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Love and Light from HEALING Creek
Friday February 22, 2008
In my life classroom, two things happened at once ... I found out about "stinking thinking" and learned a few things about how it had effected my life.
I found out that there were a lot of things that I knew for sure - but after I took a closer look - I guess I didn't really know as much as I thought I knew. I don't know where all the things I believed came from, but I accepted that not everything was true.
I was still thinking things over when I found THE FOUR AGREEMENTS by Don Miguel Ruiz. The actual Title is A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom - THE FOUR AGREEMENTS - A Toltec Wisdom Book.
Don Miguel wrote about exactly what I was thinking about. He said that little children are like sponges, soaking up everything around them. Thousands and thousands of little ideas ... We heard it or we read it, we agreed and it became a part of us. Those ideas became little agreements in our personal book of "truth".
Think about it ... How many of us heard things like:
"You looked good in blue."
"You are quite an artist." "You are a good reader." "You are so pretty." "You are so smart."
"You have beautiful penmanship." "You sing like and angel." "You are so funny!"
All good things, right?
But ...
What if someone wasn't feeling well? What if someone was having a bad day and they took it out on us What if someone was just being mean?
"Must you sing that same song over and over? You can't sing!"
"Why are you so dumb?" "Why can't you be like your little sister?" "Why can't you play ball like your brother?" "You look ridiculous in that color!" "Eating that will make you sick." "You make me sick." ... and some children hear even worse things like "I wish you were never born!"
We believed everything. They said it so it must be true! We agreed and recorded it in our own personal "book of truth" ...
BUT ...
We are not children anymore and it's time to put away childish things.
Some of my "stinking thinking" came directly from my personal "book of truth"! Is it possible to clear the slate? Can I start over?
Don Miguel Ruiz says we can, and after five years of using THE FOUR AGREEMENTS in my own life, I can tell you that it has worked for me too.
He suggested that when one of those random ideas "pop into your head", stop yourself and apply THE FOUR AGREEMENTS lavishly to those old and new agreements.
THE FOUR AGREEMENTS are easy to remember, and with a little practice, you can develop habits that will change the way you think and that will change the way you live.
Let me share THE FOUR AGREEMENTS in Don Miguel Ruiz's own words:
1. BE IMPECCABLE WITH YOUR WORD
Speak with integrity. Say only what you mean. Avoid using the word to speak against yourself or to gossip about others. Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love.
2. DON'T TAKE ANYTHING PERSONALLY
Nothing others do is because of you. What others say and do is a projection of their own reality, their own dream. When you are immune to the opinions and action of others, you won't be the victim of needless suffering.
3. DON'T MAKE ASSUMPTIONS
Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really want. Communicate with others as clearly as you can to avoid misunderstandings, sadness and drama. With just this one agreement, you can completely transform your life.
4. ALWAYS DO YOUR BEST
Your best is going to change from moment to moment; it will be different when you are healthy as opposed to sick. Under any circumstance, simply do your best, and you will avoid self-judgment, self-abuse and regret.
They're NOT meant to be a religion although they could become a way of life. It's common sense. Making those four agreements with yourself could eliminate a great deal of emotional drama, pain and poison from your life.
Don Miguel Ruiz says:
You need to be very strong to adopt the Four Agreements - but if you can begin to live your life with these agreements, the transformation in your life will be amazing.
On being impeccable with your word ...
Our words are powerful. We can speak words that create harmony or we can speak words that create discord. We can speak blessings or curses on ourselves and the people around us. Your words can set you free, or it can enslave you even more than you know.
It isn't just what we say. It's keeping our word. We shouldn't just say what we mean. We should mean what we say.
Don Miguel promised: "If you make an agreement with yourself to be impeccable with your word, just with that intention, the truth will manifest through you and clean all the emotional poison that exists within you."
On not taking anything personally ...
Gracious! None of us has to walk very far out our front door to find someone who is easily offended. The first person you find might even be you!
Don Miguel said, "Nothing other people do is because of you. It is because of themselves ... whatever they feel and do is just a projection of their own personal dream, a reflection of their past agreements.
What you say, what you do, and the opinions you have are according to the agreements you have made - and these opinions have nothing to do with me ... I know it is your problem and not my problem. It is the way you see the world. It is nothing personal, because you are dealing with yourself, not me.
