Self Discovery 3

The Belief Audit

REWRITING THE STORIES THAT RUN YOUR LIFE

Read Part 1: The Self-Discovery Session   |   Read Part 2: The Goal Clarity Session
Part 3 of the Self-Reflection Series

"I am not good enough."
"No matter what I do, I'm still behind my milestones."
"I need to lose weight. I look fat." "I am not handsome."

Sound familiar? These internal belief patterns often become our constant companions. The more we believe them, the more we try to live our lives to meet these belief systems — built with no facts or figures, just stories we've accepted as truth.

My Journey

Personally, one key belief that I always thought to myself was: "Am I good enough?"

Well, after a point, I realized these are stories I made up and started believing. During a call with my mentor, we addressed the self-doubting beliefs I had carried for so long. That conversation changed everything.

If you're also sailing in the same boat, I'm sharing the questions that helped me.

Why This Matters

Beliefs are the invisible architects of your life. They determine what you attempt, what you avoid, what you think you deserve, and what you believe is possible.

The most dangerous beliefs aren't the ones you argue about. They're the ones you never question because they feel like facts.
The Belief Detector Exercise
  • "I'm not the kind of person who..."
  • "I could never..."
  • "People like me don't..."
  • "I'm too [adjective] to..."

Whatever came up? Those are your beliefs speaking. Now let's examine them.

Section 1: Identifying Your Limiting Beliefs

WHAT STORIES ARE YOU LIVING?

  • What irritates you most about yourself or your life right now?
  • What do you consistently tell yourself you "can't" do?
  • What belief about yourself have you held the longest?
  • If your inner critic had a voice, what would it say most often?
  • What do you believe about yourself that you wouldn't want others to know?
Reflection Prompt: Limiting beliefs often masquerade as "just being realistic." Which story are you telling yourself?

Section 2: Questioning Your Beliefs

SEPARATING FACTS FROM FICTION

  • What evidence do I have that this belief is actually true?
  • What evidence contradicts this belief?
  • Would I judge a friend harshly if they believed this?
  • What would I accomplish if I didn't believe this?
  • Who benefits from me believing this?
PRO TIP: Write down your most limiting belief. Then write: "BUT WHAT IF I..." and finish that sentence 10 different ways.

Section 3: Your Core Values & Convictions

WHAT DO YOU STAND FOR?

  • What do you stand for? What do you believe in deeply?
  • What does a successful person mean to you?
  • What are you ready to fight for or defend passionately?
  • If you could describe yourself in one word that reflects your values, what would it be?
  • What belief, if fully embraced, would change how you show up in the world?
Reflection Prompt: Your limiting beliefs get all the attention. But what about your empowering beliefs?

Section 4: Rewriting the Story

CREATING NEW BELIEFS THAT SERVE YOU

  • What is holding me back from taking action?
  • What do I need to change mentally to move forward?
  • What habits need to change to support my new beliefs?
  • What new belief would I like to adopt?
  • What would I do TODAY if I fully believed I was capable and worthy?
PRO TIP: New beliefs aren't built through affirmations alone — they're built through evidence. Take ONE small action that contradicts your old belief.

The Story Audit

Try this powerful exercise:

1. Write your old belief: "I am not good enough because..."
2. Challenge it: "But the facts show..."
3. Rewrite it: "The truth is..."
4. Prove it with one action this week.

Return to this exercise whenever the old story tries to reclaim space in your mind.

The Mentor's Wisdom

The beliefs we carry aren't facts — they're stories we've practiced believing. And just like you learned the old story, you can learn a new one.

You don't have to believe everything you think.
Your beliefs aren't permanent. They're not facts. They're not your identity. They're simply thoughts you've practiced so long they feel true.

The Self-Reflection Series

"Remember: You are not your beliefs. You are the one who gets to choose them."