“I know nothing in the world that has as much power as a word.” ~ Emily Dickenson
“There exists, for everyone, a sentence — a series of words — that has the power to destroy you.” ~ Philip K. Dick
We live in scary geopolitical times. We struggle under scary global economic challenges.
On a lighter note, October celebrates all things scary as Halloween invites a variety of ghosts, ghouls and goblins to wander the streets in search of tricks or treats.
There are also scary words that scratch and claw, maim and kill, and otherwise torture the life right out of living.
In the spirit of Halloween, I’ve collected 5 of the scariest words I know. These are words that are deadlier than they seem. Their poison infects the mind and turns the heart cold and frightened and fragile.
Remember, poison taken in small enough doses builds immunity to its lethal toxicity. But if taken in larger doses will kill you.
So can these words.
So beware and use them cautiously!
5 Words that Maim and Kill
“Of all the weapons of destruction that man could invent, the most terrible — and the most powerful — was the word.” ~ Paulo Coelho
1. “No!”
We are haunted by the ever-present, always lurking, forever devouring, bloodthirsty specter of “NO!”
From a very young age, most of us have been inundated with it. We’ve heard it and seen it and felt its sting as it’s sunk deeper and deeper into our subconscious, into the fabric of our belief systems, into the lining of our thoughts, into the thick of our souls.
We’ve worshiped at its altar and imbibed its negation, breathed its deadening poison and succumbed to its negative mandate. We’ve acquired its self-defeating hostility to possibility and capitulated to its command. We’ve appropriated its finality and adopted its rhetoric and ratified its basic ideology of “Stop!”
The philosophy of “NO!” has thereby stopped dreams dead in their tracks, withered ideas on the vine, ended journeys before they started, thwarted plans and disrupted greatness.
“NO!” has murdered opportunity and buried possibility and dissected hope into tiny fragments of frustrated acquiescence to both internal and external doubt and fear. It mummifies dreams and zombifies hopes into the walking dead of eternal stagnation.
So why do we say it so often – to our children, our associates, our employees, ourselves? Why do we fill minds with the numbing poison of repeated “NO!” to the point of saturation, where “Yes!” can no longer find emotional room to breath?
No more!
Instead, create opportunities to say “Yes!” Drown the ever-insisting “NO!” in a rising flood of Yesses until its deafening cry becomes nothing more than a pathetic whimper echoing impotently in the thunderous applause and resonating joy of “YES!”
2. “Wait!”
Put it off. Not yet. Delay. Postpone. The timing is not quite right. Circumstances are not opportune. We need to be certain. What if we’re not ready? What if they are not ready? What if we’re wrong? What if …
Such considerations are not wholly without merit. But when they are motivated by unfounded fear more than wisdom, lives get put on hold unnecessarily. Dreams are relegated to the background, imprisoned behind the bars of practicality and caution. Goals are indefinitely postponed. Possibilities dry up and fall to the ground and rot unused, untried, unmet and unexperienced.
“Wait!” is often “NO!” in disguise. It’s mantra is “STOP!” and “Not Yet!” It hijacks and backstabs and ambushes and pushes ideas and plans and goals off cliffs onto the jagged rocks of finality even if it’s words are the squishy softness of “Maybe” “Not Yet” and “Later.”
“Wait!” is the perennial act of avoidance and procrastination.
“Wait” is the verbal equivalent of hiding behind excuse.
“Wait!” puts new ideas on ice, new ventures on back burners and projects under dust on shelves, turning plans for the future into regrets of the past. The road less traveled becomes the road never taken. Potential is abandoned and neglected.
And that’s a scary prospect.
So stop waiting. Act! Do! Take your life out of park. Hit the gas. Put it in motion. Let it expand and grow and breath and become what it can, unshackled from the chains of “Wait!”
3. “Quit!”
This blood-curdling capitulation lays claim to most of its victims once a goal or dream or project has already been started. The curtains have partially lifted, the journey already begun when we start telling ourselves we’re not good enough, not equal to the difficulty of the challenge. We trip and stumble over insecurities, doubts and fears.
We worry about failure, so quit so as to prevent reality from verifying our worst fears. Possibility is choked into submission as we blood let potential into something more reasonable, softer, weaker, paler, mediocre, something similar to everyone else, something bunched in the middle of the bell curve of life.
And so mountains are left half climbed, stories half told, books half written, character half developed, happiness half experienced, forgiveness half extended, dreams half dreamt, plans half planned and lives half lived.
Decide intead to quit quitting and start finishing. Be willing to adjust and improve and adapt and alter trajectories as needed, but stop letting fear cut the legs off your dreams.
4. “Careful!”
Slow down! Watch out! Get down! Get off! Don’t run! Stop climbing! You’re going to hurt yourself! You’ll poke an eye out! Be careful!
These are all synonyms for cautious failure and fearful forfeiture of all we can be and learn and do and become. It places us in circumscribed cells of artificially cramped limitations.
And so we wait and look both ways, then look again, then double check and check once more. Sometimes our delays turn youth into golden years of regret and missed opportunity and unmet potential.
