Are your dreams & desires your own? How to tell.
Posted on June 17, 2016 by Lindsey Gemme, One of Thousands of Life Coaches on Noomii.
When a dream we’ve adopted rather than grew organically does not align with our needs, we know it: But we may not recognize the symptoms right away.
We all have things we are working toward in our lives. We want to get into the right schools, be successful in our careers, find love, be happy.
Yet how do you know if you are chasing down your dream, or if you are trying to fulfill someone else’s vision for your future?
When a dream we’ve adopted rather than grew organically does not align with our needs, our personalities, our abilities, worldview or personal experience, we know it. Maybe not consciously. But deep down, it starts to wear on us like a psychic chaffing.
But we may not recognize the symptoms at first.
THE SIGNS OF AN ADOPTED DREAM
When we are in an environment or are pursuing goals that do not feed us spiritually and met our emotional needs, we experience true stress. This stressful inflammation comes in the form of fear that laces our every decision and action, which then develops into depression or anxiety.
This fear we feel is all too often based in a belief we hold about our self worth. If we don’t think certain things, behave a certain way or achieve certain goals set by ones we love and respect or society at large, we feel that we aren’t a worthy individual. We internalize our value based on outcomes in our lives, on what we have or don’t have, own or don’t own, achieve or don’t achieve.
We fear being considered a failure, even if the failure is in our own heads or in the eyes of one individual we love and respect. To place our value on the approval of our actions and behaviors on outside parties can cause great suffering.
When a goal or dream we are pursuing is based in fear and causes us pain, that is a sign we are not where we need to be.
THE SIGNS OF AN ORGANIC DREAM
Dreaming. We think of dreams as being a thoroughly American legacy. We dream about our futures when we are young, whether it’s for fame and fortune or is humanitarian in nature. We have dreams for a better, happier life for our children than we had. Dreams, in the end, are a desire.
And what is desire other than emotion?
Emotions come from a place deep inside of us, placing our dreams in the seat of our soul. They are truly organic. And because our dreams are based on emotional desires, a successful outcome is the meeting of personal needs – and not the need to please someone else. There are times it is driven by an emotional and spiritual need to serve others, or to spare others a pain or meet a need for someone else that was not met for us at some point in our lives.
A dream is a desire that is deeply personal. Goals are the steps we take to reach those dreams.
The very nature of dreams for humankind is to pursue something that will make us happy. And if our needs are being met, how does that make us feel? Usually content, happy, supported, loved, appreciated, valued… To feel good about ourselves after our work is done or dreams brought into reality is the real goal behind any truly personal pursuit of the soul.
So when we are focused more on how we want to feel rather than on an outcome and how that outcome will be perceived by others, we have found a dream worth pursuing.
Keep dreaming, ladies.
Ask yourself these questions :
- Do I feel good when I think about working toward a certain dream, outcome or goal, or do I feel dread or stressed out?
- Do I feel that if I don’t achieve this dream, outcome or goal, I will feel like or be perceived as a failure?
- Do I personally find value in this dream / outcome / goal?
- Do I know how I want to feel when I achieve this dream? What needs will this pursuit meet for me personally?
- Am I telling myself I should or need to work toward this dream, outcome, or goal, or do I say I want to?