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7 Ways Role Models Reduce Stress and Encourage Success

April 6th, 2010 by Reeta Luthra

7 Ways Role Models Reduce Stress and Encourage SuccessJust as water moulds it way into rock, the people we encounter leave their mark on the bedrock of our world too.

As you think of areas in your life that have been influenced or shaped by others, it can seem as if the enriching encounters happen more by luck and good fortune.

When luck is an attitude, you control the influences entering your life. You can cherry pick just the right kind of positive influence on your experiences, actions and thoughts.

As you do this, you gain strength and confidence in your ability to manage the stresses life throws up at you.

Role Models encourage:

1) Self-belief

Viktor Frankl survived Auschwitz. Surrounded by evil, death and fear, he found a way to continue his life’s work. Terry Fator’s dedication to his art went unappreciated for many years before he finally won America’s Got Talent and became internationally reknowned. Nobody would have thought any less of Frankl or Fator if they had given up. In fact, many would have expected it. But thankfully, Frankl and Fator were not driven by what was expected, they were driven by their own aspirations and beliefs.

As role models, they teach us that it’s okay to work hard towards what we want despite circumstances.

2) Faith in our ability

Milton Erickson was paralyzed through polio aged 17. Watching his baby sister learn how to crawl helped him become aware of his own muscles again. Stroke victims have also found role models in babies when re-learning how to walk.

Until 1954, nobody had run a mile under 4 minutes.  Then Roger Bannister did it. Just 46 days later, his record was broken. Records continue to be broken because of the role model effect. If one person can do something, someone else can learn to do it too.

Watching a master at work is a graceful experience. Your hungry student eyes will let you pick up the nuances that marks the person out as a master. NLP is big on modelling behaviours. An NLP presupposition is that if someone can do something, then anyone else can learn to do it too.

3) Action

When problems and obstacles seem a hassle or even unsurmountable, it can be easy to remain at best in a comfortable everyday rut and at worst, a victim. Limiting your exposure to negative people, and having people around you with the type of energy that moves you, provides a helping hand that complements your own efforts. With resistance being what it is, it’s up to you to let their positive influence in.

A role model inspires you to step beyond wishful thinking and into a place of action.

4) Self awareness

Sometimes, a kick in the butt comes from the unlikeliest sources. I once worked with a guy who would snack on an apple every afternoon. He’d sit there and polish it diligently for 5 minutes and then take a big juicy bite that would resound in his mouth for an eternity. Then he’d sit and stare into space for a while before taking another big, juicy bite, sucking it dry before finally putting it out of its misery. Every day I would seethe at his blatant inconsideration.

It was a rude awakening when I realised that boredom and frustration in my own job were resenting him for having the job I deserved. This was even though I knew his job would take my career in a direction I didn’t want to go. That spurred me to face my fears about doing what I wanted to do and ultimately taught me to understand the stress signals in my body before they impacted my behaviour.

When you take an unreasonable dislike to someone, there’s a good chance you are seeing something about yourself being reflected back at you.

5) New perspectives

In everyday life, we follow patterns that we have created. You may have noticed that in your personal relationships you tend to favour a particular sense. You may lose yourself in the closeness of touch, the musical sound of voice, the comfort of words or the delightful vision before you. This pattern tends to hold true in the various aspects of your life although the favoured sense may change according to context.

A role model encourages us to step out of these patterns and experience things using more of our senses. As children, we used all our senses all the time. We loved getting dirty, feeling the paint, seeing the colour and making a lot of noise. Role models can give us a similar sense of freedom and opportunity. Because we’re out of our usual pattern for the moment, we’re using more of the lesser used senses in that particular context and so process the information in a different way.

6) Your intrinsic value

Here’s a quote from “The Waltons”, a childhood favourite.

“[narration as John 'John Boy' Walton, Jr. reading from his journal] Whenever I look back to those days when I was growing up in the Great Depression, I’m always convinced that I came from a remarkable family. It wasn’t that my brothers and sisters and I were sheltered from the realities of those difficult times. It was simply that our mother and father had a way of making more of what we had and less of what we didn’t have.”

Role models help us to make more of what we hold inside us. As you fulfil your potential with integrity, in a way that meets your values, your self-esteem flourishes.

7) Independent thought - You will never be your role model. And that’s a good thing. You will infuse what they teach you with your own qualities and produce something fresh and unique as you grow into your dreams.

That’s when you realise that your individuality isn’t something you display by simply being quirky. Your individuality is your gift to the lives you touch – once you lose the fear to use it.

If life is a game of Snakes & Ladders, role models bring more ladders onto your board.

How have you been inspired or helped by a role model?


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8 Responses to “7 Ways Role Models Reduce Stress and Encourage Success”
  1. Lawrence Davidson Chew says:

    Great inspiring article on Role Model, shaping your positive behaviour !

    We swim coaches need that to inspires those under our charge to improve their
    swim skills, to improve mental toughness in spite of failures, to celebrate their small victories, and to keep on, keeping on and focus on their goals and achieve them, even surpassing them and find new goals.

    Lawrence Davidson Chew, Singapore

  2. Reeta Luthra says:

    Hi Lawrence

    That’s such a great list of qualities to inspire in your students. Do you find that as you seek to inspire them in others, you bring them out even more so in yourself?

    I’m glad you find this blog Lawrence & I appreciate your comment.

  3. Hi Reeta, when I think back on my life, I have had so many different role models that have inspired me to move forward and take risks that might not be my typical choice. Even though I have left the whitewater community, the paddlers that I have watched for years have inspired me because of how they set goals and work at them until they succeed. Even venturing out into social media was started originally by interaction with the paddling community. I’ve never learned to paddle but I have struck out into unsure waters many times recently, remembering all the successes that I watched start by trying something, then learning, then trying again.
    Julie Walraven | Resume Services´s last blog ..Lifelong career planners – I love my clients #2 My ComLuv Profile

  4. Reeta Luthra says:

    Hi Julie

    “trying something, then learning, then trying again” – Love this, to me, this is the real secret of success.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks
  1. Jim Connolly says:

    RT @ReetaLuthra: 7 Ways Role Models Encourage Success http://bit.ly/9NOB5k

  2. RT @ReetaLuthra: The Importance of Having Good Role Models http://bit.ly/9NOB5k

  3. Jim Connolly says:

    RT @ReetaLuthra: The Importance of Having Good Role Models http://bit.ly/9NOB5k

  4. alexparr says:

    The Importance of Having Good Role Models http://bit.ly/9NOB5k RT @jimconnolly: RT @ReetaLuthra


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