The siren song of “careful” lures us into a sleepy defensiveness, a foggy comfort of circled wagons and circumscribed lives of “someday-isms” that pause us in the middle of living, long before the end of the movie has played out.
And so we bubble-wrap our lives into hermetically sealed rooms of risk aversion as we pat ourselves on the back in a sigh of relief that at least we’re safe … for now.
5. “Can’t!”
I can’t. You can’t. It can’t be done. No one can do that. It’s impossible! Who do you think you are? It’s too risky. Stop it!
Why are we so ready to tell ourselves (or let others tell us) that we’re not good enough or big enough or smart enough or the right fit? We’re too quick to give up and give in and stop trying. After all, there are better people for the task than us, we tell ourselves (or others proclaim).
And so we find ourselves stuck in the rut of life, etched deeply into the same grooves we’ve always traveled, unable or unwilling to reach up or out or over, unable or unwilling to innovate, explore, learn, create, or become, unable or unwilling to act.
Instead, we’re acted upon. We become victims to the strength and tenacity of our worst fears. (<– Tweet this!) The spell of immobility and excuse and frustration descends and engulfs and murders us at the heartbeat of possibility and potential.
The very words, “I can’t!” are the incantation that immobilizes and freezes us into rigid form and finished incompleteness.
We are then introduced to the hellish reality that stopping growth is no neutral act. We shrink as we atrophy and retreat and backslide and decay.
So refuse the incantation of “Cant!” Transform it into “I Will!”
And here’s the magic of that transformation: You then will. Or at least you will much more likely begin acting as though you would. And then, of course, you much more likely will. “Can’t!” stops. “I Will!” opens. Both are self-fulfilling prophecies with very different prophesied outcomes. The life you lead will largely be the testimony to the one you finally choose to fill your heart, mind and soul.
Afterthoughts
“Words are weapons. They blast big bloody holes in the world. And words are bricks. Say something out loud and it starts turning solid. Say it loud enough and it becomes a wall you can’t get through.” ~ Richard Kadrey
The words we use matter. They shape and form the way we think. They thicken walls, heighten mountains and widen canyons and otherwise make obstacles bigger and harder to get through.
Or they diminish and shrink and reduce those walls and mountains and canyons that stand in the way of our hopes and aspirations. Words break or build. They support and encourage or undermine and cripple. They create pathways to innovation or hurdles, roadblocks and obstacles.
Words tend to do what we tell them to. They are obedient things, really. If we tell them to limit, they do their job well, constricting our very movement, fogging up thought, confusing decision, tightening around our necks and piercing our hearts and shooting hot lead into our feet.
Or they expand our understanding and motivate our movement, winging our hearts and freeing potential to rise to new and unexplored levels of possibility.
In a way, words are like copy machines. They produce what we place on the glass under the lid. The words we repeatedly use on ourselves (or others) produce the very nature of the words themselves. Negative words produce negative results. Limiting words produce limiting results. Crippling words cripple. That’s their nature. It’s what they do.
Uplifting words, on the other hand, tend to uplift. Motivating words motivate. Loving words inspire love. Kind words inspire kindness.
So think carefully about the words you habitually use. Then transform them into words that serve to liberate instead of imprison, that lift instead of drown, that build instead of destroy.
Then, perhaps, this Halloween will serve a higher purpose than providing a year’s worth of work for your local dentist. Perhaps we can commit to replacing the scary words that kill and cripple with words that encourage and inspire so that by next Halloween all we have to worry about are masked ghouls and cavities.
YOUR TURN!
Please share you thoughts in the comment and share this post if it resonated with you.
Absolutely Ken!
Words have tremendous power, and that’s how great writers are born – isn’t it? 🙂
More than scary, these are negative words that we shouldn’t have in our dictionary, even though we do use them sometime or the other.
I would like to add another one to your list – Impossible – quite similar to can’t as you mentioned. It also has the possibility hidden within – I-m-possible….that no one can really see if they have thought of thinking negative. There was a time when my Mom used to tell us that such words don’t exist in the dictionary, though later they all came up.
We need to turn these negatives into the positives, just as you mentioned, to really encourage and inspire us.
Thanks for sharing, and Happy Halloween – in the positive way. 🙂
Harleena Singh recently posted … Do You Love the Life You Live
So true, Harleena! And thanks for adding “impossible” to the list.
I just finished listening to a biography of Steve Jobs the other day and found it so interesting how he would reject engineers’ objections to some design idea he would have when they complained of the impossibility of the project. He would just tell them to go figure it out (after a few expletives were rattled off at them first, of course). But it’s that refusal to accept the idea that much of anything is impossible that allows us to do things others never thought could be done.
Happy Halloween to you too, Harleena!
for me quit is the worst
i still remember how many people asked me to give up on my business when i was first beginning, thanks God, i didn’t listen
farouk recently posted … Understanding the unconscious symbols
Think of all the people you and your books and programs and blog have helped who wouldn’t have been helped had you quit! I think there are likely an endless supply of stories of people who went for it and made something important and those who could have, but didn’t because they quit before getting there.
