I GET TO…

Which phrase sounds better to you, “I get to…” or “I have to…” 

Whenever you find yourself saying you “have to” do something, change it to saying you “get to” do something.  For example, instead of “I have to go to work,” change it to “I get to go to work.”  Instead of “I have to do laundry,” it’s “I get to do laundry.”  (Hey, doing laundry means you have clothes to wear!  It’s like implied gratitude.)

When you “have to” do something, it sounds like you have absolutely no choice in the matter.  Technically, you always have a choice even when it seems like you don’t.  When you say you “get to,” it implies a choice.  That phrase brings up your energy instead of dragging it down like the phrase “have to.”  

Now you get to try this out because you don’t have to!  😁