Stop Self-Sabotage to Actually Reach Your Goals

Episode 484 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Thais Gibson

How do you rewire your subconscious to make real progress on your goals?

Imposter syndrome, limiting beliefs, self-sabotage — it’s easy to get in your own way on the journey to achieving your most ambitious personal and professional goals. What’s happening in our heads to render our resolutions so often unattainable? Why are our goals sometimes unmet despite our best efforts? 

Thais Gibson has answers. The founder of the Personal Development School, Thais is a counselor who holds a PhD and certifications in an astounding 13 modalities, including CBT, hypnosis, and somatic experience. She is the leading expert in attachment therapy, and her very own Gibson Integrated Attachment Theory is extending the frontiers of psychology. 

Thais’s deep knowledge of how our brains form connections and pathways ties directly into not only understanding why we self-sabotage but also how we can train ourselves to stop.

The conscious mind vs. the subconscious mind

The great news is that we can become the people we aspire to be when we make those big plans. However, changing our behaviors calls for rerouting neural pathways we’ve been reinforcing since childhood. Counseling can go a long way to helping secure your desired outcomes, but this can be accomplished on your own, too.

Here’s what you need to know about the conscious vs. the subconscious minds:

  • First of all, the conscious mind is responsible only for 3–5% of your daily thoughts and emotions. The subconscious commands the other 95–97%.

  • Unsurprisingly, then, the conscious mind isn’t capable of overpowering the subconscious. This means that if your conscious mind wants something (to hold better boundaries at work, say), and what your subconscious mind believes contradicts this (your job will be in jeopardy if you begin setting boundaries), then your subconscious is going to win. Every single time.

  • While your conscious mind responds to language, your subconscious mind does not. Thais finally confirmed my long-held opinion that affirmations aren’t backed by science: telling yourself you can do something isn’t going to convince that stubborn 95%, which learns via the repetition of images and emotions, not through words. 

The cycle of “self-sabotage”

Thais is quick to point out that “self-sabotage” is a bit of a misnomer. It implies we’re setting out to derail our dreams, which isn’t the case. It might come as a comfort to learn that what’s getting in the way is deep in your subconscious. While this means it’s not your “fault,” per se, it’s still your responsibility to resolve.

When we face a ton of resistance while trying to achieve something—let’s stick with “build better workplace boundaries” as an example—it’s because we’re wired to fear what we think the outcome will be. That aversion comes from occurrences early in life that began creating these particular pathways. As we keep bowing to the assumption that was proven true once, or twice, or many times in our young lives, we create deeper and deeper ruts that make that belief—“if I stand firm with my boundaries, I will fail”—our truth. 

That truth was formed with the singular, often outdated aim of keeping you safe at any cost, so when your conscious mind pushes back, you experience cognitive dissonance, and, as we established earlier, your subconscious is going to win that battle. The only option, then, is to create new pathways that match what your conscious mind desires.

What are you afraid will happen if you achieve your goal?

If it sounds like it takes work to essentially stop believing what you’ve believed for ages, you’re not wrong. But, Thais stresses that it is possible and it only takes three key steps.

Before you start on the steps, you need to determine your aversion. Do this by first identifying the pattern you want to change. What is it that you want? In keeping with our example, this would be something like, “I want to learn to have healthy boundaries at work.”

Now, why haven’t you achieved this yet? What are you afraid will happen if you follow through? Maybe it’s that “If I do less, they’ll realize I’m not good enough to be here.” Keeping that in mind, you can start the steps.

Rewire your pathways to change your behavior

Step one: What is the opposite of your underlying fear? For our example, it’s “I am good enough.”

Step two: Speak about a memory—perhaps of playing outside as a child. You aren’t just saying words, right? You are actively envisioning the colorful jungle gym, the kids running around, the laughter. You’re also probably feeling the emotion you felt in that moment.

You’ll recall that imagery and emotion are the cornerstones of the subconscious. Memories are the containers for those components, and they are what you use to begin creating a new neural pathway.

Come up with 10 memories. They don’t have to be life-altering experiences—fleeting moments are just fine—but they should all confirm the opposite of your fear that you determined in step one. So, in this example, you would need to tap into 10 memories that evoke a feeling of being good enough. Write down or voice-record these memories in detail.

Step three: Repetition is the other component that makes subconscious pathways really stick, so that’s what you’ll do next. For the next 21 days, set aside five minutes a day to listen to or read through your 10 memories. Just when you wake up or just before bed is ideal since that’s when our minds are most suggestible. 

Thais has shared this process with tens of thousands of people, and it works. Not only do you build a new neural pathway that aligns with your conscious mind’s goal, replacing cognitive dissonance with resonance, but you also stop reinforcing the old pathway. Like a muscle, the path you’re ignoring begins to atrophy.

In our conversation on the podcast, Thais and I go even deeper into the neuroscience behind the subconscious mind and so-called self-sabotage. We discuss the societal and systemic barriers to this work and how she guides patients for whom the steps prove particularly difficult.  

I want to hear your thoughts. How has self-sabotage shown up in your life? What work have you done to align your conscious and subconscious minds, and how might you implement Thais’ teachings? Weigh in on the Courage Community on Facebook, join us in our group on LinkedIn, or reach out to me directly!

Related links from today’s episode:

Thais’s website

Watch Thais’s daily YouTube videos

Follow Thais on Instagram

Level Up: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Follow me on Instagram

LEVEL UP with even more practices for personal and professional development:

Previous
Previous

How to Move Past Taking Things Personally at Work

Next
Next

Can You Be Friends At Work?