Affirmations are widely used within the law of attraction and manifestation practices along with motivational speaking and coaching as well. It is commonly associated with more spiritual practices, but affirmations can be used for anyone in any religion or spiritual practice. While telling yourself regularly how wonderful you are may seem unconventional, scientific and psychological evidence says affirmations do work.
At the core, affirmations are more about training your brain to focus on the good rather than just a spiritual practice. Affirmations can also assist you in shifting your thinking and perspective from negative to positive, lack to abundance, from ungrateful to grateful, etc. So, let's explore some of the science behind the use of affirmations in everyday life, how they genuinely work, and how you can implement them into your daily self-care practice.
The use of affirmations can go far behind a spiritual and self-help practice. When using affirmations, you can use the power of psychology to present mental shifts in your life. A standard theory that has been used as a psychological method to shift your mental state is called the self-affirmation theory. This theory is best conducted by utilizing your affirmations in a first-person tense to maintain a consistently positive view of yourself. When people hold a more positive personal view of themselves with the use of affirmations, this then allows them to shift their perspective of the world in a more positive light.
Using affirmations as a part of your sense of self cannot only shift people's state of mind but has been proven that it can cause dynamic brain shifts. A recent study conducted by the Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology researched the correlation between self-affirmations and neuroscience. This study analyzed the relationship between positive and negative self-talk in correlation with the physical performance of athletes.
In the findings, the study concluded that positive self-statements led to better performance than negative self-statements in 2 out of 3 physical tasks conducted by participants in the study. Additionally, the study's social cognitive, and affective neuroscience areas discovered that participants who positively affirmed displayed increased activity in critical areas of the brain's self-processing and valuation systems when reflecting on future-oriented core values.
Implementing affirmations and mantras into your daily practice can be easy to do. Here are three easy ways that I have best found to incorporate affirmations daily into my gratitude practices:
Affirmations are so much more than just a catchy way to tell yourself that you are fantastic and capable of great things. Affirmations have the power to shift your mood and completely shift your mindset and change your life as well. Be creative with them and fit them to make them attractive and easy to implement into your everyday life. Most of all, I would ensure you are consistent with them, provide evidence showing you that your negative thoughts have no merit, and express gratitude while watching the mindset shift happen! At the end of the day, there is psychological and scientific proof that affirmations do work.