Others are going to have their own opinion according to their belief system, so nothing they think about me is really about me, but it is about them. You may even tell me, "Miguel, what you are saying is hurting me." But it is not what I am saying that is hurting you; it is that you have wounds that I touch by what I have said. You are hurting yourself ... Then if you get mad at me, I know you are dealing with yourself.
I am the excuse for you to get mad.
And you get mad because you are afraid, because you are dealing with fear. If you are not afraid, there is no way that you will get mad at me. If you are not afraid, there is no way that you will get jealous or sad. If you live without fear, if you love, there is no place for any of these emotions.
When you feel good, everything around you is good. When everything around you is great, everything makes you happy. You are loving everything that is around you, because you are loving yourself. Because you like the way you are. Because you are content with you. Because you are happy with your life ...
Don't take anything personally."
As you make a habit of not taking anything personally, you won't need to place your trust in what others do or say. You will only need to trust yourself to make responsible choices. You are never responsible for the actions of others; you are only responsible for you ...
You can say "I love you" without fear of being ridiculed or rejected. You can ask for what you need. You can say yes, or you can say no - whatever you choose - without guilt or self-judgment. You can choose to follow your heart always.
On not making assumptions ...
This was a big one for me, the Queen of magic thinkers. I had learned to be pretty intuitive as a child. I learned how to watch people because it was important to know if Dad was in a good mood or a bad mood. That skill carried over into other relationships. My friends and family began to trust my "intuition" as much as I did, but no one can know everything about everybody 100% of the time. PERIOD.
Looking ahead for clues made me feel like I was in control of my life but I wasn't in control of anything, even myself! I couldn't see that I was robbing myself of the opportunity to just live life and let life unfold the way it is going to unfold. Instead of trying to guess what was ahead ALL THE TIME, I needed to quit jumping to confusions and just learn from the experience.
I was sick of the chaos when I read this:
We have the tendency to make assumptions about everything. The problem with making assumptions is that we BELIEVE they are truth. We could swear they are real.
We make assumptions about what others are doing or thinking - we take it personally - then we blame them and react by sending emotional poison with our word. That is why whenever we make assumptions, we are asking for problems. We make assumptions, we misunderstand, we take it personally, and we end up creating a whole big drama for nothing ...
We only see what we want to see and hear what we want to hear. We don't perceive things the way they are ... when the truth comes out, we find out it was not what we thought at all ...
Making assumptions in our relationships is really asking for problems. Often we make the assumption that our partners know what we think and that we don't have to say what we want ... Making assumptions in relationships leads to a lot of fights, a lot of difficulties, a lot of misunderstanding with people we supposedly love ... when we believe in something we assume we are right about it to the point that we will destroy relationships in order to defend our position.
We make the assumption that everyone sees life the way we do.
We assume that others think the way we think, feel the way we feel, judge the way we judge ... This is the biggest assumption that humans make. And this is why we have a fear of being ourselves around others. Because we think everyone else will judge us, victimize us, abuse us and blame us as we do ourselves. So even before others have a chance to reject us, we have already rejected ourselves.
This is the way the human mind works ... Often when you go into a relationship with someone you like, you have to justify why you like that person. You only see what you want to see and you deny there are things you don't like about that person ...
Your love will not change anybody.
If others change, it's because they want to change, not because you can change them. Then something happens between the two of you, and you get hurt. Suddenly you see what you didn't want to see before, only now it is amplified by your emotional poison. Now you have to justify your emotional pain and blame them for your choices ...
REAL LOVE IS ACCEPTING OTHER PEOPLE THE WAY THEY ARE WITHOUT TRYING TO CHANGE THEM.
If we try to change them, this means we don't really like them ... If others feel they have to change you, that means they really don't love you just the way you are. So why be with someone if you're not the way he or she wants you to be? ...
Not making assumptions changed my life! There is real freedom in asking myself, "Are you sure?" "Do you have all the facts?" "Does this really matter?" "Is this any of my business?".
There is a lot of drama in people thinking they know "the truth", but which "book of truth" are they quoting from? Next time you have a chance to witness an argument, watch and see if both people aren't telling the other person what they think! No wonder they are both mad! Neither one feels like they are being heard or understood!
ALWAYS DO YOUR BEST!
Don Miguel said that when we are doing our best, we are going to live our life intensely:
You are going to be productive, you are going to be good to yourself, because you will be giving yourself to your family, to your community, to everything. But it is the action that is going to make you feel intensely happy. When you always do your best, you take action. Doing your best is taking the action because you love it, not because you're expecting a reward ... If we like what we do, if we always do our best, then we are really enjoying life.
