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Tools
for Personal Growth
Handling Pride
Content:
What is pride?
Pride is the belief that you:
-
Have
everything in your life under control because of your uniqueness, power,
authority, and competence; you don't need anyone or anything to help you
maintain things at an even keel.
-
Have
a special relationship with God. He will never send you challenges,
tragedies, or disasters that you can't handle on your own.
-
Are
the center of the world, universe, or cosmos.
-
Have
the answer for everything in your life and in the lives of others.
-
Are
the best thing that has happened since ``crushed ice'' and that everyone you
come in contact with should recognize your brilliance, intelligence,
competence, spirituality, sense of humor, good looks, skills, and abilities.
-
Have
excellent self-esteem, which is a mask behind which
low self-esteem
are hidden.
-
Deserve
to have everybody, the world and God, give you what you desire, in life. If
you don't get it, then it is everybody else's fault for not giving it to
you.
-
Are
above all rules; you need not go by the rules of life, society, the work
place, religion, marriage, or family life.
-
Do
not have to study hard, apply yourself at work, grow in spirituality, work
at your marriage, or work on personal growth on a daily basis because you
are different from the rest of humanity; ``things'' will just come
naturally, spontaneously, and deservedly to you.
-
Are
all powerful, all knowing, faultless, immortal; you need
no refining, retuning, or occasional checkups. With such pride you live a
life of indifference, avoidance, and denial of the warning signs that what
you believe yourself to be is not what you really are.
-
Have
the answer, the way, and the truth while everyone else is dishonest, lacking
in perfection, and needing growth. Pride makes you impatient, distrusting,
and not accepting of those who do not ascribe to your philosophy, spiritual
beliefs, psychological principles, and sociological mandates.
-
Have
no more to learn. You have reached your goal and there is no chance of a
relapse, set back, or reactivation of the problem for which you originally
went into treatment. This is a mask for people in recovery and undergoing
treatment for dysfunctional family illness. It can be the result of over exuberance,
an emotional high, a naive belief, and not understanding that change is a
lifelong process.

What characteristic behaviors are exhibited by
people with immoderate pride?
People with immoderate pride are often:
-
Cocky
``know it alls''
-
Lacking
in tolerance or patience for others' ideas, problems, or feelings
-
Unable
to listen to others or to God's messages
-
Smug
in their self-righteousness
-
Evangelistic
in their new found truths, often times
prematurely; they are unprepared for their personal setBbacks
-
Narrowly
focused in life on self-aggrandizement
-
Security
conscious. They are fearful of becoming vulnerable to any new messages about
life that might threaten their personal beliefs
-
Lacking
in insight into their own weaknesses (masked by pride) and therefore become
easy prey for a major downfall when a severe crisis or disaster strikes
their lives
-
Above
being helped, systematically cutting off offers of help from family,
friends, or professionals
-
Resentful
of those who do not acknowledge their way as the way
-
Selective
in the people with whom they are willing to associate, only associating with
people who are equally enlightened in their way
-
Resentful
of being challenged and get angry at others or at God when a challenge
arises in life
-
Threatened
by any new truths, researched answers, or spiritual happenings that do not
fit into their structured way of looking at and living life
-
In
denial about having problems; in having too much pride they are skillful in
turning helpful suggestions around, attacking the person who made the
suggestion
-
Deaf
to the world in general. They become so caught up in their own pursuit of
life that they tend to withdraw from day to day living, which they find
boring
-
Sarcastic,
caustic, and biting in their comments toward people they believe to be
beneath them or behind them in life
-
Looking
down their noses at people who react negatively to their opinions or
comments
-
Aristocratic
in their view of life, treating most people as commoners
-
Ready
with a quip, answer, or comment for everything and are happy to give
unsolicited advice
-
Hardheaded,
stubborn, and not easily swayed from the position they have taken on a
question

How do others treat people with immoderate pride?
How do others treat or react to people with immoderate pride?
-
Ignore
them and what they have to say.
-
Do
not invite them to become part of the ``team'' at work, school, or in the
community because they are not ``team players.''
-
Find
them humorous, silly, and naive. They see them as being fun to watch and
observe, but not to follow.
-
Find
them repulsive, sickening, distasteful, and avoid them.
-
Become
offended, turned off, and rebuked by their messages.
-
Create
committees, public action groups, and consumer unions to attack those overly
prideful individuals who prey on society.
-
Defend
themselves against their onslaught.
-
Pray
for them so that they will be able to gain some humility and temperance in
their lives.
-
Are
skeptical, shy, and reserved in their presence.
-
Try
to convert, cajole, or bully them into a more temperate way of acting,
believing, and living.

