Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Suffering

The Budda said, “Life is suffering.” I know suffering, but I respectfully would like to disagree with the Budda. We all know suffering, and some of us have had more then our fair share, but life is -- just that… life is.
Suffering is a response to self-blame, not to life. When we perceive that the unkindness of others or nature is somehow our due, our suffering is great. But when we feel no self-blame, when we truly know, deep in our heart, that we are good, we are innocent - then we take the life handed to us without suffering it. That is not to say that we don’t feel disappointment or sadness, or even a spark of anger - but we do not carry it within us. We do not dwell on the upset, we move forward, focusing on the solution.
Our lack of self-blame allows us to be in touch with our true self, our innocence, our deservingness, and we move forward standing upright - not doubled over in pain. It is not suffering. We are feeling our feelings and our strengths, hopes, confidence… our self-love. We are moving forward in acceptance of what is.
If you defend your right to feel wrong or deny it when you do, you will experience life as suffering. But… you can be free of suffering and you can experience life as is -- and then choose to focus on the love, the good, the cup half-full.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

A Quote from a Harry Potter Book

I heard Oprah quote from a Harry Potter Book recently. My memory might not have it exactly as it was stated but it went something very, very close to this, “The happiest man alive would be the one who looks in the mirror and sees exactly who he is”.
Most women or men looking in the mirror see their physical flaws, past mistakes and/or failures, and remember experiencing unkindnesses from others. I say this with confidence as I’ve lived my own life, have friends and family and have worked with hundreds and hundreds of clients who experience this kind of seeing. Is there truth to this quote? My answer is, “Yes.” This is how I see it: I believe each of us is on a journey towards reaching this experience of happiness when looking in the mirror. We spend a little or a lot of time, depending on our needs and our personality, correcting the negative beliefs we carry. Each time we correct a mistake belief in our self-concept we feel a bit happier with our self, we become a bit kinder to our self, and often, that kindness then gets extended to others. When we have corrected all of our mistakes in how we think about our self, when we have found compassionate understanding for all of our “flaws”, when we come to appreciate all of the lessons or gifts we received by having these “flaws” and when we have found self-acceptance and our innocence - then our reflection in the mirror will bring us joy… and a love so great and so strengthening that we will not only see it in our selves, but in everyone and everything. The life journey that requires facing our fears and touching our pain is rewarded ten-fold with joy. The love that is you may be covered by fear - but like the sun that is covered by clouds, it is there, it is real, and it shines!