We are having fun, we don't get bored, we don't have frustrations ... DOING YOUR BEST REALLY DOESN'T FEEL LIKE WORK BECAUSE YOU ENJOY WHATEVER YOU ARE DOING ... Action is about living fully.
Inaction is the way that we deny life. Inaction is sitting in front of the television every day for years because you are afraid to be alive and to take the risk of expressing what you are.
Expressing what you are is taking action. YOU CAN HAVE MANY GREAT IDEAS IN YOUR HEAD, BUT WHAT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE IS ACTION. WITHOUT ACTION UPON AN IDEA, THERE WILL BE NO MANIFESTATION, NO RESULTS AND NO REWARD ...
God is life. God is life in action. The best way to say, I love you God", is to live your life doing your best. The best way to say, "Thank You God," is by letting go of the past and living in the present moment, right here and right now.
Whatever life takes away from you, let it go.
When you surrender and let go of the past, you allow yourself to be fully alive in the moment. Letting go of the past means you can enjoy the dream that is happening right now ... There is no time to miss anyone or anything because you are alive.
Not enjoying what is happening right now is living in the past and being only half alive. This leads to self-pity, suffering and tears.
You were born with the right to be happy. You were born with the right to love, to enjoy and to share your love. You are alive, so take your life and enjoy it. Don't resist life passing through you.
Just your existence proves the existence of God. Your existence prove the existence of life and energy ... We don't need to know or prove anything. Just to be, to take a risk and enjoy life, is all that matters.
Say no when you want to say no, and yes when you want to say yes. You have the right to be you.
You can only be you when you do your best ... By doing your best, the habits of misusing your word, taking things personally, and making assumptions will become weaker and less frequent with time. You don't need to judge yourself, feel guilty, or punish yourself if you can't keep these agreements ... If you do your best in the search for personal freedom, in the search for self-love, you will discover that it's just a matter of time before you find what you are looking for.
Powerful! I understand more about myself every time I return to this book. I am sharing it with you but it is your choice what to do with it. Over my lifetime, I have accepted other agreements about me, my life, my family, and the world and not all of them were kind to me, my life, my family and the world. Some of those ideas held me back and opened me up to abusing myself or accepting abuse form others.
I was a victim. I abused myself by criticizing myself. I abused myself when I thought I didn't do something good enough. I abused myself when I made mistakes. Because I was saying negative things to myself, I allowed other people to say the same things to me because deep down, I already thought those things were true. They weren't true. I did dumb things but I am NOT a dumb person. I made mistakes but I am NOT a mistake. I needed to forgive myself for getting me into some of those messes and then relegate those messes in the past where they belong.
Bad things could have happened a year ago or ten years ago but they are in the past. The only way they can hurt me now is if I bring them back. Some things hurt like heck a year ago but it doesn't have to come back and hurt me 30 seconds ago! There is no good that will come out of keeping that pain alive.
If I can forgive me, I can apply the same forgiveness to the people who might have hurt me. Using the Four Agreements, I can accept that what they did at the time was more about them than it was about me. I can't make any assumption about what they did or why they did it because I do not know, and even if I asked that person, they may not know either. Anger, Jealousy, Rage all come from fear ... and the ones who hurt us may not know or be ready to know why they hurt us because they are still so busy hurting themselves. Doing our best means having compassion for ourselves, and the ones around us.
If I keep my speech impeccable, if I don't take anything personally, if I don't make assumptions, and if I do my best every day for all the days of my life, that is all that I can do.
If others choose to do the same thing, that is their choice. If others choose not to do the same thing, that is also their choice.
I can only do what I can do to make my life a better place for me.
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Thursday February 21, 2008
Regarding Meditation and Prayer ... Eastern religions teach people to set aside the everyday to focus on the Divine for a few minutes everyday ... I'm afraid too many of us in the West look at God as some sort of a Divine Vending Machine, or Someone we turn to when we want something. What spoiled brats we can be!
Spirituality requires an investment.
It takes time to "grow Faith" the same way it takes time to be a wife or husband, to be a mom or dad, to gain an education, to master our profession ... even to have good health. None of those things would happen without a little effort on our part and an investment of time!
Maybe our meditation and prayer would do us more good if we chose to use that time to connect with the Divine instead of trying to force the divine to connect with us!
