
How to create better circumstances in life
“…I don’t believe in circumstances. The people who get on in this world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, and if they can’t find them, make them.”
– George Bernard Shaw, Mrs. Warren’s Profession
So here is a quick tip on how to get out in life and start creating a better one instead of complaining about the one you have! Like I use to do when I was a young lad…
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First, let’s talk about the problem

The problem is that the people who don’t reach their goals are usually the ones who complain about it.
They blame other things or other people for not being able to achieve their goals.
How can you be successful if your failures are always somebody else’s fault or something beyond what is reasonable to control yourself?
So here is the toughest lesson I ever had in life prior to my heart attack.
You need to take responsibility for yourself and stop blaming others.
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The problem with this mindset of blame, however, seems that the more often it’s used as an excuse not just by individuals but organizations themselves in general across all industries around the world – governments included. But I digress.
- You need to take responsibility for your own actions. It is not good to blame others for your failures because it will not make you successful.
- It’s hard to be successful if you’re always blaming others or circumstances for your failures.
Why would you want to hand over so much power to a person or a circumstance anyway?
I should know because I spent a large part of my life locked up due to being bitter, mad, frustrated, and just angry at the world because of what I thought my parents did or didn’t do for me!
I use to spend my time with an angry look on my face. Using it as a defense mechanism!
My thought process back then was “If my own parents could do me harm, then what’s to stop a complete stranger from doing the same thing?”

I bought into the fear factor! I used my energy to create what I DID NOT WANT instead of creating a better version using the power of my mind.
I soon realized that one of the worst things I could do is to focus on what’s not working in my life and playing the victim role thinking I had nothing to do with how I got to this station in life.
Boy, was I oh so wrong about that!
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After years of soul searching and now learning how to shift my focus from what I FEAR or don’t want in my life to focusing on what I can create despite current circumstances, I was finally ready to do the work.
Focus on the positives
So let’s switch gears and place our focus on how we can create a better life instead of wait on one!
I can promise you this. If you are willing to put in the work and do just one thing daily, you too can begin to create the life of your dreams and be happy for the journey.
It’s not as much about the destination anyway as much as it should be about the ride!
Lets focus on solutions you can take action on so you can create a better life.
Make a Control Map Before You Make a Move

Before you can create better circumstances, you need to stop treating every problem like it belongs in the same pile.
Some things are yours to change.
Some things are yours to influence.
Some things are yours to release because staring at them all day will only drain the energy you need for action.
A simple way to sort this out is to make a Control Map.
Take one situation you keep complaining about and divide it into three columns:
1. What I control
These are the actions, decisions, habits, words, and follow-through that belong to you.
2. What I can influence
These are people, conversations, systems, or outcomes you may affect, but cannot fully command.
3. What I need to release
These are things you cannot change by obsessing, replaying, blaming, or waiting.
Let’s say you hate your job.
You may not control the company culture, your boss’s personality, or whether a promotion opens this month.
But you do control whether you update your resume, apply to three roles this week, ask for clearer expectations, track your wins, or have a direct conversation about your future.
That is where your power is.
Not in pretending the situation is perfect.
In finding the part you can actually move.
A career coach might help you sort this quickly, especially if you keep mixing together facts, fears, and old stories. The work is not just “think positive.” It is looking at the circumstance and asking, What is the next responsible move I can make from here?
Try this with one real problem.
Write the complaint at the top of a page.
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Then ask:
What do I directly control here?
Who or what can I influence with a clear action?
What am I giving attention to that is not giving me power back?
That third question can sting a little.
Good.
That means it is probably telling the truth.
Turn the Complaint Into a Clear Request

