton, Ohio, who is the author of the newly released communication system called “Talk to Me: Communication Moves to Get Along With Anyone.” Dennis all-too-well knows that you may feel like you’re in a hole but you can climb out. You will find solutions to the mountain of problems you face…if you strive to “be a victor instead of victim of your life.” Mission Possible: Make your mood matter to you today…do what’s good for you to be happy and good company to be around!

I’m Treated Unfairly

If you make others feel sorry for you, you’re probably not going to read this. It’s not about why everybody in life is treating you so badly and why you deserve lots of compensatory damages to make you feel better. You are already the first chair violin master in your very own “Poor Me Symphony.” On the other hand, IF you refuse to play “the victim violin” because you don’t want people to feel sorry for you, even when you have boatloads of reasons to feel that way, then what I have to say will lighten up a resentment load you might be carrying today.

THE VICTIM VIOLIN

I am betting that you know someone who plays “the victim violin” or the “victim fiddle,” someone who makes others dance to their tune. You know the feeling of being with that person…you have flashbacks…you feel the “poor me complainer” plopping their depression on your doorstep for YOU to solve. And you know what it feels like to dance on eggshells…walk on broken glass…duck when you hear the latest “If you just do what I told you to do, THEN I would be happy…but since you fail to comply to my wishes I have to pay you back in punishing ways to get your attention.” Whew! Victims who are into psychodrama and melodrama have a breathless way to make you their victim, and they do so in persecutory ways that are passive-aggressive or get-even schemes that involve flying underneath the social radar.

THE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE DARK TUNNEL IS A TRAIN COMING TO RUN YOU DOWN?

Many nice people are martyrs who have been taught by organized religions that suffering is noble. In their way of thinking, to be a good martyr on the road to sainthood is to suffer nobly. I would say “suffer gladly,” but victims will hear none of it. Bottom line: Victims erroneously believe that there’s nothing they can do to better their lives…including carrying the flashlight of a positive attitude during dark or stormy passages on the hero’s journey. Just don’t lie about it: If you don’t want to be happy, then don’t act like something will make you happy when in reality you won’t allow anything to. When you feel “hooked and sorry” for victims (and that includes you)…a victim will run right over you and moan about how bad you messed up their train wheels with your entrails.

IS YOUR LIFE AWFUL OR AWE-FILLED?

Anyone worth knowing feels dispirited and depressed now and then. We just don’t make a lifestyle out of it! Here’s how victims can push your buttons and make you feel you owe them your time, attention, money, servant indenture:

1. VICTIMS are experts at making you feel responsible for solving problems they aren’t able to solve.

Trickster: A victim won’t solve problems to feel happy because that removes the victim label from their collar.

2. VICTIMS make you feel like you don’t matter…that whatever you do isn’t quite good enough.

Trickster: A victim has many people working for him or her…upbeat communicators trying hard and humping to please the old grumpy unhappy one.

3. VICTIMS make you feel like you are the cause of their unhappiness.

Trickster: Never forget that a victim’s attitude and personal choices are the cause of their unhappiness…not YOU.

4. VICTIMS are complainers and whiners who salute “Misery loves company…and I’m some of the best company around!”

Trickster: A victim smiles sweetly to your face, but then stabs you or your company in the back while saying, “BUT I didn’t want to do it…I didn’t mean to do it…they didn’t leave me any other choice…SO it’s their fault for the trouble I’ve seen.”

5. VICTIMS push the pedagogy that you must show how much you care by excessively worrying about how well they’re faring and doing in life.

Trickster: A victim rarely thinks they are cared for enough…and they always feel begrudgingly owed for the lack and loss of positive appreciations and “good luck.”

6. VICTIMS convince you through “hammering away at you” that you have serious character flaws and personal faults.

Trickster: What a victim badgers you about, like money or dishonesty, is truer of the victim than of you.

7. VICTIMS are emotional blackmailers who convince you that when you feel good you are making the victim feel bad or even much worse.

Trickster: Well, if you do hold all of the emotional cards…I’m sure you would wave your wand over them to make the victim feel happy for a change, wouldn’t you?!