What if we started our prayer and meditation by clearing our minds of the things in our lives? What if we set aside the to-do lists, the schedules, the worries ... to truly think about God? What if we let our minds go to a peaceful place ... imagining a meadow full of flowers, a mountain top or a sandy beach ... any place that would fill us with awe?
What if we let ourselves believe that the God of the Universe, the Creator of all the beauty that has ever inspired us, put that beauty there just for us? God loves us THAT MUCH.
If we were the only person in the whole universe, God would still delight in blessing us!
That's true! God loves YOU.
God has GREAT FAITH in you. He knows your deepest heart and your every thought.
Prayer and Meditation can be a time to immerse ourselves in God's eternal, unconditional, divine love. It's personal.
It's intimate. It's real.
The first time I tried, I felt like the little girl in MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET saying "I believe - I believe - I believe" and feeling nothing ... but I kept on doing it anyway!
One day, I felt how much God loves me. I really felt it! It made me feel so humbled. It made me cry to think that God loved me right where I was, no matter what. I felt warm all over. I felt goodness fill every cell. It made me want to do better. It made me want to please Him. It changed my point of view the way nothing else ever has.
Today, I think of God as my loving Father. He is more wealthy and powerful than anyone we can name. Everything you see or touch belongs to Him! He was meeting my needs before I even knew I had needs. He used everyone of my life experiences to bring me to this moment. What loving father would ever send us on a mission without making sure we have everything we need? My life has a purpose and my Father has a job for me to do!
My point is that God will never seem alive to us as long as we think of him as a vending machine, dispensing spiritual snacks every time we put in a prayer!
God can CHANGE our lives if we allow ourselves to change the way we look at God. God's love can fill us up like nothing else ever has! No wonder my life didn't work before. I ran on empty for a long time. Taking the time to reach out to God and seeing just a small part of His love brought me healing like I had never known.
A few weeks ago, I repeated a quote I read that said ...
Wisdom is knowing that I am everything and nothing at the same time.
I know that I am everything to God. It's personal. But I also know that you are everything too! It's personal. It doesn't take one thing away from how much He loves me for Him to love each of you the very same way! In the big picture, I am just a speck ... one little twinkle in a sky full of stars ...
Living this way put my everyday into perspective. It cut my worries down to size. It changed the way I pray ... It made my life less about being a star and more about celebrating the twinkle in all of us.
WHO AM I
written and performed by Casting Crowns
Who am I? That the Lord of all the earth, Would care to know my name, Would care to feel my hurt. Who am I? That the bright and morning star, Would choose to light the way, For my ever wandering heart.
Not because of who I am, But because of what you've done. Not because of what I've done, But because of who you are.
I am a flower quickly fading, Here today and gone tomorrow, A wave tossed in the ocean, A vapor in the wind. Still you hear me when I'm calling, Lord, you catch me when I'm falling, And you've told me who I am. I am yours. I am yours.
Who am I? That the eyes that see my sin Would look on me with love And watch me rise again. Who am I? That the voice that calmed the sea, Would call out through the rain, And calm the storm in me.
Not because of who I am, But because of what you've done. Not because of what I've done, But because of who you are.
I am a flower quickly fading, Here today and gone tomorrow, A wave tossed in the ocean, A vapor in the wind. Still you hear me when I'm calling, Lord, you catch me when I'm falling, And you've told me who I am. I am yours.
Not because of who I am, But because of what you've done. Not because of what I've done, But because of who you are.
I am a flower quickly fading, Here today and gone tomorrow, A wave tossed in the ocean, A vapor in the wind. Still you hear me when I'm calling, Lord, you catch me when I'm falling, And you've told me who I am. I am yours. I am yours.
I am yours.
Whom shall I fear? Whom shall I fear? 'Cause I am yours. I am yours.
( You can hear WHO AM I in comment section - Thanks. )
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Wednesday February 20, 2008
In the beginning of recovery, I felt like my mind was going in a thousand different directions and none of them was helping!
I don't know what event will start your recovery, but I do know that whatever it is, it will come with it's own set of challenges ... changes that you will have to make ... Maybe, you have to leave the place you have been? Maybe, that means finding a new home and a new job and starting over or maybe it means making the best of what is left?
I looked for peace in a lot of ways ... Maybe, some of these have or will work for you?