A lot of complaining is really an unmade request.
Not always.
Sometimes you need to vent, process, or name what is happening.
But if the same complaint keeps coming back, there is a good chance your next step is not more thinking.
It is a cleaner request.
“I never get any help around here” is a complaint.
“Can you handle dinner on Tuesday and Thursday so I can finish this course?” is a request.
“My boss never notices what I do” is a complaint.
“Can we schedule 15 minutes this week to review what I have completed and what I need to do to be considered for the next opportunity?” is a request.
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“My partner does not support my goals” is a complaint.
“I need two hours on Saturday morning to work on this, and I need you not to interrupt me unless it is urgent” is a request.
See the difference?
A complaint throws frustration into the air.
A request gives someone a specific action to respond to.
The cleaner the request, the harder it is to hide behind the old story.
Use this simple pattern:
Name the situation: “I have been trying to finish my certification.”
Say what you need: “I need two quiet blocks of time this week.”
Make the ask specific: “Can you take the kids to practice on Wednesday and handle bedtime on Friday?”
Give the reason without over-explaining: “That would let me finish the next module and stay on track.”
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That is not begging.
That is leadership over your own life.
A communication coach, relationship coach, or leadership coach might help you practice this if direct requests feel awkward. Sometimes the skill is not knowing what you want. It is learning how to say it without attacking, apologizing, or shrinking.
And yes, people can still say no.
That is useful information too.
A no gives you reality.
A complaint gives you a loop.
Responsibility Is Not the Same as Self-Blame

Taking responsibility does not mean pretending every bad thing that happened was your fault.
That is not strength.
That is just another trap.
You may not have chosen the layoff.
You may not have chosen the family you were born into.
You may not have chosen the illness, the breakup, the betrayal, the recession, the missed opportunity, or the person who let you down.
But you still get to choose what you do next.
That is the difference.
Self-blame says: “This is all my fault, so I should feel ashamed.”
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Responsibility says: “This happened. Now what can I do with the power I still have?”
Those are not the same thing.
One keeps you stuck in punishment.
The other moves you into action.
If you lost your job, responsibility might look like filing for benefits, updating your resume, calling three contacts, cutting one expense, and applying for roles before noon each day.
If your relationship is struggling, responsibility might look like asking for one honest conversation, naming the pattern clearly, booking counseling or coaching, and deciding what behavior you will no longer participate in.
If your health has slipped, responsibility might look like scheduling the appointment, walking for 15 minutes after lunch, planning breakfast before bed, and tracking what actually changes your energy.
No drama required.
Just clean ownership.
A life coach can be helpful here because they can keep bringing you back to the line between what happened to you and what is now yours to handle. That line matters.
If you want to get more from your life, and are looking for concrete action steps to get you there, check out our
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You do not need to carry blame that does not belong to you.
But you do need to carry the next right action.
That is how you stop handing your future over to the past.
Try This 7-Day Create Better Circumstances Challenge

