Hope pretends to be a powerful emotion covered in a cloak of positivity, but it causes us to work harder and longer than necessary.

No one works harder than a hard-working woman who uses the emotion of hope to create the life they want.

Hope pretends to be a powerful emotion covered in a cloak of positivity, but it causes us to work harder and longer than necessary.

Hope is one of my default emotions, and I usually need to check in with myself and my body regularly to ensure I am not using hope to create the life and business I want.

When I fall into the feeling of hope, I notice that I will either not take action or, in my brain, wishing and praying something or someone outside me will be different or take action.

When I am feeling hopeful, I notice that my go-to activities are signing up for another program, buying another book, gathering knowledge, and hoping someone in the world can solve my path to creating what I want.

When I learned my relationship with the feeling of hope was not inspiring intentional actions, I started choosing more empowering emotions like commitment, determined, confidence, and resolved.

From these emotions, I naturally find myself taking massive action, including evaluating the results I create to see if my actions could be even more effective.

From these emotions, I notice the ease of fully owning my success, future, and the life I want to create.

I choose to work on myself and who I am becoming in the world, which also fuels more intentional and deliberate actions.

Unfortunately, hoping sometimes works, and we can think of people who hoped life would be better, and it did.

The problem is that hoping, wishing, and praying does not work, creating resentment in the external thing we were looking to create the desired result.

Want to learn how to create more intentional and massive action fueling emotions like commitment, determination, confidence, and resolve? I can support you.

Schedule a consultation today and start working smarter.