Self-Soothing Techniques by Mark Dombeck, Ph.D. and Jolyn Wells-Moran, Ph.D.
Use self-soothing techniques to calm yourself down when upset. Self-soothing techniques are methods for calming and relaxing the body and the mind and soothing jangled nerves:
Venting and Journaling
People are social creatures. Most find comfort in talking about problems with others when they become upset. First, because the experience of being listened to and hopefully understood helps people to feel less alone in their pain. Second, because talking about a problem, taking the time to put it into words, helps people to get a grip on that problem and to see possibilities that weren't obvious before.
Venting generally requires an audience. You may be able to vent to trusted confidants (e.g., trusted friends, family, mentors, therapists, or clergy), but when you do this, keep in mind that your confidant is giving a gift to you of their time and attention each time they listen to you rant. If you continually vent to others without finding ways to give them back "gifts" of similar value (for instance, your taking time to listen to them vent and rant), you will likely burn out your friendship.
Journaling can provide a good outlet for times when you need to vent but don't have anyone to vent to. Journaling couldn't be simpler. You simply write about your experience and emotion. Whatever you might say to a confidant, you can simply write down in a journal entry. In effect, the journal itself becomes your confidant.
Though not offering the comforts of a human listener, journaling has some advantages of its own. Journaling can occur any time of day or night, and can go on for a long as you have pen and paper to spare. Unlike spoken venting which is lost forever once it leaves your mouth, you can look at your journal as a sort of self-monitoring tool. A review of your old journal entries reveals what problems you have succeeded in solving and what problems remain to work on.
The availability of online internet communities makes possible a new journaling format ( We are already here! Blogstream is perfect for this! ). You can join an online community, and vent your emotions to the small audience of members. You can do this any time of day or night, and, although other people get to read what you write, they are also able to comment on what you have written and provide valuable support or criticism.
Relaxation Methods
Several relaxation techniques have been developed which people can use to actively create a state of muscular and mental relaxation, even when they are wound up and tense. Many of these techniques work to create their relaxing effect by interrupting existing muscular tension states. Practice of these various relaxation strategies can help break down tension and promote a relaxed feeling state.
Progressive Muscle Relaxation
PMR is based on two observations: 1) that muscles can be actively tensed, but not actively relaxed (relaxation depends on a "letting go" process, not a tension-producing one), and 2) that it is easier to relax and "let go" a muscle after it has just been tensed up, than it is to relax a muscle which has not been tensed up. A person practicing PMR first tenses and then lets go different muscle groups in sequence until they have tensed and then relaxed every muscle group in the body. By the end of the tension-relaxation cycle the body has entered into a deeper state of relaxation than would otherwise have been possible.
Autogenic Training
Autogenic Training is a method for promoting a profoundly relaxed state of consciousness.
Basically, the practitioner sits or lies down quietly and focused on inner experiences to the exclusion of outer ones. Practice starts with a breathing exercise probably adapted from yogic pranayama practice; while breathing deeply, breaths are exhaled slowly so that it takes twice as long to exhale as it does to breath in. This breathing exercise provides a centering feeling of peace and calm.
Yoga and Pranayama
To someone living in the developed world, yoga seems like a relatively new sort of exercise program that has a lot to do with stretching. The various exercises and practices making up yoga were designed to tame the various forces inside the mind and body that want to walk in different directions and bring them together with a single purpose of becoming more holy. Yoga provides its students with a wealth of benefits, among them opportunities for profound relaxation, improved mental and emotional control, and freedom from the aches and pains of aging.
Meditation
Most people have very little control over their minds. Though they can certainly take control when they need to, in order to concentrate on a project or problem, for instance, when they are not concentrating, their minds wander, daydream, and chatter incessantly. They want things, even things that are very impractical to want, or very dangerous. They worry about things, even things that are very unreasonable to worry about. These desires and worries greatly influence people's moods, especially the negative ones that people become motivated to change.
The mind's desires and worries wouldn't matter so much - wouldn't have so much power over people's moods - if they didn't take them seriously. Most people do take them seriously, however. They are identified with their thoughts and feelings - embedded in them - lacking in a certain kind of perspective necessary to understand that just because something feels urgent doesn't actually make it urgent.
