When we bring compassion and presence to our negative inner stories, they begin to dissolve.
By Spencer Rouse
We all carry stories—beliefs we once accepted as truth—that may have helped us survive, belong, or stay safe. But over time, those same beliefs can quietly begin to hold us back from the fullness of who we are.
What is a Limiting Belief?
It’s simply a thought that we’ve mistaken for a fact. It’s the quiet voice that says:
- “I’m not creative.”
- “People will judge me if I fail.”
- “All the good opportunities are already taken.”
These thoughts feel true. They hide beneath the surface of our daily choices, shaping how we show up in the world. Most often, they’re rooted in fear, self-doubt, or past pain—and they appear when we’re about to grow.
How They Show Up
Limiting beliefs are subtle but powerful. They may sound like logic or self-protection, but in truth, they’re walls built from old stories. Here are a few ways they tend to appear:
- Avoiding opportunities that might help us grow.
- Procrastinating—not from laziness, but from self-doubt.
- Falling into “should” thinking: I should be better…I should have known.
- Acting in ways that prove the very beliefs we wish weren’t true.
There’s an old story about a man who threw salt over his shoulder every morning. When asked why, he said, “To keep the elephants out of my backyard.”
“But there are no elephants in your backyard,” his friend replied.
“See?” he said. “It works!”
That’s the power of belief—it shapes our world, whether or not it’s based in truth.
Where Limiting Beliefs Originate
These beliefs don’t appear out of nowhere. They begin early—absorbed from family, culture, religion, or experiences before we had the wisdom to question them. Painful moments—like rejection, failure, or betrayal—often leave us with “rules” meant to protect us, such as, Don’t try again or, Don’t stand out.
Over time, repeating those thoughts carves deep grooves in our minds. They become automatic—what psychologists call Automatic Negative Thoughts—patterns like:
- All-or-nothing thinking (“If I’m not perfect, I’ve failed.”)
- Catastrophizing (“This will never work.”)
- Overgeneralizing (“It always goes wrong for me.”)
- Harsh labeling (“I’m just not good enough.”)
But automatic does not mean accurate.
How to Spot a Limiting Belief
Start by noticing where you feel stuck, anxious, or small. Ask yourself:
- Where in my life do I feel afraid to take action?
- What story tells me I can’t have what I want?
Watch for phrases that begin with:
- “I can’t…”
- “I’m not…”
- “It’s impossible…”
- “They won’t…”
The moment you hear those words, pause. You’ve found a doorway to freedom.
The Power of Language
Language is a mirror of belief. One of the biggest culprits is the word “should.”
- “I should be further along.”
- “I should stop feeling anxious.”
- Each “should” adds pressure and guilt.
Try replacing it with “choose” or “could.”
- “I could take one small step today.”
- “I choose to be gentle with myself.”
That single shift opens the mind toward possibility.
Breaking the Belief Loop: A 5-Step Practice
- Name it. Say, “This is a story, not a fact.” Then take a slow, deep breath.
- Test it. Ask, “What’s the evidence for this belief? What’s the evidence against it?”
- Take a tiny opposite action. If you believe you’re “not creative,” doodle for five minutes. If you believe “people won’t care,” share something heartfelt anyway. These small acts begin to rewrite the narrative.
- Release the emotional charge. Energy practices like EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique) tapping can help. Try this simple script:
“Even though I believe this story—‘I’m not good enough’—I deeply and completely accept myself.” Then gently tap through the points on your face and body as you name the fear, the old story, and your new choice: “I’m practicing a new story: I am enough.” (Learn the tapping points and download a chart here.]
- Reinforce the new pattern. Repeat it often. The more you embody the new belief, the stronger its frequency becomes.
How Mindfulness Softens the Grip
Mindfulness offers a compassionate way to loosen the hold of negative thoughts. Rather than fighting them—or trying to make them disappear—we simply notice them with kindness. You might say, “I’m having the thought that I’m a failure.” instead of, “I am a failure.”
That small shift can change everything. You’ve moved from being in the thought to observing it. The thought becomes like a cloud drifting across the sky—temporary, not permanent.
Mindfulness reveals that thoughts rise, linger, and fade. When we see them as passing visitors, they lose the power to define us. And in the stillness beneath the chatter, peace is always waiting.
A Gentle Reminder
You are not your beliefs. You are the vast awareness behind them—the light that sees them come and go.
When we bring compassion and presence to our negative inner stories, they begin to dissolve. And what remains is truth, freedom, and the quiet strength of knowing: You are enough. You always have been.
Spencer Rouse has been a professional psychic and intuitive reader, energy healer, life coach, and lecture/workshop facilitator for more than 20 years, working one-on-one in counseling sessions, in groups, and at psychic
fairs and other events. She works primarily through the gifts of claircognizance—an inner knowing—and clairsentience—the ability to sense information through feelings and emotions. Spencer also connects with the different layers of the human energy field (the aura) using color and sound to help balance and invigorate life force energy. Visit her online at http://www.SpencerRouse.com or email PsychicSpencer.com.
