Does Being a Complainer Inhibit Success?

It is only human nature to complain sometimes, but is there a point at which the regularity of your complaints starts to eat into your chances of achieving success? I am sure we all know people who always seem to be complaining; whenever you see them, they just cannot wait to get stuck into their latest complaints.
Such people flood you with negativity, and do nothing to enhance your mood. However, it is worth stopping and thinking if you are a complainer yourself? Maybe not as bad as the worst complainer you know, but possibly enough to tilt against your chances of being a success.
Successful people tend to be positive most of the time; when they complain it is usually with justification, such as when a contractor or employee has let them down. However, they quickly move on from that complaint and get on with the positive achievement of whatever it is they are trying to do.
If you watch and listen to prolific complainers, the ones who complain about certain obstacles to their success, you will often find they are really making excuses for their own lack of, or limited, success.
Instead of facing up to and dealing with the obstacles, they treat them as an enemy, and as the reasons that they are not making progress in their lives. Instead, they should be concentrating on the positive aspects of how to overcome or avoid such obstacles. Complaining and doing no more is a drain on your chances of success, whatever field you may be in.
Those with a positive and less complaining attitude are most likely to be successful. They home in on obstacles and deal with them clinically. While frustration may show from time to time, in the end the obstacles get dealt with by those who are destined for success.
It is often said that success breeds success, but it can also be true that failure and negativity breed failure and negativity. For those who tend to be complainers, it is vital to break out of that negative cycle. It is far better to see obstacles and set backs as challenges that you set about resolving with renewed vigour.
Complaining to friends, relatives and colleagues will rarely be of any help to you, and if you are a compulsive complainer, they may quickly turn against you or try to avoid you. Most people do not like to be bombarded with negativity.
So, if after some honest thought you realised you may be too much of a complainer, then now is the time to consciously put a more positive response into all those obstacles and set backs. Instead of looking for excuses, look for positive ways to overcome or avoid the obstacles. 4.5
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