Meditation techniques are designed to help people grow a larger perspective on the contents of their mind. With this perspective, people can move from being their moment to moment worries and desires, to having their moment to moment worries and desires. Instead of being worried, people can start to understand that they are experiencing a worrying feeling. The same old worries and desires are still there after growing the new perspective, but now they are things you can manipulate and choose whether to take seriously or not, rather than things that define you as a person. Because the new perspective allows you to view your mental landscape in a new and powerfully freeing way, it is sometimes referred to as the "witness consciousness".
Self-soothing methods help to sooth calm and relax you when you are upset. However, they are not the only reasonable approach to helping alter your unwanted moods. Sometimes, as the saying goes, a change is as good as a rest ...
Distraction
Distraction is a surprisingly effective technique for changing your mood. When you realize that you have become upset, choose to interrupt your negative mood by engaging in something that distracts you from what has upset you. For best results, the thing you engage yourself in as a means of distraction should be both absorbing and interestingto you. Doing this thing should either require your full attention, or be so absorbing of your attention that you will forget yourself. Watching a movie or TV show, surfing the net, reading a book, listening to (energizing) music, calling a friend, and exercising are good examples of the latter, while engaging in detail-oriented tasks like writing, programming, cleaning your house, weeding your garden, playing music or singing or otherwise being artistic, or organizing your files are examples of the former. You should do something you like doing if at all possible. Work can be a fine distraction if you like working or find it absorbing, but it won't work out well if you don't.
Distraction works because it interrupts your mood and forces you to "shift gears". Many negative moods contain an element of rumination to them. When you ruminate, you go over your problem or worry again and again in your mind. Each time you go over your problem or worry, you reinforce its grip on you. Distraction breaks this grip by forcing you to think about other things. If the thing you distract yourself with is sufficiently compelling or demanding of your attention, you will temporarily stop ruminating and start to feel better. Maybe not good, but better.
Distraction is not anything more than a temporary respite or reprieve from negative moods. It is not a permanent cure or fix and should not be thought of as one.
Organization
A very good way to distract yourself productively is to do something to better organize your life. By organize your life we mean clean and order your living or working spaces, your personal calendar, the way you handle your finances, your computer, or the way you dress, exercise and generally carry yourself. Cleaning your house can be an incredibly empowering thing to do, especially when you are feeling bad. Typically, when you are feeling badly, you are also feeling out of control. Your internal state is often a reflection of your external state. When your environment is messy, you feel messy inside. When this is the case, any time you spend organizing your environment (your home or work environment, etc.) is also time you spend building up your own personal sense of control and accomplishment. Your efforts to organize your life are thus both distracting from your mood, and separately empowering and confidence building. It's a simple thing, but it works.
Comedy and Humor
Another good way to distract yourself is to immerse yourself in comedy and humor. Watch a funny movie or TV show. Listen to a favorite comedian's routine. Read a funny book or magazine. Find something that will make you forget yourself and laugh out loud for a while.
When you're feeling anxious or down, you tend to have a rather grim face, and your thoughts, which are keyed to your emotions, are similarly grim. By laughing, you engage facial and body muscles associated with positive emotions. As these emotions are enacted, however temporarily, it will become slightly easier for you to remember positive thoughts and positive memories. It's a temporary effect, to be sure, but it can be a relief. Laughing also has a relaxing effect, and will help to reduce body tension.
Physical Exercise
Physical exercise is an incredibly powerful and compact means of altering your mood. Regular physical exercise offers many of the benefits of the other techniques we've described for controlling moods. It distracts you by causing you to attend to your body sensations rather than to your agitated thoughts. It relaxes and physically exhausts you (after a workout is complete), helping you sleep soundly. It removes the kinks from your muscles and helps you to stay limber and strong. It elevates your mood directly (during and just after a workout) by increasing circulation of naturally occurring body chemicals known as endorphins. Finally, it increases your overall general health and stamina and strongly prevents the development of numerous disabling diseases that otherwise would make life difficult in later years. There is a certain amount of physical pain involved in exercise, but if you can get past that, the benefits are enormous.
An isolated exercise session will be useful for altering mood, mostly because it will bedistracting and physically exhausting. However, for maximum benefit, including some prophylactic (preventative) protection from negative moods, exercise should be fairly vigorous and repeated multiple times per week.
Most all aerobic exercise, regularly practiced, will provide benefits.
- Calisthenics (jumping jacks, push-ups, sit ups, etc
- Exercise classes (Aerobics, Spinning, Jazzercize, Yoga, Pilates, etc.)
- Team sports (baseball, softball, rowing, golf, etc.)