If you want to make this real, give yourself seven days.
Not seven days to fix your whole life.
Seven days to prove you can stop feeding the old circumstance and start building the new one.
Pick one area only.
Your career.
Your relationship.
Your health.
Your money.
Your confidence.
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Your home.
Do not pick five areas and turn this into another reason to quit.
Pick one.
Day 1: Name the circumstance you keep complaining about
Write it plainly.
“I am tired of being broke.”
“I hate how disconnected my marriage feels.”
“I feel stuck in this job.”
“I keep saying I want to get healthy, but I do not follow through.”
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Do not dress it up.
Name the thing.
Day 2: Make your Control Map
Draw three columns:
What I control
What I can influence
What I need to release
Fill them in with real actions, people, decisions, and facts.
If you write “my whole life” under what you need to fix, you are being too vague.
Get specific.
Day 3: Turn one complaint into one request
Choose a complaint you have repeated more than once.
Then make a direct request from it.
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Ask your boss for a meeting.
Ask your partner for a specific kind of help.
Ask a friend to walk with you twice this week.
Ask a mentor to review your resume.
Ask yourself for one hour without your phone.
Make it something someone could actually say yes or no to.
Day 4: Remove one habit feeding the old circumstance
If you complain about money but keep avoiding your bank account, open it today.
If you complain about your health but keep buying food that makes you feel worse, remove one item from your regular routine.
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If you complain about your relationship but keep making sarcastic comments instead of honest requests, stop the sarcasm for one day and say the real thing.
Tiny removal.
Real consequence.
That is the game.
Day 5: Take one visible action toward the new circumstance
Visible means you can prove it happened.
You sent the email.
You made the call.
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You walked the mile.
You booked the appointment.
You applied for the job.
You cleaned the drawer.
You wrote the page.
You practiced the conversation out loud.
No imaginary progress.
A real action.
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Day 6: Track what changed
Do not only track the outcome.
Track your behavior.
Ask:
What did I do that I usually avoid?
What felt uncomfortable but useful?
What changed because I acted instead of complained?
What did I learn about the situation once I moved?
Sometimes the first win is not the result.
Sometimes the first win is realizing you are not as powerless as you thought.
Day 7: Share the result or ask for accountability
Tell someone what you did.
Not as a performance.
As a way to make the new pattern stronger.
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You might say:
“I applied for three jobs this week and I am going to keep going.”
“I asked for help instead of silently resenting everyone.”
“I looked at my finances and made one change.”
“I booked the appointment I have been avoiding.”
“I started walking again, and I want you to check in with me next Friday.”
A coach can help you turn this seven-day challenge into a longer plan with practice, feedback, and accountability. But the first proof can start right here.
One circumstance.
If you want to get more from your life, and are looking for concrete action steps to get you there, check out our
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One map.
One request.
One action.
Then another.
That is how you start creating a life instead of waiting for one to arrive.
Know this
Go-getters will always reach what they are striving towards. They never let circumstances get in the way.
They create their own success by getting up and looking for what they want in life, instead of complaining about what they can’t have.
If you want to be a go-getter then you’ll want to know about how important it is to set clear goals and take action on them every day until you’ve reached your dreams!
If you want to get more from your life, and are looking for concrete action steps to get you there, check out our
Request a Coach page. It’s a “cut the fence-sitting and take action” way to tackle your issues and actually find success.
To get off the fence and start to take action,
click or tap here.
Let’s break it down into six focus points
- Identify the circumstances you want in life.
- Set goals for your desired circumstances.
- Create habits that will help you achieve your desired circumstance.
- Get rid of bad habits that will get in the way of achieving the desired circumstance
- Repeat steps 1-4 until you have achieved your desired circumstances or new, better ones!
- Share what has changed with others who might be interested in making their own changes!
A quick note about your focus

- You will get what you pay close attention to
- The law of attraction suggests that “like attracts like”
- Find greater happiness in your life by focusing on the things you want instead of the things you don’t want
But what if I need more help?

When I first got serious about changing my own life instead of blaming others, the practice was HARD!
Notice I used the word PRACTICE because all of life is but a practice right and it’s always going to be hard at first until you get enough practice.
Besides, think about it this way. There is NO ONE on earth who came out of the womb running full sprints right?
NO!
We all had to learn how to walk through practice and now we all take that granted too!
So let me give you more ammunition for your voyage to your best life!
DO THIS
- Worry less about what you don’t want to happen and think more about your desired outcomes
- Clear up self-doubt, limiting beliefs, procrastination, and other mental blocks that prevent success
- Focus on where you want to go in life; set goals; meet them; feel good
- Enjoy the feeling of accomplishment
Everything I have listed in this article has come by way of 17 years of self-examination and insight into my own life. The lessons I have learned have been life-changing.
If you want to get more from your life, and are looking for concrete action steps to get you there, check out our
Request a Coach page. It’s a “cut the fence-sitting and take action” way to tackle your issues and actually find success.
To get off the fence and start to take action,
click or tap here.
Now that you know how to create habits for the life you want, it’s time to take action.
- Make sure your goals are specific and measurable so they can be tracked more easily.
- If something doesn’t seem like a good idea or isn’t working out as planned, let go of it and try again with another approach until you find what works best for you!
- Remember, there is no “one size fits all” solution when it comes to changing habits; we’re all different in some way.
But if I’ve helped one person change their habit successfully then this article was worth writing.
So have fun creating those new habits and remember – now is always better than later!
Need some in depth help with manifesting? Drop on by our directories choc full of Law of Attraction coaches and NLP coaches, and start bringing your visualizations to life! Or click here to have us match you to the best.
If you want to get more from your life, and are looking for concrete action steps to get you there, check out our
Request a Coach page. It’s a “cut the fence-sitting and take action” way to tackle your issues and actually find success.
To get off the fence and start to take action,
click or tap here.

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