How do you know when pride is stunting your personal
growth?
You know that pride is stunting your personal growth when you:
-
Think
that you have nothing left to work on.
-
Get
angry at the realization of personal growth as a lifelong process.
-
Get
angry at God for sending you a calamity or disaster to deal with.
-
Become
restless and impatient with others who are involved in their own quest for
truth and personal growth.
-
Can
rationalize why you no longer need help, support, or understanding from
others in your life.
-
Believe
you have all the answers to your life's quest.
-
Believe
you have no need for a spiritual life or spiritual development.
-
Believe
that you are invincible. You are ready to deal with whatever comes your way.
You are sure that whatever it is, it won't be overwhelming.
-
Believe
that you have no need to take preventive measures to protect your physical
and mental health.
-
Believe
that all this ``renewal,'' ``wellness,'' ``prevention,'' ``support group,''
``treatment'' business is for the birds, not for you.
-
Believe
that you don't need anyone in your life to mess it up or make it less than
perfect.
-
Become
obsessed with protecting yourself, your goods, and your family from the
onslaught of the ``real world.''
-
Take
yourself, your spouse, your family, and isolate them from the temporal or
secular world.
-
Become
picky in choosing people with whom you will associate.
-
Begin
to take yourself too seriously.
-
Find
yourself turning against anyone who questions your beliefs or way of life.
-
Become
stuck in a stereotypic way of thinking and problem solving.
-
Become
resentful toward those who ignore you.
-
Believe
that God has a new partner: you.
-
Act
like you are the only one who has ever accomplished, succeeded, or achieved
your
level of success.

What do persons with immoderate pride believe?
-
I'm
strong and I can handle anything that comes my way.
-
After
overcoming this major hurdle in my life, there is nothing that could throw
me like that again. I'm prepared.
-
I
need no help in dealing with my problems, anyway, no one could help me.
-
I
feel like a million bucks. There is nothing you can say or do to change
that.
-
God
and I have a special relationship, and He will never let me down.
-
If
you live a clean life, treat people fairly, and are generous to others you
deserve to be blessed in this life with bountiful fruits for your labors.
That is the way it should be.
-
How
could God treat me this way? I've done everything He has directed me to
do.
-
It
is unfair to expect me to handle this loss at this time in my life.
-
There
can't be a God who is merciful and just if He would allow this to happen
to me.
-
What
I have recently experienced convinces me that all people are inherently
evil.
-
Don't
let your guard down or they will steal you blind.
-
I
can't understand why no one listens to me or follows my role modeling!
-
I
tell them how to live their lives for success and they turn around and do
just what they want to do.
-
No
minister, priest, psychologist, or doctor is going to tell me how to live my
life.
-
I
have no problems. You are the one with the problems.
-
Everyone
around here is stupid, incompetent, and ineffectual.
-
I
can't stand having to repeat myself for people; why can't they get it the
first time.
-
Life
owes me a living. The world owes me a living. You owe me a living.
-
Thank
God I'm perfect.
-
There
is only one path to salvation, success, and wisdom: it is my chosen path.

