3 Examples Of How Unexpected Events Can Help Elevate Self-Awareness
Life doesn't always go the way we expect, but that doesn't mean we can't learn from it.
When the unexpected comes knocking — and it always will — how do you greet it?
Do you open the door with an anxiety-inducing "uh-oh" and try to circumvent or eradicate the unexpected event altogether? Or do you treat it as an opportunity to increase your self-awareness and problem-solving skills?
This whole concept of self-awareness may conjure up images of escaping to Walden Pond with an Oprah’s Book Club bestseller — New Age-y, impractical, midlife-enlightenment stuff that makes eyes roll and guests leave the dinner table before dessert.
But not so fast!
While any term preceded by "self" may sound like a topic for another day, no prefix is more conducive to a vibrant life with healthy relationships. And the foundation of all these "selfies" is self-awareness.
Here are some self-awareness examples that will help you grow and shape into the person you're meant to be.
1. You are aware of your emotions.
Self-awareness refers to your ability to identify, understand, and manage your emotions.
At the opposite end of the spectrum is having emotions that you can’t identify, understand, or manage. Your feelings have you, not the other way around.
If you operate at this level, you’re likely to live in fear of anything that is unpredictable or unexpected.
It’s uncomfortable to have emotions you don’t recognize. It’s like having a stranger in your home... and he’s not planning on leaving.
You have to make the choice, usually subconsciously, that you are going to block out your feelings. As they consume you from the inside out, you busy your life from the outside in. Comfy, cozy denial.
But you won’t really be comfortable, despite your rehearsed ability to maintain a certain amount of numbness in your status quo.
Chances are you will experience heightened anxiety and not just about one issue. Everything becomes a cause for anxiety.
Living with generalized anxiety disorder disrupts every aspect of life, whether or not the sufferer is aware.
The quest to keep life orderly, predictable, and under control leads to a fear-based existence that is anything but controlled.
2. You take every opportunity as a lesson.
Think of the saying, "Be careful what you ask for." Scream to the universe, "Give me patience!" and guess what the universe is going to provide?
The opportunity to demonstrate patience. After all, how will you ever know you have it if you can’t put it into practice?
And so it is with unexpected events and the opportunity to increase self-awareness.
Once you decide to see the universe as a benevolent teacher, you will realize that everything in your life is there for your learning potential.
You want to become better at your job?
You want to have happier relationships?
You want to feel comfortable having difficult conversations?
You want to stop being afraid of "what might happen if..." and start living life more fully, courageously, confidently?
Then, guess where the journey begins.
Yes, the yellow brick road starts with your foot on the starting point of self-awareness. And life is paved with opportunities to keep it growing.
But that means meeting the unexpected, befriending it, and allowing it to journey with you.
What presents as a brainless scarecrow becomes a prodding of your curiosity and your quest for greater knowledge. And what would knowledge be without the heart and courage to apply it?
Each unexpected encounter is a wake-up call to the traveler who wants a meaningful journey.
3. Each encounter is an opportunity to learn about yourself.
Each unexpected event is welcomed without fear, you learn more about yourself.
"What do I need to learn? What has kept me from learning it until now? What am I so afraid of? What’s the worst that can happen?"
"Do I not trust myself to handle whatever comes my way? Why or why not? And what do I need to love more unconditionally within myself so that I can love others more unconditionally?"
As you increase self-awareness, often without fanfare, your life begins to open, expand, blossom.
Living with anxiety is like looking through a high-powered zoom lens. What’s in the foreground is in sharp, isolated focus.
But, the periphery and background are blurred because of this narrow field of vision.
Self-awareness, on the other hand, is like a wide-angle lens that brings everything into focus.
You see from left to right, and front to back. There's no need to obsess about one subject in the foreground unless a situation calls for that kind of focus.
The challenge to self-awareness is the process of recognition and identification.
Something happens that makes your stomach feel queasy and makes you want to run away. It triggers an eerie, visceral remembrance, and you just don’t want to go there.
You admire your colleague who somehow manages to survey the situation and ultimately bring it to a creative resolution.
Why can’t you be like that? Oh, but you can! There are plenty of ways to increase self-awareness.
The key is to set the intention and then "slow down the moment" to ask what it wants to teach you.
That promotion you want? Observe those in upper positions and ask yourself what they do well that you struggle with. Perhaps ask to interview one of them so you can become better at your job.
Those difficult conversations with combative topics? Take a listening approach for a while.
Life, in its broadest sense, is about lessons. And those lessons grow out of your perceptions of and responses to the events life presents to you.
As you develop self-awareness, you also develop communication and relationship skills — genuine, sustainable, and transferable skills.
As you increase self-awareness, you also develop leadership skills that can improve every area of your life.
Think about a favorite teacher, boss, or project lead. Why was that specific person chosen for that specific position? What made them so good at it?
Chances are, your answers will include qualities like compassion, empathy, self-control, integrity, and the ability to handle unexpected events and emergencies.
Listen for things you may not have considered before and the expressions that make you feel uneasy or threatened.
Is it really the topic that turns you off? Or is it the way people express their thoughts and opinions in your presence?
Do you recognize yourself in that uneasiness? Or do you recognize a communication flaw in your relationships — one that your own personal growth could help to remedy?
Those "what if’s" you’re always so afraid of? Take on one challenge with the mindset that whether you succeed or fail is really a neutral outcome.
You’re taking it on to learn, to grow, and to shrink the monster that has been lurking in your imagination.
How did you feel about committing to something new or uncomfortable? How did you feel after you completed it?
Give the feeling a name — happy, sad, exhilarated, or embarrassed. And meditate on where those responses originated in your life — and if and where they still belong.
When your life is mired in predictability, you don’t have the motivation to stretch outside your Netflix-and-chill comfort zone. Auto-pilot takes so much less effort.
But it also keeps your life in the basement, sequestered far below the penthouse where the view and the party are.
Say "thank you" to the benevolent universe. And trust the unexpected events it sends you as messengers charged with leading you to your highest self.
Dr. Karen Finn is a life coach. Her writing has appeared on MSN, Yahoo! & eHarmony among others. You can learn more about Karen and her work on her website.