Would your life be easier without following some of your ordinary routines?

Last night I finally used my new, long charging cord so I could finish reading an article on my iPad while relaxing in bed, after the battery had run down.  I had routinely placed the device close to the charger across the room weeks after I had acquired the new cord, because it had not occurred to me that I had any other option. It was simply an old, well-established habit.

Now I am looking for other old, useless habits. How about you?   What once useful habits are you ignoring?

Change happens in everyone’s life, but it’s hard to stop doing something that was once important but isn’t any longer.

Sometimes a belief makes it hard to release an old habit.  One of my colleagues kept trying to get approval from others in a new relaxed setting. It was a habit she kept after leaving a highly competitive corporate environment where she constantly needed to prove herself.

She used the simple process I teach in this book to free herself from the belief that she needed approval and gave up the old habit.

If you are trying to let something go, but struggling to figure out how, get your copy and learn the magic sentences that make it easy to make space for new and better choices.

This post is a comment I wrote about a passage on Page 46 revised edition, Page 48 original of  Letting It Go: Relieve Anxiety and Toxic Stress in Just a Few Minutes Using Only Words (Rapid Relief with Logosynthesis®). You can see the passage in the book. You can also see the excerpt here. This link will take you to Bublish.com, where I regularly publish comments on parts of this book. This is a site where authors share of their work. You can subscribe to my musings, there, as well as to the musings of many other authors. It’s a great place to learn about new books and I recommend that you visit.