Thanks for the example, Farouk!
I think NO is worst. It conveys negative emotions and pulls us from pursuing our dream instead of pushing us towards it. To a child, it means disappointment and loss. I have to give you credit for the way you play with words. I am amazed and truly admire the post.
CreditDonkey recently posted … Americans in Debt – and Know It
Thanks so much for your kind words. I love words. I’m a government and economics teacher at a high school, but played with the idea of becoming an English teacher at one time. So I do recognize in a very visceral way the power of words. I’ve also worked with abused children in a previous line of work and have seen the anguish words can cause children.
My wife is particularly good at looking for opportunities to say “Yes!” to our son so that the “No’s” don’t become the context of his emotional life and memories of childhood.
Thanks for stopping by and sharing!
Powerful words, Ken! I resonated with everything you said, especially the word “careful” stood out to me as a word that I had buried in my subconscious from childhood. Thank you for your insights because you helped me to be more aware of the skeletons in the closet this Halloween!
Elaine Enlightening recently posted … Aging and death or Eternal Youth?
Thanks so much, Elaine.
“Careful” almost seems benign. How would any parent want their children to be reckless? But “careful” can be such a slow-working poison that deadens risk-taking, keeps us safe and following protocol, unable to rock the boat, staying close to trends and well within comfort zones and far from anything that smells of adventure. And so we remain average, doing what others do, the way others do them, when it’s supposed to be done. Some things work well that way. And caution is a good thing in certain areas of life and at some times. But when we develop a generalized attitude of “careful”, we limit options and possibilities in ways that are unfortunate.
Thanks again for sharing your thoughts, Elaine. We do need to be aware of the skeletons in our closets. Glad to have helped!
Philip K Dick really knows something about the dark power of words, some words can really affect one’s mental status quo in a scary direction…
Virag recently posted … Melyik fajta fogpótlást válasszam?
Hi Virag,
Yes, that was a powerful quote, right? Most of our lives are extension of the way we habitually think. And our thinking is partly the result of the words we use to describe and explain what we’re thinking about. So choosing the words we use and how we use them can become a self-fulfilling prophesy of limitation or possibility.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts here, Virag. Much appreciated!
Hey Ken,
For me, my scariest worries is no’s and can’t. Everyone wants to achieve something, but when it comes to really going for it, some are scared that it will be a ‘no’ instead of a ‘yes’. So it often translate to ‘I can’t”.
At least from what I thought when I was reading this.
Dennis Do recently posted … How to Not Let Fools Get to You
Hey Dennis,
Sorry for the delayed reply, but want to thank you for your thoughts. Great point about being afraid so “No!” turns into “Can’t!” I think it’s difficult for people to admit defeat, even to themselves. So they protect themselves from failing by never attempting.
And that’s too bad.
You’re so right, Ken. And you write extremely well too. We talk ourselves into lots of things, then years later we realise we can’t get out of them. Like your quote, we build up wall we can’t get through.
I’ve been trying to take out the negative words and replace them with positives.
Anne recently posted … Great News!
Thank you so much, Anne! (And sorry it took so long to reply!)
Words can strengthen and inspire or cripple and discourage, can’t they! We’re so good at talking and talking, worrying and worrying and never quite getting around to doing and doing! But by removing the words that undermine the action we need to take to get what we want, we can get a lot closer much more easily.
Good luck removing the negative words! They sneak into our language so easily!
Catchy post title–couldn’t wait to see what they were. You picked some doozies. The Bible says that “the power of life and death are in the tongue.” We can speak a blessing on others or a curse. How important it is to be careful, especially when speaking to those over whom we hold special influence, like our children, spouses, employees, friends.
Of the words you listed, I think I am most prone to use “careful.” In fact, I just reminded my daughter to drive carefully when she left. Hmmm. I’m going to listen more to the words I use and watch for these poisonous ones. Thank you!
Galen Pearl recently posted … Miracles, Anyone?
Hi Galen! The title came last, just before I posted, a while after the post had been written. But once I came up with it, I had to keep it! I originally had something more descriptive (but boring).
I like that Biblical passage. The tongue is the most powerful muscle in the body. It can collapse empires or build monuments to possibility! It can strip a person of courage and esteem or lift someone to heights they never dreamed possible.
I think some people (women more than men?) have something of an innate urge to want to protect their children. I know a lot of moms who seem to be fighting the “careful” battle 24/7. They’re always telling their children to slow down and get down and watch out and be careful. It’s a tough impulse to overcome for some. Good luck taming yours! 🙂
PS: Having said that, driving carefully is something I remind my daughter to do as well. None of the words in the post are always poisonous and undermining.
So true, in my list would be “careful!” on the 1st place, but the other ones are also very common.
Angela recently posted … Fogpótlás Magyarországon és Budapesten
Hi Angela, Just found your comment here hanging out without a reply, so thought I would take a moment to respond. Sorry I missed it.
I think mothers are almost instinctively programmed to worry about the safety of their children. In my experience, anyway, it seems moms are more likely to tell their kids to be careful than men. Have you noticed the too?