8. VICTIMS pout and use clout if you feel healthy anger toward them for any reason under the sun.

Trickster: Why shouldn’t you feel mad at a victim who blames you for their loss of vibrancy, achievement, passion, optimism, extra money, life and sex drive?

9. VICTIMS will hand you a manure sandwich and tell you it’s a bologna sandwich, which is pure baloney.

Trickster: When you get sick from eating the manure sandwich the “supposed victim” hands you…the victim will be mad that you are upchucking when you ought to be ever-available to meet his or her needs NOW.

10. VICTIMS make you feel like you have to have their permission to do what you need for feeling good.

Trickster: A victim will make you first feel responsible for their life and emotional welfare…yet you only have one life to live and you’ve got your hands full as it is!

11. VICTIMS will sweet talk you with crocodile tears to force you to expend all of your resources on them.

Trickster: You can spend all your energy, time, effort, emotion, money, savings, retirement earnings, secret slush fund, Aunt Harriet’s inheritance and STILL the victim will prevail with a “What about ME?!”

12. VICTIMS will make you take sides with the supposed “persecutors” who are making them feel bad.

Trickster: Think about it: The “bad boss” or “bad spouse” or “bad brother/sister” or “bad mother/father” etc. are used as foils in the psychodrama…and probably feel the same way about you. Namely, that you are the victim’s true persecutor! Anyone up for an extended family or team-at-work fight?

13. VICTIMS will blow up or shout or nag and pout when you don’t bow to their gospel of, “Why does this always have to happen to me?!”

Trickster: That’s the point…the victim doesn’t have to push others away with their depressing attitude that is as closed tight as a mason jar.

THE OLD DUCK-AND-WEAVE…EMPATHIZER VS. INSTIGATOR COMMUNICATORS AS VICTIMS?

People who are victims, which are all of us when we wish to be, can either be Empathizer-type (E-type) communicators or Instigator-type (I-type) communicators. E-types can break your heart and make you feel heavy with grief. In contrast, I-types can make your head spin until you feel like you are going crazy with worry. Either way, being a victim is a role that is played out…often for a lifetime of creating exactly what a “depressed person” says they don’t want. Being married to someone who’s chronically, constantly low-level depressed…is akin to dancing on eggshells. The old duck-and-weave….where’s the next complaint, big issue, whine, bitch, onslaught, unhappiness, paybacks are hell, problem that won’t go away, back-stabbing, gossip, war of words, unfair accusations, guilt bombs going to come from? Whew…aren’t you GLAD you are done with that part of your life?

IS YOUR MOOD A VICTIM OF THE VICTIM’S DEDICATION TO BEING UNHAPPY NO MATTER THE BLESSINGS OF THEIR LIFE?

Sensitive Empathizer communicators pick up the bad mood of others like head lice. You become the victim…when your mood BECOMES a victim of the negatalking victimizer. Refuse to allow your mind to swirl and twirl in confusion when from experience you’ve learned over-and-over again that NOTHING works to make the victim happy. The victim doesn’t want to be happy! If the victim gets happy…all the sympathy and special favors GET GONE.

LET’S TALK: DO WHAT’S GOOD FOR YOU

Dr. Dennis O’Grady is a professional keynote speaker and professional coach psychologist from Dayton, Ohio, who is the author of the newly released communication system called “Talk to Me: Communication Moves to Get Along With Anyone.” Dennis all-too-well knows that you may feel like you’re in a hole but you can climb out. You may see yourself being lost in an emotional swamp filled up with ugly alligators but you can find your way out. And that you may feel like you’re going to go crazy but you will find solutions to the insurmountable problems you face…if you strive to “be a victor instead of victim of your life.” Mission Possible: Make your mood matter to you today…that’s all you have some control over. So let’s talk…when you do what’s good for you … you will be happy and good company to be around!

Let’s Talk About Depression

Depression is an inability to do anything. Depression is also an inability to say anything much positive to yourself when you’re down in the dumps. If you are an Empathizer (E-type) communicator, depression will dim your light and sap your energy. If you are an Instigator (I-type) communicator, depression will drain your physical battery and zap your motivation. Either way, when your head’s hanging down, depression is the vampire that bites your neck and sucks the creative life energy right out of you through a BIG straw.

