Well — what a week it’s been! Last Wednesday I received the all-clear from my biopsy, and what a massive relief it was”¦ So massive that I hadn’t fully understood how much I had been stressing over the whole episode. Yes, I know, it’s only natural to feel anxious over the potential of discovering a life-threatening illness, but I hadn’t appreciated just how much I’d been holding in, boxing off, pushing away so that I could deal with life on a day-to-day basis.
It took a good couple of days for the good news to sink in, and since then I’ve felt more ”˜alive’ and full of beans than I have done for a long time. It’s only now that I’m feeling lighter and brighter, that I realize just how tense and low I had allowed myself to become. I guess there’s a whole lot of truth in that old sayings “we don’t know what we don’t know” — and let me tell you, now that I do know how much better I’m feeling, I am ready to grasp life with both hands. I’m enjoying a newfound and sense of liberty and excitement, and I notice that I have a huge smile most of the time now — inside and out. I also have a new level of calmness and confidence that I’m not sure I’ve ever experienced before.
Minor Irritations
Funnily enough, I’m also experiencing a number of ”˜hiccups’ that I’m finding quite irritating — businesses closing just when I need to make an appointment, people not returning calls, my car breaking down, electrical equipment playing up. In previous times, I would likely have reacted one of two ways. Either I would have let it wash over me as if nothing had happened, or perhaps I would have scrunched up my face and clenched my teeth — but still not let anything ”˜bad’ escape my lips. Now though, and this last week in particular, I have certainly been expressing my frustrations! I don’t think I’ve ever really done that before — well, certainly not in the way I have been cussing and stamping my feet over recent days. And you know what? It’s actually been feeling pretty darned good!
Previously, you see, I’d learned and believed that the more I chose to focus on something, the more I would bring similar experiences in to my life. The fact is I still believe that to be true. What I believe I hadn’t fully appreciated in the process before though, was that I can still focus on the ”˜good stuff’ while also honoring very real sensations of irritation or frustration. Instead of doing that, however, I’d succeeded in pushing aside anything and everything that I’d deemed remotely ”˜negative’ within my experience, which simply resulted in me ignoring myself. In doing so, I believe I also succeeded in shutting down my own intuition. After all, if I wasn’t respecting the niggling feelings because I’d judged them to be in some way harmful, then surely it stands to reason that I’d been equally incapable of accepting the good emotions as well”¦?
Thoughts Create Experiences
So here’s the irony. Many years ago I studied and worked as a Louise Hay trainer, where the whole ethos is all about loving and accepting ourselves — exactly as we already are. It’s also about the notion that thoughts become things. That changing our thinking radically changes our experiences and, therefore, our lives. That negative or unconstructive thoughts will naturally create negative experiences — right? Yes, all of that makes sense (and I still hold true to that perception of the world) and yet at the same time I was consciously choosing my thoughts, I now believe that I was subconsciously squashing myself. Despite myself, therefore, I had been living against the principal of loving myself — exactly as I already am!
How on earth could I trust my intuition if I couldn’t acknowledge and accept every response and emotion that was true for me? How on earth could I expect myself to know — to truly know — the difference between what was good or bad for me, if I steadfastly ignored the signs to say that something is wrong? Yes, I could (and still can) choose my thoughts and create a more positive reality for myself — but in the process I couldn’t possibly fully know and accept myself within that positive reality.
Bottom line is, I wasn’t trusting myself. At least, that’s the way I see it now.
Now I’m really learning to trust myself — more so than ever before. And for me, that means allowing myself to feel, accept and express all manner of emotions. While I’m sure it may sometimes mean that a few of my responses may appear to be a little heavy handed while I get used to acknowledging the annoyances, I do believe that with practice I’ll find a level ground. And I also believe, that as I continue to recognize these little (or large) frustrations and express them honestly, that I’ll have less and less need for nuisances in my life. By which I mean, that the more I accept these ”˜not so positive’ emotions as they arise — without judgment, labels or blame — then surely the more and more I am trusting and accepting myself?