- Solo sports (jogging, swimming, hiking, climbing, etc.)
- Working out with weights or "Nautilus" style machines.
- Martial arts
Yoga offers a particularly well balanced and designed exercise program for those who like it (provided that you pursue it regularly and progress through to intermediate classes where the poses begin to require strength to master).
To read any of the complete articles: Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Venting and Journaling, Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Relaxation Methods, Progressiv.. , Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Autogenic Training and Yoga , Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Meditation , Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Distraction , Mental Help Net - Psychological Self-Tools - Online Self-Help Book - Self-Soothing Techniques: Physical Exercise
There were other little things that worked for me too like ...
Taking walks
Having a cup of tea on the back porch Long hot baths Listening to music Watching Birds
Reading poetry or quotes ... didn't take much concentration but it changed the things I was thinking about
Photography Painting (pictures, not walls - but painting walls is good too if it relaxes you) Gardening Going for drives in the mountains
There were more ... but one of the ways that helped me was blogging here with all of you. It wasn't just a chance to write down my feelings, but often, I'd learn from you, reading about your challenges and the way you worked things out. It gave me comfort that things would work out for me too (and they did!) ...
What are some of the ways you comfort yourself?
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Tuesday February 19, 2008
I always thought everyone thought like me. It never even occurred to me that there was another way! I didn't know that there was a healthier way. As I read the list the first time, I let myself think of examples of things I had talked myself into or out of ...
Addictive Thinking by Abraham J. Twerski, M.D.
Many of the features of addictive thinking can be seen in co-dependents as well as addicts because they stem from a similar origin: low self-esteem.
The self-deceptive features of addictive thinking and co-dependency have much in common. In both, there are often denial, rationalization, and projection. In both, contradictory ideas can coexist, and there is fierce resistance to change oneself and a desire to change others. In both, there is a delusion of control, and in both there is, invariably, low self-esteem. Thus, all the features of addictive thinking are present in both, and the only distinguishing feature may be the chemical use.
There was laughter when a man suggested that alcoholic thinking is every bit as destructive as alcoholic drinking. To illustrate, the man read the questions from a self-test for alcoholism, substituting the word THINKING for the word DRINKING. Here is what we read:
Are You an Addictive Thinker?
1. Do you lose time from work due to thinking? 2. Is thinking making your home life unhappy? 3. Have you ever felt remorse after thinking? 4. Have you gotten into financial difficulties as a result of thinking? 5. Does your thinking make you careless of your family's welfare? 6. Has your ambition decreased since thinking? 7. Does thinking cause you to have difficulty sleeping? 8. Has your efficiency decreased since thinking? 9. Is thinking jeopardizing your job or business? 10. Do you think to escape worries or troubles?
The point is that even in the absence of chemicals, distorted, addictive thinking wreaks havoc.
Many addictive thinkers come to their conclusions because they reverse ordinary cause and effect. Although addictive thinkers turn logic around, they are absolutely convinced that their logic is valid. They not only resist rational arguments to the contrary, but also they cannot understand why others do not see the "obvious". An example is: The fact that chemicals usually cause the problems, but the addicted person believes that problems cause chemical use.
The peculiarity of addictive thinking, he says, is the inability to reason with oneself. This can apply to various emotional and behavioral problems, but is invariably found in addiction: alcoholism, other drug addiction, compulsive gambling, sexual addiction, eating disorders, nicotine addiction, and co-dependency.
The three most common elements in addictive thinking are:
1. Denial The addicted person finds accepting the diagnosis of addiction every bit as devastating as accepting a diagnosis of cancer.
2. Rationalization Rationalization means providing "good" reasons instead of the true reason. Like denial, this defense is not exclusive to chemically dependent people, though addicts can be very adept at it. Rationalization also preserves the status quo, making the addict feel it is acceptable not to make necessary changes. This characteristic of addictive thinking can operate long after an addict overcomes denial and becomes abstinent.
3. Projection Projection means placing the blame on others for things we are really responsible for ourselves. 1. It reinforces denial. 2. It helps preserve the status quo. Blaming someone else seems to relieve an addict from the responsibility of making changes: "As long as you do this to me, you cannot expect me to change." Since the others are not likely to change, the drinking and the other drug use can continue.
Denial, Rationalization and Projection are all subconscious acts. These three major elements of addictive thinking - denial, rationalization, and projection - must be addressed at every stage of recovery.