THE BEST ANTI-DEPRESSANT: IMPROVING YOURSELF IN LITTLE WAYS EVERY DAY

Take the case of Peter, a sensitive male Empathizer-type communicator (E-type), and a client who came to see me for executive coaching. He went from a dim light to a bright light pretty darn fast in four meetings. Here’s what Peter told me about using my “positive and effective communication tools.”

“I have an inner sense of well-being now. I’m mellowing like an old bottle of red wine. I work on myself and improve on me every day…although it’s not all about me…not at all. I used to take a small flaw…magnify it…then analyze something to death. I feel a natural optimism now without self-defense mechanisms. My feelings aren’t so easily hurt as they used to be. What doesn’t work in my life–I let go of. I don’t drive things into the ground, and I don’t take anyone or anything for granted. Gaps in communication are closed for the better. I don’t take the negative and run with it and put undue stress on myself as I did before. I used to feel sort of a contempt to care for me…now I feel caring toward how I feel…where I’m going…that I’m not done but heading in the right direction. I feel good…there’s a calm well-being.”

CAN YOU CURE DEPRESSION?

Curing or lessening a depression (or feeling down and blue) depends on your communicator type. Do you know your communicator type? If you are an Empathizer communicator … you will want to “turn around” your negative beliefs into positive thoughts to talk sense to yourself when you feel bad. And if you’re an Instigator communicator … you will want to “turn into” your vulnerable feelings to make sure you don’t “run away” from signs on your road less traveled.

I. Empathizer Communicators: The cure for depression is to talk to your self in unconditionally loving ways. Feel the love of yourself coming right at your self NOW!

II. Instigator Communicators: The cure for depression is to treat yourself to unconditionally loving actions. Feel the love of others coming right at you NOW!

WHAT CAN YOU DO FOR YOU…WHAT CAN YOU SAY TO YOU…HOW TO HELP YOURSELF UP WHEN YOU FEEL DOWN

“I can take some little steps that will yield good results!” is the belief of a positive and effective inner-personal communicator. What you can do to feel better fast too:

1. GET YOUR HAPPY BACK. Feeling down and blue isn’t your fault, but you can improve your mood no matter how bad you’re feeling. Take positive “baby steps” to get your happy back, such as talking positively to yourself in kind and caring ways today. For example, “I won’t put undue stress on myself by adding to my already over-full plate!” will stop running down your mood with the worry of negative thinking.

2. BE YOUR OWN BEST FRIEND. “I am worthless and I can’t do anything useful to feel better now!” is the core magnetic thought of the depressed person, and it’s a thought process that draws negative energy toward the self. If no one likes or approves of you, are you still the “best friend” you have in the world to lean on?

3. LIE IN THE BED YOU’VE MADE OR WALK ON? “I’ve made my bed so now I’ve got to lie down on the sharp nails and broken glass and suffer mightily!” reinforces a passive attitude that you can’t do anything right now. An forever more, it’s truly a pile of elephant crap.

4. CAN YOU BE YOUR OWN WORST ENEMY AND BE HAPPY? “I’m not good enough for you or anyone!” is a self-shaming and de-energizing negative belief that will make you hate yourself. Why look a gift horse in the mouth, namely, how you treat yourself when no one is looking? Stop putting yourself down with “I’m not good enough!” circular thinking that will make you frown and feel like a circus clown.

5. HE OR SHE WHO DIES WITH THE MOST JOYS WINS. The double-whammy: Healthy people who feel depressed also feel bad and guilty for feeling bad. Thus, “I feel bad for feeling bad about my life because I have so much going for me and to be thankful for!” is akin to hitting yourself in the head with a hammer. The guilt trip “BUT I have it all and SHOULD feel thankful!” will take you down a dark road of depression with your car lights turned out.

6. JUST A LITTLE LUCK. A little luck goes a long ways. You make your own luck when you talk positively to yourself in the long face of depression. Also, when you do little “energy in” nice things for yourself, such as get a massage, you find this “declaration of emotional independence” will inexorably pick up your spirits because “lucky opportunities” are all-ways right in front of you like the nose on your face.