What behavior are needed to bring immoderate pride under
control?
In order to bring immoderate pride under control, people could:
-
Develop
a sense of humility and modesty about their abilities, skills, and
strengths.
-
Develop
a more realistic picture of their place in the cosmos, universe, world,
society, work place, and home.
-
Do
an honest self-appraisal of their successes,
achievements, and accomplishments, recognizing the part that God and others
have played in their lives.
-
Accept
that life is a continuous journey on a path with a variety of twists and
turns. There is never a time when they can sit back, confident that they
have already survived the major hurdles and obstacles.
-
Recognize
and accept the fact that God is never done with them. Just when they think
they have made it, God may have a new challenge or crisis waiting for them.
-
Accept
their own humanity, which involves making mistakes, weakness of resolve,
weakness of the flesh, fallibility, lack of strength, emotion, anger,
disappointment, confusion, dismay, and other ``normal'' responses to the
unknowns in life.
-
Remember
from where they have come and recognize that their past is their best
navigational map as they chart their course.
-
Become
less selfish, self-centered, and egotistical;
instead, become more humble, giving, and ``other'' oriented.
-
Shed
their masks, which covers low self-esteem, a lack of self-confidence, and a
sense of insecurity.
-
Become open to the variety of options and paths
available for personal growth and wellness.

