Why do some people tend to sabotage themselves?

in #psychology6 years ago (edited)

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Many times, fear and doubts make us freeze and avoid us to take action, while disguising themselves as rational arguments.

There are a lot of example of common actions that are self sabotaging for the person like a guy who goes out with a girl he really likes, however moments before the date he is not very well and cancels the date. Or perhaps a girl who has started a new project that can mean a great change and advancement in her life, but she never has time to finish it so she never really starts what could potentially be a life changing event. Perhaps we have all been there sometime.

On numerous occasions people are involved in this type of dynamics. In certain cases the circumstances aren’t really helpful, but in most cases the main obstacle is the person himself, who for fear of future changes becomes a victim to self-sabotage.

What is this sabotage all about?


Self-sabotage is any action that gets in the way of your intent. On a diet? Birthday cake calories at the office obviously don’t count. Need to reach a deadline for an assignment? You’ll focus much better if you finish the next episode in your Netflix queue, right? Thinking about breaking up with your partner? You’ll get right into it after you rearrange the living room furniture first. | Source

Self-sabotage and all the activities and actions that concern it, are unconscious acts that manifest themselves in moments that can be of great change in the lives of people. These behaviors tend to complicate the achievement of goals through unconscious acts that make us waste our valuable time.

The goal of this unconscious sabotage is to keep the person in a comfortable state, where everything is easy or, at least, foreseeable. It is also a type of unconscious defense mechanism in which the person tries to avoid situations that can be somehow painful, or stressful or unknown circumstances that can cause anxiety.

Why does this happen?


There are a lot of possible explanations for people to sabotage themselves. Taking into account the following examples, it will be easier for anyone reading to avoid them and thus more easily to achieve whatever goal must be accomplished. Some examples are:

  • Having little self control
  • Having little self-esteem
  • Having internal conflicts
  • Having little confidence in oneself
  • Having problems prioritizing goals
  • Having a fear of changing and facing difficult situations

All these signs and traces that inhabit the mind of the person appear unexpectedly, gaining control over the person and his actions that results in some jamming in the projects and possibilities of evolution, of self-development.

Sabotaging oneself is an externalization of all those issues the person can not accept from himself, all those beliefs based on fears and that, over time, because of not being confronted, have gained influence and power within him.

Therefore, these harmful ideas and behaviors are only a symptom that there is something deep in the mind that must be examined. Although in many occasions trying to understand these thoughts is not pleasant at all, this self-evaluation can be an opportunity to move forward and to learn to face any future situation that may arise.

We can’t change the past. Yet, as adults, we can identify the self sabotaging thoughts that we’ve internalized and consciously choose to act against them. When we fall victim to our critical inner voice and listen to its directives, we often engage in self limiting or self sabotaging behaviors that hurt us in our daily lives. | Source

How can we tell if we are suffering from this?


There are some key attributes of self-sabotage, although it is important to note that a person who tends to self-sabotage might not do it every time but just in certain conditions. That is, a person who sabotages himself without realizing it when facing a certain aspect or circumstance of his life does not have to do it in all the others aspects of his life.

These behaviors appear above all in moments when there is a great deal of responsibility or when the person must make a decision that implies an important change in his live.

Some commons symptoms in people sabotaging themselves are the following:

  • Insecurity
  • A sensation of having no control
  • Little confidence in oneself
  • Intense fear

Nevertheless, it is perfectly normal for anyone to have all of these feelings when we are about to undergo some kind of significant change in our life, it is something that everyone experiences to a greater or lesser degree.

The most important difference between people who sabotage themselves and those who do not, is that those who do are driven by fear and by their beliefs that they will not achieve whatever it is they want, while the others (people who don’t sabotage themselves) are able to leave behind the fears they might have and overcome all the thoughts that cause them a feeling of insecurity.

What we need to do when facing any type of important event is not to avoid the fear, but to be aware of it and act accordingly, without letting it invade our mind and much less paralyze us.

