“Nothing 
		can dim the light which shines from within.”
		— Maya Angelou
		
		It is what it 
		is. Accept it, learn from it, and grow from it. It doesn’t matter what 
		you’ve done; what truly matters is what you do from here.
		
		And what you 
		need to remember right now is that you can’t heal yourself in the same 
		exact environment where you got sick. You need to surround yourself with 
		situations and people that push you to heal and grow. Less drama, less 
		mess.
		
		Because the 
		truth is, you won’t always be a priority to others—or to the world’s 
		agenda at large—and that’s why you need to be a priority to yourself. 
		Learn to respect yourself, take care of yourself, and become your own 
		support system. Your needs matter. Start meeting them.
		
		Don’t wait on 
		others to choose you.
		
		Choose 
		yourself, today!
		
		Choose to 
		live your life today not as a bystander—not as a prisoner to the old 
		environments and beliefs that sometimes keep you stuck. But to instead 
		live as an active participant, engaged in the new possibilities in front 
		of you.
		
		That’s your 
		choice! YOUR choice!
		
		You are 
		choosing right now…
		
		1. Choose an 
		attitude that moves you forward.
		
		The Greek 
		philosopher Epictetus said it perfectly more than 2,000 years ago: 
		“People are disturbed, not by things (that happen to them), but by the 
		principles and opinions which they form concerning (those) things. When 
		we are hindered, or disturbed, or grieved, let us never attribute it to 
		others, but to ourselves; that is, to our own principles and opinions.”
		
		In other 
		words, a peaceful and mentally strong person is not a someone who’s 
		always in a good situation, but rather someone who always has a good 
		attitude in every situation.
		
		Regardless of 
		what you’re going though, it’s about choosing: Will I allow this to 
		upset me? Will I choose to make this bad or good? Will I choose to stay 
		or walk away? Will I choose to yell or whisper? Will I choose to react 
		or take the time to mindfully respond?
		
		When our 
		course students come to us feeling down about a life situation they 
		can’t control, we typically start by reinforcing the hard truth: 
		sometimes changing your situation isn’t possible, or simply not possible 
		soon enough. You can’t get to a new job in an instant. You can’t make 
		someone else change against his or her will. And you certainly can’t 
		erase the past. But…
		
		You CAN 
		always choose an attitude that moves you forward. And doing so will help 
		you change things from the inside out, and ultimately allow you to grow 
		beyond the struggles you can’t control.
		
		2. Choose to 
		focus only on today.
		
		No matter 
		what’s happening, you can resourcefully fight the battles of just one 
		day. It’s only when you add the battles of those two mind-bending 
		eternities, yesterday and tomorrow, that life gets overwhelmingly 
		intense and complicated.
		
		Accept that 
		it’s not the experience of today that holds you back and drives you mad, 
		but the regret and resentment about something that happened yesterday or 
		the fear and dread of what tomorrow might bring, but probably won’t. 
		It’s necessary, then, to let yourself live just one day at a time – just 
		today – just right here, right now.
		
		And this same 
		strategy applies to your goals too—they don’t need to be so darn 
		grandiose and convoluted that they frighten you. If your goals excite 
		you, and are broken down into manageable chunks, you’ll be compelled to 
		move forward with them. If they are based on what brings meaning into 
		your life, not just what you think you “should” do, working on them will 
		flow easier into each new day. (Angel and I discuss this in more detail 
		in the “Goals & Success” chapter of our brand NEW edition of 1,000 
		Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently.)
		
		3. Choose to 
		take the next step.
		
		It really 
		only takes a small shift everyday that over time amounts to enormous 
		change.
		
		People don’t 
		suddenly heal and start living their ideal life overnight—their daily 
		rituals (tiny steps) play a massive role in making it possible for them 
		to create the life they sincerely want to live.
		
		You can 
		choose to develop daily rituals that point you in the direction of 
		creating your ideal life—or rituals that keep you firmly anchored to 
		your present situation. Make the decision. Make the commitment. Then 
		take the next tiniest step forward in the direction you choose to go.
		
		Honestly, 
		that’s all life is—tiny, positive steps that you take moment by moment, 
		and then one day when you look back it all adds up to something 
		worthwhile – something that’s often far better, and different, than what 
		you had imagined when you began your journey. (Angel and I build tiny, 
		life-changing rituals with our students in the “Goals and Growth” module 
		of the Getting Back to Happy Course.)
		
		4. Choose to 
		take things less personally.
		
		After a 
		couple decades of intentional soul searching, I finally figured out that 
		there’s absolutely no benefit to holding on to anger, resentment or any 
		of their close cousins. Truthfully, I would not be the human being I am 
		today if it weren’t for each and every life experience I’ve had. And the 
		same is true for you.
		
		Screwing up, 
		making mistakes, and letting people down occasionally isn’t wrong—it’s 
		being human.
		
		When I 
		realized this truth, and accepted it, I opened my awareness to the fact 
		that not everything, or perhaps even anything, that anyone else ever 
		does is about me.
		