In recovery, an addict's perceptions undergo a gradual change. With the help of counseling and working the Twelve-Step program, addicts become less self-centered and less exquisitely sensitive. As sobriety progresses, self-esteem improves and they no longer interpret everything as personal, as belittling. They begin to take responsibility for their actions and stop blaming others. Things that used to provoke anger and rage no longer do so.
Every aspect of recovery is subject to growth. Accepting life on it's own terms, accepting powerlessness, surrendering to a Higher Power, taking and sharing a moral inventory, making amends ... all those things take place gradually.
Stinking Thinking
by Robert Burney M.A.
The "stinking thinking" of Co-dependency causes us to have a dysfunctional relationship with ourselves and others. These are some traits of that stinking thinking:
1. Black and White Thinking:
The disease comes from an absolute black and white, right/wrong, always and never perspective. "I will always be alone." "I never get a break." Any negative thing that happens gets turned into a sweeping generality.
2. Negative Focus:
The disease always wants to focus on the half of the glass that is empty and lament, rather than be grateful for what we have. Even if the glass is 7/8 ths full the disease can find some negative to focus on. (On the other extreme are some people who focus only on the good as a way of denying their feelings.)
3. Magical Thinking:
Mind reading, fortune telling, assuming - we think we can read other peoples minds and feelings, or foretell the future, and then act as if what we assume is the reality. We often create self-fulfilling prophecies this way.
4. Starring in the Soap Opera:
Blowing things out of proportion, playing the "King or Queen of tragedy." Some of us are addicted to "Trauma Dramas"and want the excitement and intensity of dramatic scenes while others of us are terrified of conflict. It is quite common in codependent relationships to have one person who is over-indulgent and dramatic emotionally coupled with someone who wants to avoid conflict and emotions at all costs.
5. Self-Discount:
Inability to receive, or to admit to our own positive qualities or accomplishments. When someone gives us a compliment we minimize it ("Oh it was nothing"), make a joke out of it, or just ignore the compliment by changing the subject or turning the compliment back on the other person.
6. Emotional Reasoning:
Reasoning from feelings. "I feel like a failure therefore I am a failure." Believing that what we feel is who we are without separating the inner child's feelings about what happened a long time ago from the adults feelings in the now.
7. Shoulds:
"Shoulds," "must," "ought to," and "have to" come from a parent or authority figure. "Should" means "I don't want to but they are making me." Adults don't have shoulds - adults have choices.
8. Self-Labeling:
Identifying with our shortcomings and mistakes, with our human imperfection, and calling our self names like "stupid," "loser," "jerk," or "fool" instead of accepting our humanity and learning from any mistakes or shortcomings.
9. Personalizing and Blame:
Blaming yourself for something you weren't entirely responsible for, or for how someone else feels. Conversely, you may blame other people, external events, or fate, while overlooking how your own attitudes and behavior may have contributed to a problem.
Codependent Stinking Thinking + The Rules for Being Human + Risking
Even today, I have to be mindful of the way I think. Just because an idea pops into my head doesn't mean it's true! It could just as easily be one of those random wacky thoughts that just appear. Who knows where they come from?
Maybe something I overheard, a movie I watched, a book I read ... We are bombarded with over 6,000 messages everyday. Not every single thing that comes to my mind is worth my attention!
I had to give myself permission to think in a new way:
As a Person I have the Right to:Be myself.
Refuse requests without feeling guilty.
Be competent and be proud of my accomplishments.
Feel and express anger.
Ask for affection and help (may be turned down, but can ask.)
Be treated as a capable adult.
Be illogical in making decisions.
Make mistakes - and be responsible for them.
Change my mind.
Say, "I don't know."
Say, "I don't agree."
Say, "I don't care."
Offer no reasons or excuses for justifying my behavior.
Have my opinions be given respect.
Have my needs be as important as the needs of others.
Tell someone what my needs are (they may not care to do anything about it.)
Evaluate my own behavior, thoughts, and emotions and be responsible for their initiation and the consequences upon myself.
Take pride in my body and define attractiveness in my own terms.
Grow, learn, change - value my age and experience.
And sometimes to make demands on others.
Codependent twisted thinking, I have the right to, One Day at a Time |
In spite of our best intentions, "stinking thinking" doesn't just disappear overnight. It takes work to change old habits ...
Tomorrow, I'll share something that worked for me.
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