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You can't achieve your way to self worth.
You can't force the squinchy part of yourself into submission - the part that feels weak and less-than and shameful.
You can't exercise it into oblivion, or smother it with success or any other form of doing.
You can't hide it behind shiny things. Not for long, anyway.
It's an inside job.
Ask Hazel Gale.
She's a former world-champion boxer and kick boxer who drove herself to breaking point, ignoring the physical signs that she was burning out. She numbed her fears of weakness and not-enoughness with punishing workouts.
Her body had other plans, but Hazel didn't want to listen. It was a fight she couldn't win.
"I had to crash," she says. "You can't wage war on yourself and emerge victorious."
Burnt-out and unrecognisable to herself, Hazel met her most formidable opponent yet, her fear of weakness.
Hazel shares how she let go of old coping mechanisms, and how she befriended her "Mind Monster," the part of herself that she'd thrashed against for decades.
Now, as an author and cognitive hypnotherapist, she's made a movement of it - the Mind Monster movement. She shares how you can leave behind your own pre-patterned behaviours that no longer serve you.
We talk about:
If you're ready to relate to yourself differently, join us.
Thanks for tuning in. I'm so glad you're here.
Links and Resources
Hazel Gale's Email
Fight Book
Meetthemindmasters on Instagram
Hazel Gale on Instagram
Fight Facebook Group
Hazel Gale's Articles on Medium
Hazel Gale on Twitter
Review MoxieCast on iTunes
Quotes by Hazel Gale:
"I had a sense that I deserved to win the fight."
"All of that self-doubt and shame that had preceded this moment had been false. From that point on, my life changed."
"Our bodies can't speak to us in any other way than to create symptoms."
By Mandy LehtoYou can't achieve your way to self worth.
You can't force the squinchy part of yourself into submission - the part that feels weak and less-than and shameful.
You can't exercise it into oblivion, or smother it with success or any other form of doing.
You can't hide it behind shiny things. Not for long, anyway.
It's an inside job.
Ask Hazel Gale.
She's a former world-champion boxer and kick boxer who drove herself to breaking point, ignoring the physical signs that she was burning out. She numbed her fears of weakness and not-enoughness with punishing workouts.
Her body had other plans, but Hazel didn't want to listen. It was a fight she couldn't win.
"I had to crash," she says. "You can't wage war on yourself and emerge victorious."
Burnt-out and unrecognisable to herself, Hazel met her most formidable opponent yet, her fear of weakness.
Hazel shares how she let go of old coping mechanisms, and how she befriended her "Mind Monster," the part of herself that she'd thrashed against for decades.
Now, as an author and cognitive hypnotherapist, she's made a movement of it - the Mind Monster movement. She shares how you can leave behind your own pre-patterned behaviours that no longer serve you.
We talk about:
If you're ready to relate to yourself differently, join us.
Thanks for tuning in. I'm so glad you're here.
Links and Resources
Hazel Gale's Email
Fight Book
Meetthemindmasters on Instagram
Hazel Gale on Instagram
Fight Facebook Group
Hazel Gale's Articles on Medium
Hazel Gale on Twitter
Review MoxieCast on iTunes
Quotes by Hazel Gale:
"I had a sense that I deserved to win the fight."
"All of that self-doubt and shame that had preceded this moment had been false. From that point on, my life changed."
"Our bodies can't speak to us in any other way than to create symptoms."