7. THE SENSELESS PURSUIT OF PERFECTION WILL DRIVE YOU NUTS IN NO TIME AT ALL? “Why can’t I get it right?” … “I need your approval!” … “I’m invisible and unimportant to you!” “Why would anyone in their right mind like me when I dislike myself so much?” … “I’m bringing this on myself and always turning my shiny dreams into rust!” … “There I go again running myself down with a Mac truck of worry and negativity!” “I’m a perfect martyr” thinking … shoots your self-esteem in the head and pushes away people closest to you as punishment for your sins.

8. “MY WAY IS NOT THE ONLY WAY.” Your way is NOT the only way, thank God. Are you open to new solutions to old perplexing problems? “It’s my way or the highway!” is a set-up to make others feel controlled by your mood … and your mood controlled by no one in particular.

9. WHY FEEL INVISIBLE OR LIKE A WHOPPING FAILURE? “I’m so sorry for everything I’ve done!” is a harshly judgmental guilt trip that constantly drains your battery of creative ideas and causes your engine to grind frustratingly. Failing at life isn’t possible when you keep trying to do the new when the old system is no longer working for you.

10. TAKE SOME STRESS OFF FROM YOUR SHOULDERS. “I know what to do but I don’t have the energy to do it!” isn’t true. Depressive thinking makes you dig a hole and jump right into it, discarding anyone’s help to throw you a rope ladder so you can climb out of that hole. You DO have the energy to do a few little things that prove that you’re not playing the victim violin.

THERE’S NOTHING YOU CAN DO ABOUT A DOWNER MOOD?

E-types suffer from dysphoria, states of depression and anxious moods far more consciously than I-types do. I-types keep busy being busy to avoid their feelings and to focus on the positive. Don’t believe for a second that there’s nothing you can do about a down mood. It’s just not true! In fact, there’s nothing you can’t do! Don’t let depressive thinking “brainwash” your mind and “drain” your emotional declaration of independence called “I CAN TOO…!” Heck, even God’s moody…God love us!

WHO BETTER THAN YOU TO TREAT YOURSELF TO A LITTLE CARING WHEN YOU’RE CRYING INSIDE?

The tar baby of depression makes you feel stuck fast in the lie that you can’t do anything effective to feel a little better today in caring ways. Depression numbs your positive feelings…so remember although feeling bad is not your fault … you are still response-able to take little steps in the faith that feeling what you do has something loud to say about your courageous character. So go ahead and improve yourself a little every day. A little bit of goodness and caring treatment … by you and for you … can and will carry you forward when you feel stuck in a depression.

Dr. Dennis O’Grady is author of “Talk to Me: Communication Moves to Get Along with Anyone,” a book whose simple purchase for yourself can be the first great thing you do for yourself on this journey out of depression and depressive thinking.

Depression In The Workplace

SOMEBODY HAS TAKEN A STRAW AND SUCKED THE LIFE OUT OF ME!

A professional nurse, who is a very sensitive human being and Empathizer-type communicator, told me recently:

“I feel like someone has taken a straw and sucked the life right out of me. I’m fading fast. I know what to do to feel better but I lack the energy to do it. My partner is concerned, and my co-workers are asking me what’s wrong, but I still can’t seem to pull out of it. So that’s why I’m talking to you, Dennis. I need to get some pep to my step again. I need to get my happy back! I mean this is ridiculous because I’m supposed to be the healer here…but this healer is wounded and her spirit is dying.”

That short description, in fact, vividly describes what a moderate case of “clinical depression” feels like in good, caring people like you and me.

HOW TO KNOW IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW IS DEPRESSED

Depression makes you feel invisible, and you feel unable to do anything to help yourself. You might hear yourself say, “My back is up against the wall” … “I can’t make a decision” … “I’m a no one!” The first step to fixing a problem is to know what the problem is. If you’re a manager or a worker bee, these are the symptoms to look for when your star employee is no longer a star, or when the star’s light is fading fast.

1. EVERY LITTLE STRAIN TESTS THE NERVES. When you are depressed, little annoyances carry the same psychological stress weight as “the big issues.” Thus, being interrupted with an unwelcome phone call or a child’s latest problem at school will feel as bad as receiving a cut in pay or being threatened with losing your job.

