Have a Word With Yourself
Av a word with yourself.
That’s what my dad used to say whenever I moaned about life.
At the time, I hated it.
Felt like he was brushing me off.
Like he wasn’t listening.
Like my problems didn’t matter.
But he wasn’t dismissing me.
He was directing me.
Because what he understood, that I didn’t,
is that most problems don’t start out there.
They start in here.
And if you don’t get control of that,
nothing out there changes.
Recently, I had to take that advice myself.
Because I slipped.
Lost direction.
Standards dropped.
The weight of everything started stacking up.
And when that happens, something always follows.
That voice.
Quiet at first.
Then louder.
“You can’t do this.”
“You’re not good enough.”
“You’ve been winging it the whole time.”
Imposter syndrome doesn’t arrive with noise.
It creeps in.
And if you’re not sharp,
you start agreeing with it.
That’s where most people lose.
Not because they’re incapable.
Not because they lack ability.
But because they let the wrong voice take the lead.
Here’s the part people don’t want to hear.
You are in conversation with yourself all day.
Constantly.
And that conversation is not neutral.
It is either building you,
or breaking you.
There is no middle ground.
Every thought you repeat becomes a belief.
Every belief shapes your behaviour.
Every behaviour compounds into your life.
So when you say:
“I’m not good enough”
You don’t just feel it.
You act it.
You hesitate.
You hold back.
You lower your standards without even realising it.
And this is where my dad’s advice lands differently now.
“Av a word with yourself.”
Not emotionally.
Not dramatically.
Practically.
Directly.
Honestly.
Because sometimes you don’t need motivation.
You need correction.
So I had that word with myself.
No fluff.
No excuses.
Just truth.
“I’ve drifted.”
“I’ve let standards slip.”
“I’ve been reacting instead of leading.”
That’s it.
No spiral.
No self-pity.
Just awareness.
Because awareness, when it’s honest, creates control.
Then comes the part most people avoid.
Taking responsibility for fixing it.
Not tomorrow.
Not when you feel better.
Now.
“What did I stop doing that was working?”
“What standard did I lower?”
“What needs tightening up?”
Simple questions.
Uncomfortable answers.
But that’s where change actually happens.
Because discipline doesn’t start in your actions.
It starts in your language.
The way you speak to yourself determines what you tolerate.
And what you tolerate becomes your reality.
If your internal voice is weak,
you’ll move like it.
If your internal voice is uncertain,
you’ll hesitate.
If your internal voice is constantly doubting,
you’ll never fully commit.
But if your internal voice is clear,
firm,
grounded,
everything changes.
You stop negotiating with yourself.
You start executing.
This is what most people miss.
They’re trying to fix their life,
without fixing the voice that’s running it.
So here’s the standard.
Pay attention to how you speak to yourself when things aren’t going your way.
That’s the real you.
Not when you’re winning.
Not when everything’s smooth.
When it’s heavy.
When it’s uncertain.
When it would be easier to fold.
That voice either steadies you,
or sinks you.
And if you don’t take control of it,
it will take control of you.
So yeah.
Av a word with yourself.
Not once.
Daily.
Because the quality of your life
is a direct reflection
of the standard of that conversation.
coming soon: april 2026
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