What are the steps to tempering immoderate pride?
Step
1: Before you can handle pride that has gone out of control
or has become immoderate, you must first recognize if this is the case for
you. Answer the following questions in your journal:
a.
What accomplishments, achievements, or successes make you feel proud?
b.
What is your attitude about these successes? Do you brag a lot about
them? Do you let others know how hard you had it at one time in your life and
what you did to turn it around? Do you get offended when others don't pay much
attention or give enough recognition to these successes?
c.
Who do you feel was responsible for your successes? What role did the
others' in your life play in these successes? What role did God have in these
successes? Do you feel you are solely responsible for these successes?
d.
When you consider these successes, what makes them unique, different,
or exceptional from those of others?
e.
How did you feel when presented with a challenge in your life in the
form of a death, a loss, a setback, a disaster (natural or man made), a
relapse, or an unexpected crisis? What challenges have you faced in the last
two years that shook you up? How did you handle these challenges? Who did you
blame for these challenges? What was the result of your personal growth in
dealing with these challenges?
f.
What blocked your handling of these challenges? Why were you
disappointed with these challenges? What role did pride play in your reaction
to these challenges?
g.
In answering the above questions, do you see a trend that fits the
definition of pride as presented in Section I?
h.
In answering the above questions, does your behavior fit that of a
person with immoderate pride as presented in Section II?
i.
In what ways have people reacted or given you feedback about your
immoderate pride?
j.
In what ways has immoderate pride affected or stunted your personal
growth?
k.
What beliefs do you hold that reflect your immoderate pride? What
replacement beliefs do you need to temper your pride?
l.
What behavior do you need to develop in order to temper your immoderate
pride?
Step
2: Once you have determined that your pride in your
accomplishments, achievements, and successes has gone out of control, that it
is a mask for your low self-esteem, your lack of self-confidence and
insecurity, then you are ready to take an inventory of yourself in your
journal.
My
Personal Inventory
In
order to control my pride and keep it in line with reason, rationality, and
humility I make the following personal inventory:
a.
My full name is:
b.
I was born on (month, date, year) in (city, state):
c.
I attended or graduated from the following schools and got the
following diplomas and degrees:
d.
I have held the following jobs over the following time periods (list
chronologically):
e.
My current job and job responsibilities include:
f.
I have received the following honors, and awards for my achievements,
accomplishments, and successes:
-
school:
-
work:
-
the
community:
-
place
of worship:
-
my
family of origin:
-
my
marriage:
-
my
current family:
-
my
profession:
g.
I have the following skills, abilities, knowledge, strengths, and
competencies:
h.
I have the following interests, motivations, and ambitions today:
i.
I want to pursue the following hobbies, interests, and activities:
j.
How have I grown as a person:
-
emotionally:
-
intellectually:
-
physically:
-
spiritually:
k.
I have the following people to thank for my level of success:
l.
I have God to thank in the following ways for my level of success:
m.
I have been able to survive the following disasters, crises,
calamities, challenges, roadblocks, dependencies, illnesses, and obstacles:
n.
I was able to recover from these negative impacts in my life because:
o.
I would not be where I am today, handling these negative issues in my
life, if it were not for the following people:
p.
I am doing the following things to insure that I do not relapse if a
new negative impact should enter my life:
q.
I am working with and relating to the following people to ensure my
lifelong support system, safety net, reinforcement, and assistance if a
negative impact should occur:
r.
I am doing the following things to strengthen my spiritual life and
develop a healthy, realistic relationship with God:
s.
I am working on the following personal growth and relationship issues:
t.
I am working on or have completed the following Tools for Coping
tools to rebuild my self-esteem:
Step
3:
Now that you have completed your
personal inventory, you are ready to take a visualization journey to keep your
immoderate pride under control. Before you attempt this visualization, call
yourself into a relaxed state using a physical relaxation exercise. Now, close
your eyes and begin the visualization:
A
Revealing Visualization
You
find yourself lying in bed dreaming of the beauties of the world. You have the
feeling that all is well with the world and that you are the master of all
that you see. Into your dream a stranger's voice intrudes. ``Why do you have
so much pride? Who do you think you are? What right do you have to assume that
you are in control of everything in your life?'' You become offended by these
questions and respond that you are happy with your life and the way it is.
The
voice answers ``But why have you left me out of the picture?''
You
respond, ``Who are you? Leave me alone. I am happy the way things are and
there is nothing you can do to change my point of view.''
The
voice then says, ``Let me take you on a journey and show you what I can do for
you.'' You agree that that would be fine. If you can get something for
yourself, why not?
Suddenly
your body is being transported across space, and time. You see a collision in
the cosmos and a series of celestial bodies forming. You see a glowing series
of stars until you pass a single star around which nine planets rotate. The
voice says ``This is the universe I made for you.''
You
are then transported to the third planet closest to the star and you see the
air, sky, wind, water, land formations rotate and shift rapidly until they
become a solidified form. The voice says, ``This is the world I made for
you.''
You
then land on the earth. Before your eyes you find barren ground transformed with
lush vegetation, animals of a variety of species, and seas filled with
vegetation and fish. The voice says ``These are the natural resources I made for
you.''
You
then drift inside your body and see your organs, blood vessels, tissues, nerves,
bones, and flesh, all working marvelously in a syncopation and symphony of life.
The voice says ``This is the body I made for you.''
You
then drift over a rapidly moving kaleidoscope of scenes from your past life in
which you met and overcame obstacles, roadblocks, and challenges to your
personal health, safety, and growth. The voice says ``These are the events in
your life I helped you overcome.''
Then
suddenly you are confronted with a thunderstorm and each rain drop is in the
form of a scene of future obstacles, disasters, hardships, weaknesses, and
challenges to threaten your personal security, health, and well being. The voice
says: ``I will be your umbrella to protect you from the rain. You must be
willing, however, to do the work of opening the umbrella and holding it against
the rainstorm.''
Instantly
you open the umbrella and hold it steady over your head against the rain. As
soon as you do this, a beautiful sun appears and a gorgeous rainbow fills the
horizon. The voice says: ``Let go of your pride and accept my assistance and I
promise you a lifetime of sunshine and rainbows to help you through the storms I
send. I will do this only if you are willing to work along with me and use the
tools I have given you.''
You
are now relaxed and at peace. You float back to your bed where you were
dreaming. You are going to awake, refreshed and renewed, ready to face the
challenges in your life. As you count backward from five to one, slowly open
your eyes and return to your awakened state.
As
you reflect on this visualization, consider the following questions. Answer them
on a separate sheet of paper:
a.
What does this visualization reveal about me and my pride?
b.
Who is the voice? Why is the voice so powerful? Why was the voice so
patient with me? Why wasn't the voice angry with me?
c.
What does the umbrella represent in my life? How well have I used the
umbrella in the past? How could I improve my use of the umbrella in the future?
d.
What is the rainstorm? Why is the rainstorm so overwhelming?
e.
How attainable are the sunshine and rainbows in my life? What keeps the
sunshine and rainbows shining on a daily basis? How well do I use the tools I
have to insure my ability to get through the storms in my life?
Step
4: After you have completed assessing your pride, the
personal inventory, and the visualization in Step 3, you are ready to let go of
immoderate pride in your life. If, however, you are still hanging on to your
pride, return to Step 1 and begin again.

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