2. FEELING BLUE OR CRYING AT THE DROP OF A HAT. When you feel depressed, you will feel down in the mouth for no reason, sorrow-filled, sad, like your world is coming to an end or has ended. Thoughts of ending it all might also zip through your mind. This is a feeling of life malaise or uneasiness, as if you can’t count on anything to remain steady. You can find a secure hand to hold when the winds of change are blowing. Talking “pull yourself up” tough to yourself only intensifies the negative feelings.

3. MAD AT YOURSELF…GRUMPY…EDGY… SELF-CRITICAL INSTEAD OF SELF-CARING. You will feel down and blue, and you’ll deliver stern lectures to yourself about how you have to be better, smarter, thicker-skinned and tougher, work harder, not let it get to you, not be so sensitive, not be so upset about nothing at all. You will feel dumped on and put upon, namely resentful. Being subconsciously angry at the self was one of Freud’s psychological definitions of depression.

4. NO ENERGY. When you experience a depression, you will wake feeling tired after a good night’s sleep. Even small activities will drain your energy, as if you’re pushing a big boulder up a mountain by your nose. When you have “no energy”… a bad attitude and withdrawing from others usually follow close behind.

5. THERE’S A HOLE IN YOUR BUCKET. When you or a co-worker/partner feel anxious and depressed, compliments won’t register and criticisms will take center stage, thus draining your bucket of self-esteem that is vital to renewing your energy. Also, you will blame yourself for putting the hole in your bucket, even though it’s not your fault. You will inaccurately believe that you are giving less than your best at work or home…when half of your best is better than most of the rest.

6. REAL DOWNER RELATIONSHIP BLAHS. Dysphoria is feeling down and blue, sometimes for a reason, most times for no reason at all. When you feel down, paradoxically, your relationships won’t boost you up. Instead, they’ll often inadvertently drain you down to lower levels even more. That’s because you feel guilty for being in such a bad mood about your relationship or partner. More bad news: Your romantic partner or kids will tend to become anxious when you feel down for too long.

7. YOU DON’T DO WHAT WORKS TO MAKE YOU FEEL BETTER? When depressed, you won’t do “all those little things” that will give you a mighty boost of energy. “Little things,” like taking a breather from a tight schedule, reading a positive magazine article, goofing off, calling a friend, meditating or praying, watching a comedy on T.V., going to bed early, saying “no” to helping others when you barely have the energy to put one foot in front of the other. My “energy in” rule and the “Talk to Me” system of talking positively to yourself … will make you feel better pretty darn fast, though.

8. NEGATIVE TALKING THAT FEEDS ON ITSELF. When depressed, you will talk to yourself and believe others talk about you in negative ways. Key negative beliefs: “I am worthless.” “I am not important.” “Anybody can do what I do.” “I’m doing all this to myself…it’s all my fault.” “I should’ve known better … Why am I letting this get me down?” “What’s the matter…is it something biological, situational or relational…why don’t I know?” “This bad feeling is going to last forever…I’ll never pull out of this funk.” The good news: Just being aware of the negative sub-vocal chatter in your skull will lessen it.

9. “WHATEVER I DO TO FEEL BETTER WON’T WORK, SO WHY EVEN TRY?” When depressed, you will make a donkey out of yourself by incorrectly judging the outcome of trying new actions, and you’ll assume that they won’t work. Thus, you will slay some of your and your co-workers’ or partners’ best suggestions, before they have a chance to take flight and pick up your mood.

10. “I DON’T SAY ‘NO’ TO ANYBODY!” Over-extending…being the nice guy or gal…always saying “yes” and not saying “no” when “no” is the right answer, is one of the leading interpersonal causes of keeping a depression going. The solution is to pull back…explain why you are crispy and burned out and need to re-energize. People will understand.

11. LOVE YOURSELF AS YOUR NEIGHBOR. The temporarily depressed person forgets one simple thing: all love that emanates from them begins and ends with feeling loving and caring toward the self. You can’t love and minister to others unless you first love yourself when you don’t even have a reason to. If you can’t be kind to yourself when you’re under the weather… how can you truly be kind to others? If you cannot love yourself when you feel “sick” … how can you offer healing help to your neighbors? Well, of course, you and I can’t do the impossible.