When the person becomes aware of both their fears and their own beliefs, in many cases irrational, it is much easier to choose the most appropriate decisions and avoid carrying out actions that sabotage or obstruct their aspirations.

Common ways of self-sabotage


  • Avoid finishing tasks

In these cases the person begins a considerable number of projects or tasks, but eventually he ends up abandoning them. Usually, the person tends to dedicate numerous hours of work and effort, and then give up when he is about to finish it.

The explanation found for this way of sabotaging is that if the person does not finish any project, they will never have to face the possibility of failing or not knowing how to live up to the subsequent demands that this possible success will bring to their lives.

It consists in the habit of postponing or delaying those duties that the person must necessarily finish up, replacing them with other less significant or simpler and attractive ones.

This habit is one of the most common and probably every person has at least one time delay something without proper justification. The reasons for carrying it out are very varies. Some of these reasons may be that the person does not really like the task that needs to be carried out or, and in the case of professional or personal projects, the fear of not having a good final result is also quite important and might cause some delays as well.

In this way, if the person is delaying the completion of the task and does not invest all the necessary efforts and resources will have a justification if this does not turn out as he expected

  • Perfectionism

This is the ideal excuse to never finish a task. Using the excuse of perfectionism the person finds a very good reason to avoid finishing the task without appearing to really not know if he wants to achieve what he is working for.

There are two possible excuses in this case. Either the person thinks that since he can not do something perfectly directly, he does not do it, or that by constant checking and rechecking he avoids finishing the project.

Conclusion


As you can imagine, since self-sabotaging is something that mostly happens unconsciously, everyone can do it without even realizing it.

The behavior is so logical and natural to the person engaging in it that he or she often doesn’t know it’s happening. | Source

If you feel you are being less productive or less efficient than normal, there is a little chance you might be sabotaging yourself for some reason. This is why, sometimes if we want to increase the amount of work we want to accomplish but for some reason are unable to do so, the thing we should do is to self analyze us to see what are the implications of doing that task in a wrong way. And if the implications are very ugly, we need to come to terms with the possibility of failing and overcome it, in the end, we all know no one is perfect and making mistakes from time to time is absolutely normal.

Once we are in peace with our possibility of failing, we will probably be able to finish whatever task we are doing, and recover our normal level of productivity o efficiency.

Do you think you have ever sabotaged yourself? If so, what do you think caused that?




References

psychologytoday - self-sabotage

psychalive - sabotaging

psychcentral - sabotage

psychologytoday – the enemy within

openmindcounseling – psychology of self-sabotage

quickanddirtytips – why we self-sabotage


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Many, many times I have sabotaged myself. It has most often been because of fear. Fear of failure, fear of commitment, fear of the unknown. It has been a pattern in my life that I'm glad I have found a way to control.

Self sabotage becomes magnified when you suffer from a mental health problem also, because the critical voice that may be accentuating your fear is so much stronger, sometimes externally hardened by some traumatic situation in childhood. I feel strongly that the key, if you've suffered/suffer depression/anxiety, or another so-called mild disorder, is to work first on the day-to-day situational triggers. The self sabotaging of mechanisms to wellness. For example, a depressive may not exercise as they're staying in the house because of a fear of panic attacks which they have suffered in the past. If they can get past this trigger and go out regardless of that fear it serves as positive reinforcement for tackling larger issues of ingrained modes of thought that have been strengthened by time and behavioral habit.

This is just my experience of how I built up to tackling the core problems that were bolstering the lesser day-to-day anxieties. Some therapists may disagree with this approach but they would be wrong in assessing every case as the same.

Really interesting article as always @dedicatedguy.

You are spot on when saying this:

Fear of failure, fear of commitment, fear of the unknown

Working on the little daily activities is wise and taking baby steps can be the best option indeed.

Cheers mate!

Great post! I tend to be both a perfectionist and a procrastinator, so I have to work hard in those two areas!

