If you work for a major employer, have watched the news or read the
newspaper in the last couple months, you've probably been encouraged to get
your flu shot by now.
According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), flu season starts in
October and ends as late as May, so the best timing for the influenza
vaccine is October and November. Between 5% and 20% of the population will
be affected by the virus, and the CDC says the vaccine is proven to be 70%
effective in preventing the flu.
So why am I not in line for my shot?
It's a different reason than why I hesitated to accept this topic
assignment, which would have been "don't think about what you don't want to
experience." It's a different reason than my acupuncturist would give, which
is "there's a better way to maintain health."
The reason I'm not signing up to have chemically killed influenza virus
injected directly into my bloodstream is because my belief system on this
topic is #1 - don't mess with nature, and #2 - don't mess with success.
When I take any action that's not in alignment with what I believe, I'm
inviting trouble.
If I believe it takes hard work to succeed and yet I don't work hard, I'm
resisting success. If I believe there are no good men left and I start
dating, I'm not likely to hook up with a good guy. And if I believe my body
knows best yet I turn it over to the whims of modern medicine, I'm rolling
the dice.
Conflicting Beliefs
Which is why I experienced a dilemma years ago working at the bank, when my
manager announced flu shots were mandatory for all.
Normally, I believed you do as the boss says. (Undoubtedly ingrained from
childhood, where I was well-trained to "do as told" as a daughter and
student.) But I had also come to believe pharmaceutical companies push drugs
that don't benefit us as much as they like us to think. And I surely didn't
believe my body needed dead viruses floating in it to stay healthy.
I also figured it wasn't my employer's business whether I got a flu shot or
not. It was my personal health choice, or at least I thought it should be.
By then it was two beliefs against one, so I refused the shot.
While my manager was perturbed I didn't follow instruction, I had the smug
satisfaction of perfect health season after season.
Even so, I don't invest time convincing others to avoid flu shots. Because
many people access confidence and peace of mind by being vaccinated. And
from a law of attraction perspective, that's what matters: finding your way
to a good vibration. Peace of mind, confidence, positive expectation ...
however we get there is up to us. For some, that means getting a flu shot.
For others, that means skipping it.
Honor your belief
After mentioning to my boyfriend I'm writing about flu shots, he launches
into a tribute about what a wonderful technological advance for modern
medicine, how it's saved many lives and how much he appreciates his employer
offering them for free.
While I'm amazed that we've discovered yet another topic on which we don't
see eye to eye, he continues with a story about how he almost died from the
flu a couple years ago. Ever since then he's received an annual vaccination
and hasn't been sick since.
Not surprisingly, he also strongly encourages his staff to get their flu
shots.
Momentarily I forget I'm not invested in what someone else believes. With my
lunch growing cold, I find myself explaining to my errant lover that it
isn't so much the shot that makes a difference, but rather his belief that
it will. He interrupts and asks about that sickness I had last year.
What sickness?
"Wasn't it the flu?" he asks.
Yeah, it was not the flu. I don't even remember being sick. "Was that your
other girlfriend?" I ask, "because I haven't been sick in years."
He reminds me I had an irritating cough that lasted several weeks.
"Remember, you were always muting your line because you couldn't stop
coughing?" Okay, now I remember. It was a cough, though; definitely not the
flu.
He's a smart guy, so he leaves that one alone.
I want to get back to my burrito, so I wrap the conversation up succinctly.
I ask if he knows anyone who got the flu after getting the shot. He
conveniently doesn't, but I do. I tell him there isn't necessarily a right
or wrong position on flu shots. It helps some, doesn't help others. It's not
as cut and dried as he likes to think.
I add it's not so much what we believe as it is that we act in accordance
with our beliefs that matters.
For example: He gets a shot and feels protected - good for him. (And I'm
nice enough to not plant beliefs about the dangers of vaccinations, thank
you very much.) Someone else gets a shot who has mixed beliefs (which would
have been me if my manager had his way), is taking a gamble. Another who
feels good about not receiving the vaccination is on a good path to avoid
it.
The trouble starts when we don't act in accordance with our beliefs.
This is why when some law of attraction newcomers learn it isn't the diet or
the exercise that matters (rather our thoughts about the diet and exercise
that make the difference), they excitedly give up the diet and exercise they
loathe. But changing the action before changing the long-held core belief
can lead to trouble.
Or when someone reads we can attract money simply by changing our vibration
- it's true, but part of our vibration is our belief. So if we give up the
second job and start a spending spree trusting VISA to handle it, we create
a challenge if we haven't adjusted our deeply held belief about how money
operates in our life.
You can feel the difference between wanting to believe something and really
believing it, right?
Yes, so can the Universe (or whatever you name the powers that be).
Where the power is
A longtime friend of mine makes fun of anyone who takes medication. He holds
disdain for those who rely on a "magic pill" instead of using the absolute
power of their mind to heal.
Which I understand. And yet, sometimes we best access our power through an
outside avenue we've been trained to more easily believe in or rely on. If
you can eliminate the headache by taking the aspirin, amen! There's no
reason to make it hard on ourselves, after all.
It's true that our power lies within, but some of us access it better by
using an outside source to tap into it - like drugs, doctors and flu shots.
Who cares? What matters is that we use our power - to thrive, to create, to
live as we choose.
And accessing that power depends on knowing and respecting your
beliefs. If you find a personal belief that you'd rather not hold, you can
use your power to change it.
As I write this, the daily Abraham quote (from the Yahoo Group at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ AbeQuotes) pops up in email:
"We wonder how you ever decide what is right or wrong for you, what is
appropriate or inappropriate, when there are so many different opinions and
voices trying to get your attention and trying to get you to follow ...And
the more you step out into this very diverse and expansive physical
experience, the more you bump up against the great variety of ideas that
other people have about the way you should live... What we want you to do is
to discover that you have within you a Guidance System that lets you know,
in any moment, what you're doing with your vibration. You can literally
feel, once you have listened for it a little bit, whether you are a
vibrational match to your Core Energy or whether you are not."
This season, for the good of everyone, find your own "feel good" about flu
shots or whatever other topic is on your mind and go!
(This article was originally published in Catalyst Magazine)
If you're so inclined, please feel free to reproduce this article in full with proper author credit (that would be me, Jeannette Maw) and link back to Good Vibe Coaching. Thanks!