12. YOUR EMOTIONS ARE TIED UP IN KNOTS AND YOUR THINKING TWISTED. Depression “depersonalizes” you as a human being. If you’re a doctor, depression makes you feel like a “provider.” If you’re a nurse, depression makes you feel unimportant and expendable, too. If you’re a manager or administrator, depression makes you feel like no one is implementing the solutions you are wisely advising. Depression confuses your common sense tactics to make you feel like a loser.

ENERGY IN…ENERGY OUT

“I don’t have the energy!” is a major complaint of the depressed employee or family member. The solution is to input “energy in” from outside sources and the use of positive talk. In my third book, “Talk to Me,” I recommend specific ways “to talk positively and effectively to yourself” when you’re in a bad mood. For our purposes: “Talk Nice to You.” “Energy in” is the secret cure that you can use to feel better when you feel about as important as the belly of a worm slithering across a muddy sidewalk with a group of junior high kids running toward you!

RELATIONSHIP DISTRESS

Perhaps two-thirds of all depressions are due to some change in your life or some ongoing relationship dissatisfaction, dispute or distraction from home. Usually those problems travel with you to work. And if the depression is primarily biologically rooted, then medication plus self-management tools work best. In most cases, the rule of “Keep it simple … the cure might be easier than your depressive thinking would have you believe it is!” will work like a lucky charm or rabbit’s foot.

ABOUT TALK TO ME

Dr. Dennis O’Grady is a professional keynote speaker from Dayton, Ohio. He is also the author of three books that deal with change management, mood management, relationship relaxation and positive and effective communication skills. Dennis is the author of “Talk to Me: Communication Moves to Get Along with Anyone.” As a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist, he has spent more than 30 years helping himself and others out of depression and into “being a leader of your own life.” Has someone taken a straw and sucked the life out of you? Then order a copy of “Talk to Me” from this site to experience a quick boost in your energy. If you don’t experience feeling better fast…your money will be completely refunded to you with no questions asked. In the meantime, do a few of those “little things” that you know will work to “add energy” to your life. After all, suffering isn’t your communication style at all! Also, in an accompanying article, I will tell you how your experience of depression and what does and doesn’t work for treating depressive issues significantly varies depending upon whether you are an Empathizer-type communicator or an Instigator-type communicator.

Feeling All Your Feelings

If you’re able to truly feel all of your feelings, you’ll gain the necessary energy to solve difficult problems. So the first step to experience “the joy of feeling alive” or “the joy of contentment” is to accurately feel whatever you do.

When you feel hurt–cry.
When you feel happy–laugh.
When you feel scared–talk.
When you feel angry–connect.
When you feel love–express it.
When you feel grief–mourn.
When you feel grumpy–don’t act like Dopey.
When you feel resentful–let go.
When you feel vengeful–forgive but don’t forget.
When you feel rejected–accept it.
When you feel good–celebrate.
When you feel lonely–reach out to others.
When you feel self-critical–nurture yourself instead.
When you feel like a failure–try…try again.
When you feel disappointed–don’t dump.
When you feel shy–introduce yourself.
When you feel high and almighty–calm yourself.
When you feel perfectionistic–make a mistake.
When you feel stuck in the status quo–do something new.
When you feel awe–tingle.
When you feel awful–don’t complain ad infinitum.
When you feel hopeful–spread it around.
When you feel optimistic–tolerate pessimists.
When you feel a loss of control–manage what you can.
When you feel vulnerable–feel proud of yourself.
When you feel down–lighten your load.
When you feel mistrusting–trust your inner circle of advisors.
When you feel bored–spice up your life.
When you feel like you messed up–apologize.
When you feel alone–make new friends.
When you feel alive–feel fortunate and live your life.
When you feel stuck in a rut–change equals communication.
When you feel stressed–address your grievances.
When you feel things aren’t going your way–don’t run away.
When you feel displeased–please yourself more.
When you feel anything at all–feel the feeling gladly.

Dr. Dennis O’Grady is a professional keynote speaker and the author of a proven new communications program found in his latest book TALK TO ME: Communication Moves to Get Along with Anyone. He specializes in teaching “positive and effective communication strategies to be the leader of your own life.”