Surely that therefore means that I can expect — and accept — an even more fulfilling life than I am currently enjoying”¦?
So, I am grateful for all the annoyances that have been showing themselves this week. And, rather than think that perhaps my thinking is somehow flawed for such things to be turning up in my life, I’m choosing instead to know that these are all more opportunities to express myself with more authenticity.
I guess the one thing to be aware of, though, is to make sure I don’t start enjoying showing my fierce or annoyed self too much — otherwise I could turn in to a perpetually grouchy person! Note to self — frowning will create a whole new batch of wrinkles. Much better to just make sure the smiley lines become more deeply engrained 🙂
Ox Drover
Yes the How is what gives definition to what we perceive, not the event itself. Perceive is the meaning that we gave the event. How is the beliefs and all it’s minions that we filter the event through which creates the meaning. And beliefs are made up of what one has decided is true. Not that the belief is true but we act as if it is. A belief can limit us. Box us in. Stuck never able to grow or become more. I’m good. I’m bad. I’m not good enough. I can’t do that. Etc. Or a belief can move us forward, create growth. I can learn to do it. Mistakes are fixable. There is no failure only feedback.
A lot time I use sports to explain things. Sports is cut and dry. In limiting beliefs a person isn’t trying to win [over come adversity] but is trying not to lose. What in football is called the prevent defense it loses more games then it wins. But they didn’t get beat by the big play.
In the book “MINDSET ”“ The New Psychology of Success” by CAROL S. DWECK, PH.D One of the way they put it is one is fixed mindset a non-learner or a growth mindset a learner.
The Story of the Taoist Farmer
http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/Taoist_Farmer.html
THE POWER OF CHOICE
http://eight.pairlist.net/pipermail/neurons/2012/000588.html
THE POWER OF BOUNDARIES
http://eight.pairlist.net/pipermail/neurons/2012/000588.html
Back_from_the_edge
Glad that it has helped.
On the ’anniversary dates’ thing. Think of some thing that was but is no more. This can be anything but it is something that was in your life but can never be again. Someone that has died but just make sure that your ok with that it’s no more. When you think of it tap your hand or knee etc. Now think of the psycho today tap the same spot. Now think of the psycho tomorrow tap the place. Think of the psycho the next day tap. Next week tap. Following week tap. Next month tap. Three months tap. Six months tap. Go out as far as you had plans in your head. And any special plan times and anniversary. This will remove all the tabs in the future that we all set.
alivetoday
My bill….Just smile and be happy. 🙂 Sounds like your headed in the right direction. The links up above are on the same line as the others.
Everybody make it a GREAT DAY
Spoon,
The story about the “good news? bad news?” is one that I used to tell on LoveFraud often. It is one of my favorites but I had forgotten to tell it. The link to it and the sources of the story was very nice, thank you.
It is so true! How can we tell, without foresight just what IS “good” or “bad” news? How could the farmer have told if the loss of the horse would save his son’s life? or the broken leg? So many times In my life I have seen that happen.
I am a Christian believer and I believe the Bible verse that says “ALL things work together FOR GOOD to those that Love the Lord” Frequently though I am a poor example of a Christian as when something “bad” happens, I don’t trust enough in that verse. But looking back over my life, SO MANY times I can see that it is TRUE.
Ox Drover
Yeah some times we don’t appreciate the good God has in store for us.
Here’s another one I’ve always liked
Two monks were on a pilgrimage. One day, they came to a deep river. At the edge of the river, a young woman sat weeping, because she was afraid to cross the river without help. She begged the two monks to help her. The younger monk turned his back. The members of their order were forbidden to touch a woman.
But the older monk picked up the woman without a word and carried her across the river. He put her down on the far side and continued his journey. The younger monk came after him, scolding him and berating him for breaking his vows. He went on this way for a long time.
Finally, at the end of the day the older monk turned to the younger one. “I only carried her across the river. You have been carrying her all day.”
And this one
I asked a very wise man about life.
He said, “Life is empty and meaningless.”