		Think about 
		the last time you were unkind to someone. Was it because of them, or 
		because of you? Perhaps you were just having a bad day at the time, 
		right?
		
		Truth be 
		told, if someone hurts you, chances are they have been hurt themselves. 
		So do your very best to never take anything too personally. Don’t let 
		vain insults get to your heart. Most human beings can only give others 
		what they have received themselves. All of your actions and intentions 
		should come from a place of love, but not everyone will be loving in 
		return, and that’s perfectly OK.
		
		As Miguel 
		Ruiz explained in his book The Four Agreements, when you do not take 
		anything personally, you liberate yourself. You can open yourself to the 
		world, freely, and not have to worry about the judgments of others.
		
		5. Choose to 
		create healthy space for yourself 
		(away from 
		sources of negativity).
		
		It doesn’t 
		matter if it’s your dad, sister, cousin, friend or coworker that’s 
		spewing negativity at you, if they are bringing you down on a daily 
		basis, you need to spend less time with them. No, this doesn’t mean you 
		have to exile them from your life – it simply means you can choose to 
		carve out time away from them, to reclaim some positivity and sanity.
		
		There’s a big 
		difference between accepting that someone’s negative actions or behavior 
		is born from a place of anxiety or insecurity versus excusing their 
		behavior and therefore enabling it to continue relentlessly in your 
		life.
		
		We don’t have 
		to condone a person’s negative behavior toward us, even though we may be 
		compassionate, loving and understanding of its origins.
		
		At some point 
		we all have to be accountable for our own well-being. And quite 
		honestly, if someone decides to lash out at you again and again, you’re 
		not obligated to be a punching bag.
		
		Also, keep in 
		mind that differing opinions are a part of life and relationships. But 
		when we come across people who are intent on delivering harsh criticism 
		from the sidelines, sometimes we just have to tell ourselves that we may 
		not be doing it perfectly in their eyes, but hey, at least we’re 
		stepping up and doing it. At least we’re getting up, showing up, walking 
		into that darn arena every day and turning to face the crowd, shouting: 
		“Here I am, trying my best! I’m a work in progress and I’m OK with it!”
		
		6. Choose to 
		seek support only from the right sources.
		
		Think for a 
		moment… If you were craving pizza, would you go to a Japanese sushi bar? 
		No! Because you know they don’t serve pizza at a Japanese sushi bar. In 
		fact, they wouldn’t even have the right ingredients to make a pizza even 
		if they were willing to customize a special order for you. If you really 
		wanted pizza, you would simply go to an Italian restaurant that serves 
		it, right?
		
		Now think 
		about the people you go to when you’re craving support, reassurance, 
		guidance, healthy feedback, or simply a loving, listening ear. Do you go 
		to people who are consistently able to dish out what you are hungry for? 
		Or do you go to people who don’t have what you need on their menu, and 
		thus find yourself endlessly discouraged and disappointed?
		
		Bottom line: 
		It’s time to align your hunger with where you dine. (Angel and I discuss 
		this in detail in the “Relationships” chapter of our New York Times 
		bestselling book, Getting Back to Happy: Change Your Thoughts, Change 
		Your Reality, and Turn Your Trials into Triumphs.)
		
		7. Choose to 
		be OK with NOT being perfectly OK.
		
		Even though 
		it’s true that life’s challenges make us stronger, and that it will be 
		OK eventually… it’s not always OK right now, and sometimes that’s all we 
		can feel when we’re in the midst of terribly tough times. Sometimes NOT 
		being OK is all we can register inside our tired brains and aching 
		hearts. This feeling is normal. This emotion is human. And accepting 
		this can feel like a small weight lifted.
		
		The truth is, 
		it’s not OK when someone you care about is no longer living and 
		breathing and giving their amazing gifts to the world. It’s not OK when 
		everything falls apart and you’re buried deep in the wreckage of a life 
		you had not planned for. It’s not OK when the bank account is nearly at 
		zero, with no clear sign of a promising income opportunity. It’s not OK 
		when someone you trusted betrays you and breaks your heart. It’s not OK 
		when you’re emotionally drained to the point you can’t get yourself out 
		of bed in the morning. It’s not OK when you’re engulfed in failure or 
		shame or a grief like you’ve never known before.
		
		Whatever your 
		tough times consist of, sometimes it’s just NOT OK right now. And that, 
		again, is more than OK.
		
		Yes, I’m 
		suggesting to try your hardest to be perfectly OK with not being 
		perfectly OK all the time. Because those with the strength to succeed in 
		the long run are the ones who lay a firm foundation of growth with the 
		bricks life has thrown at them. Don’t be afraid to fall apart for a 
		little while, because when it happens, the situation will open an 
		opportunity for you to grow and rebuild yourself into the brilliant 
		human being you are capable of being, one brick at a time.
		
		The floor is 
		yours…
		
		We would love 
		to hear from YOU.
		
		Which point 
		above resonates with you the most right now, and why?