By the way, I happened to click on the Source for your second image. It's a Pexals image, and the correct source is here. :-)

Yeah man I put that same link under the references in images sources # 2. Thanks!

There's the perfectionist in me. LOL!

Sincerely, I really find this article helpful.
I believe that in one way or the other, we have all engaged ourselves in this sabotage stuff, but like you said, it is the force driving us backwards anytime we are to make an important decisions.
I really agree with you and thanks for always sharing an inspiring post @dedicatedguy

I agree, we all at some point have decided to delay something important for whatever reason. Eventually, everyone will always have to overcome that fear and face the results, no matter what they are.

many times we fall into that! we leave many things and we give everything to everything and sabotage ourselves. many factors intervene.
we just have to be determined and dedicated

Indeed, having proper discipline makes it so much easier to avoid losing time when we have important tasks to finish up!

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This is a courtesy of @fingersik

I have sabotaged myself many times, As a kid I even ran away when a girl I liked came to talk to me. I think it is a defense mechanism to avoid pain - in the past something similar has happend and you got hurt, your subconscious interprets the thing you are sabotaging as a threat and poof! Sabotge.

It might as well be some kind of unconscious reaction to something that happened in the past, but I don't think its necessary to have a bad past experience to sabotage oneself, there might be people who simple do it out of unjustifiable fear.

This is good and it makes me check on myself.

The most important difference between people who sabotage themselves and those who do not, is that those who do are driven by fear and by their beliefs that they will not achieve whatever it is they way, while the others (people who don’t sabotage themselves) are able to leave behind the fears they might have and overcome all the thoughts that cause them a feeling of insecurity.

It makes me think deeply how I am driven most times. Well to be honest sometimes it is by fear and I do get hurt when insecurity kicks in and I became a bit irrational. But as the years go by, like what you stated, I decide that I want to be powerful to recognize fears and be aware, so I don't make hasty decisions in those times. I tried to resort back to a game plan I have gone through in my mind. Now I think it has been less self-sabotaging :)

You are so good in writing topics like this. Love it, @dedicatedguy!

We all have some times we are feeling insecure, we all have vulnerabilities, its good that you recognize when you are feeling like this, that's usually the first step in overcoming every type of issue. To recognize it.

I'm sabotaging myself right now, because I'm reading this instead of working lol.
Great article as usual @dedicatedguy, I love reading your blog!!!

lol @evecab well unless you are learning something perhaps you are not sabotaging yourself haha. Thanks!

ahaah no worries, with your articles I always learn something ;)

Sabotage is common to many people.. Right now i am doing the Same thing.. I am meant to be doing something else but i find myself on steemit. Lol

Yeah its very common, but unless you are really hurting your goals its not necessarily sabotaging

Well at that moment there was a target i was meant to achieve.. I reached that and i am glad.

You are doing a great job, relax. Don't let it take over your life, but I see your progress in a good light. Try to author more, not that there is a problem with documenting before or getting the feel of the tag first.

It's either the theme of today, because I just wrote a similar comment on someone else's post, or I kept thinking of about perfectionism (like what you mentioned in your post) and the imposter syndrome.

I think sometimes people self sabotage because of that too, the thought that "I'm not good enough". Researchers have traced it back to our childhood and upbringing, where we may have tried to show we did a good job to our parents and families, and that got suppressed by a negative response. Over time, the self confidence drops, resulting in us thinking we're not good enough.

Just my thoughts. Love the work!

Nice to see you here, I am also involved in this and I am following your progress for a long time. I have people right here on Steemit, trying to help others but they are a mess themselves and I can't find a way to motivate them without changing their poverty and unclear future. How could they be empowered? I am not talking about people having it good, but people struggling with food or sanitary problems that would like to help others but are too broken and depressed to get their act together.

Oh well for that to happen those parents must be very mean and harsh towards their child, because if its simple one time they ignored or responded negatively I would think its not such a big deal, especially towards the long term.

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