Personal Development: How Can You Align Your perceptions with Reality?
February 1, 2010 by Roger K. Allen
Filed under Principles of Personal Development
“You believe what your mind tells you.”

Personal Development: How Can You Align Your perceptions with Reality?
• Play detective with your own thoughts. Gather clues and evidence and use them to distinguish between reality and your understanding of reality as filtered by your preconceptions, emotions and mindset.
• As part of your personal development, commit to writing down your thoughts while your emotions are still heightened. It’s nearly impossible to access emotions after the fact, so try to make a habit of sitting down in or immediately after a situation and journaling your emotions and perceptions. Then take another look when you are calmer and then again a day or so later. Continue to journal, sorting facts from assumptions and challenging your understanding.
• List other potential interpretations. Even if you don’t have time to sit and journal in a given situation, make a habit of reinterpreting your perceptions. For example, you call your brother to wish him a happy birthday, and he rings off abruptly. You and he have a history of jealousies and tension, so you are infuriated: “Why do I bother? He doesn’t care about me!” Good! That’s one possible explanation. Now let’s try to find at least 2 more. The more the better, so here we go:
• I guess I caught him at a bad time.
• He must hate having birthdays. Well, since I’m two years older, I can understand that.
• I wonder if he’s upset at something I’ve done lately? Or that I haven’t done.
In this example, you can only really draw one sure conclusion: You don’t know why he hung up suddenly. You don’t have enough information. If you call him again later or he calls you, you might have more information, but in the meantime, you just don’t know.
Why are we spending so much time working on this concept of perception vs. reality? I’m going to go into the why more in my next blog, but in the meantime, think about that last example. Putting yourself in that situation, what feelings do you think resulted from the original conclusion, and the subsequent ones?
Learning to manage your fact processing skills will make a dramatic difference in your personal development. To accelerate your progress even more, join me for the LIVE BIG seminar on March 12 and 13, and you can break free from your illusions for good!










Patricia Eslava Vessey on Mon, 26th Apr 2010 8:39 am
I love the way you break down this process and make it easily useable in creating what you want in your life.
Lauren on Sat, 26th Jun 2010 1:05 pm
This is like the Lefkoe Process developed by Morty Lefkoe in that there could be several, equally valid reasons, for the abrupt end to the phone call. This validates all the work I did through the Process to rid myself of limiting beliefs. And pausing for a moment before getting angry and upset and telling yourself stories that only exacerbate the situation. Love and Light