Thursday, April 1, 2010

MAKING FRIENDS WITH "UNFRIENDLY" EMOTIONS

No one likes the painful emotions, the ones that make us sad and tearful, frustrated and angry, despairing, fearful or panicked. I believe that the reasons why the population of the United States is experiencing such an epidemic of depression is that we've been raised to either judge ourselves for having the pain or we haven't learned how to resolve the pain - so it's pushed into our subconscious for relief. We use excessive alcohol, sex, sugar, caffeine and nicotine to help us to suppress the pain. We also use excessive shopping, gambling, working, exercise, love obsessions and under or overeating to do this, as well.
As a psychotherapist in private practice for over 23 years I've heard more than a few depressed patients say that feeling their anger wouldn't help to change anything. Partly true -- feeling and expressing their anger may not change another person or situation, but it absolutely will change their mental/emotional/physical state -- giving them back their Vital Energy. Depression is not a feeling, it is a mechanism in which a person's Vital Energy (Prana, Chi)is used to hold down their uncomfortable emotional energy. The result is an inner struggle that depletes them, making them feel lethargic and unmotivated. In the case of anxiety, the person over-focuses on the upsetting emotion, getting locked into it and depleted by it. In both cases the individual is over-focusing, either by doing so directly (anxiety) or by focusing their Vital Energy towards it in resistence to it (depression). In both of these cases the patient would agree that the emotional energy they are stuck with is considered by them to be an "unfriendly" one - a painful one.
What's the antidote? How can we learn to face rather than run from pain?
The process of making friends with our pain starts with understanding that all feelings (whether emotional or physical) are friendly messengers -- coming to us for the purpose of keeping us whole and healthy -- not to hurt us. If we can stay with that thought rather than reverting to the thought that it is some kind of punishment or failure on our part we have crossed the first hurdle in making friends with pain.
The second step is using the signal to look deeper inside of our thoughts and beliefs to find the self-blame that is the underpinning of emotional pain. How are we blaming ourselves for the pain? Here's an example - if I like my brown eyes, and someone comes over to me and tells me that I have ugly eyes because they are brown, I will not be upset because I do not agree. If, instead, I didn't like my eyes I would be in agreement with the persons statement and I would either become hurt (sad) or angry (a defensive stand against hurt) towards this person for saying that to me. If I use my pain as a signal to look inside - I can see that I am holding a negative belief about myself and I am now, being conscious of it, able to question it and change the negative belief into an atleast neutral one. Here's another example - if I am insecure about being smart enough to go to college, and someone with a college degree calls me "dumb", I will most likely feel insulted, and feel either hurt or angry towards them. But, if I were secure about my intellect and someone called me "dumb" I would probably just ignore it or chuckle. With no insecure idea inside of me to be triggered by the comment I would not react with pain. If I did, it would be an opportunity for me to explore my true beliefs about myself and have the opportunity to correct it. Correction is the name of the game. When our mind is filled with negative ideas about who we are, our emotions signal us, and provides us with the opportunity to make corrections. Life is much sweeter when we are not walking around carrying a load of negative beliefs about our selves. If you find that you need some assistence in changing the beliefs I highly suggest that you ask for help, from friends, family, and, if need be, a psychotherapist. Our beliefs about our selves influence every decision we make for our self. The better we think and feel about our selves the more we beleive we deserve and the better we treat our selves. There are no "unfriendly" emotions - only signals for the purpose of healing and strengthening you.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

A HEALTHY MIND - WHAT IS IT?

Physical Health is the result of:

1) the body’ ability to absorb and use proper nutrients and
2) the body’s ability to flow.

When there is a block in the flow illness develops. For example, with digestion, elimination, blood flow or liver functioning it is evident that flow is pertinent. Flow is energy in movement. Every aspect of the body/brain requires a constant movement of energy to maintain health. For the body/brain to receive the nutrients and immune responses there must be flow.

I would like to suggest that the intangible mind works in a very similar fashion to the body/brain. It needs both nutrients and flow, of the intangible energies.

Nutrients for the mind are comprised of higher or faster moving energies such as love, appreciation, gratitude, compassionate understanding, joy and affection. The lower or slower energies such as fear, anger, guilt, jealousy, greed and hatred do not nourish the mind, but all of these energies must flow for a mind to be healthy.

When the lower or slower energies become repetitive or stuck, it slows down the flow and the proper functioning of the mind. When a person is stuck in the past, repeating behaviors that are not appropriate to their current situation, when a person is close-minded and cannot make space for another person’s view, flow is blocked. For example, with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder people get stuck with a repetitive thought, such as checking to see if the door is locked over and over again.

The mind is made up of thoughts and beliefs. Beliefs have more influence on our behavior because they are thoughts we have given more trust or faith to, for whatever reason. Our attitudes, perspectives, emotions and defense mechanisms all spring from our beliefs. Our beliefs, therefore, influence how relaxed, stressed, anxious or depressed we are. The less relaxed we are, the less energetic flow there is. When the belief becomes repetitive it becomes debilitating and we become stuck. Whether it’s the flow of blood or the flow of beliefs and emotions, the body/mind needs this energetic movement to maintain health.

To maintain a healthy mind one must recognize their beliefs and emotions and express (in a safe and non-hurtful way) what they are believing and feeling. From this place they can choose to resolve or change what they are experiencing so that they can move on in a stronger and more peaceful way. By doing this they will create the flow needed and enable the nurturing higher energies to be experienced so that the mind will be a healthy, functioning aspect of the whole being.