This site is called Smallercup and suggests you should have a smaller cup to improve your well-being. But what is in the cup? The assumption is something positive, but sometimes what we are holding in our cup and our soul is anything but that.
A serious challenge to your well-being is the malice and ill-will you may harbour inside. A silent but real anger against someone or something will prevents a positive sense of self to emerge. Someone seriously crossed your bottom lines, or a point-of-view totally violates your sense of right or justice and you are stuck in anger, resentment and poison. Your cup is neither full, empty nor smaller, just disappointed and vengeful!
First, if your cup has any toxins in it, it will be difficult to materially improve your well-being. Desmond Tutu noted that we “all face the same choice: to forgive or to seek revenge”. Letting go is not easy, but not letting go of your real and valid misfortunes is going to corrupt your life journey. Revenge will absolutely get you nowhere other than backwards.
Second, letting go does not mean forgetting, rather it means forgiving the wrong or wrong doer and moving on. And perhaps even forgiving yourself.
Third, letting go of your wrathful poison will release you from the prison of your past. Obsessing and replaying past transgressions rots you from the inside out. Unfortunately, you become a prisoner of your past.
Fourth, harbouring negative feelings to specific individuals taints the way you see people generally, how you see the world, and how others see you.
Five, harbouring disappointment about the past limits your achievements in the present and the future, as it can undermine your confidence and willingness to take risks and chance success.
Six, letting go of those aspects of your past allows for healing and moving forward.
Seven, letting go always allows for resilience to mature.
It is very unlikely there is anyone that does not have moments they wish they could erase from their past, so you are not alone. Awfulizing, re-playing, second guessing, and harbouring those past moments doesn’t undo the damage.
However, there is much merit in cognitive behavioral therapy to free you of these matters and help you let go. PLEASE do see a specialist to help you move on if you are stuck.
Reflection Source: www.Smallercup.org
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