I said, “That can’t be so!”
He then said, “And it doesn’t mean anything that it doesn’t mean anything.”
And I still said, “No!”
Then he said, “And that gives you the freedom to give it any meaning you want it to.”
And I said, “Ahh!”
Spoon, there are many many old “stories” like that which have such deep philosophical meaning. Those were very good, thank you.
An EVENT has whatever meaning (to us) we want to ascribe to it….
An interesting thing was something I observed the day of the 9/11 attacks. I was teaching a CPR class to a group of highly intelligent and very motivated students when we heard that the event had happened. We turned on one of the huge WALL-sized TVs in one of the nearby classrooms and went in to watch. I asked the kids if they wanted to continue (we were nearly done) or if they wanted to stop and reschedule….they all said they wanted to continue. Out of 19 students 17 flunked the written exam. While they did not “appear” to be effected they were very much so. The event was 1500 miles away, and it was something that did not “effect” these students, they were not in danger themselves, and they were totally safe where they were…but yet they ascribed meaning to the event.
I do living history events where I “dress” up and present a persona at parks and other places. the two weekends after the 9/11 event we attended two events and the places were EMPTY which usually would have been filled to capacity. People ascribed a meaning to the event of 9/11 though it did not effect them personally and they did not “go out” and do things they normally would have.
We ascribe “meaning” to lots of things that happen in our lives and then we have associated EMOTIONS to go along with the meaning we have ascribed. Sometimes those emotions are painful ones. Lots of times the “shoulds” or “should nots” as the young Monk found become big burdens when they do not have to be.
Thanks for your input spoon!
Ox Drover
Your welcome.
The meaning for most events are pre-programed within us. There is no thinking. When we do think most of the time we are only choosing between a few pre-programed responses. But what we normally do is re-act to what is happening. The emotion are tied to the belief so it all just happens. We feel. Then we act. A psycho acts to feel. His pre-programing are tied to his real self but he is running on his aviator which has few pre-programed states. We too can act and then feel. But we normally feel then act.
Usually it takes a major event for us to change a belief. An event that creates Cognitive Dissonance. What we like is Cognitive Consonance. We like things to stay the same.
What you were seeing with the 911 is Cognitive Dissonance. The kids where using Cognitive Consonance until they worked out the Cognitive Dissonance of the event.
Mel,
Great to hear about your clean bill of health. Thank you for this wonderful topic.
Donna,
I definitely agree with your view of the Law of Attraction: not merely having positive thoughts, but being conscious of and facing our own energy & vibration.
spoon, this is brilliant and it really sums it up for me:
“The trust issue to me is that it was not a healthy trust with the right boundaries to start with so in the end we are left with not only dealing with the damage of the psycho experience but with having to learn for the first time how to set healthy boundaries.”
stargazer, this is also brilliant & I’m so happy you posted it:
“the enemy is not the sociopaths in the world, but unconsciousness itself. Until we bring our own unconscious feelings, thoughts, beliefs, and decisions into our awareness and release them, we will continually act out destructive dramas ”“ if not with a particular sociopath, then with someone else……………If we don’t see what patterns are operating behind the scenes, what emotions we are repressing, and what hidden beliefs we have, we are not completely at choice. We might think we are, but really we are not ”“ we are just acting out the programming that we are not aware of……We can turn our focus inward and heal those things within ourselves that attract sociopaths in the first place. Then we will stop attracting them. The problem is that pain is painful and we want to avoid it at all costs……..Projecting happiness into the future never works, because it takes us out of the present moment, out of our bodies.”
I love those Tao stories, too. Gotta read ’em again.
Thank you all!!
Spoon, you are absolutely right! That programming is imprinted on us as we are growing up I think just as a goose programs itself to follow the first thing that moves when it hatches. The cultural “norms” and cultural “facts” that we are taught are hard wired into our brains. We are taught to “jump” when we see what looks like a snake.
In raising cattle I watched the “tame” cows stand calmly by while we approached them and their calves also watched to see if we were “okay” when we approached and were not “spooked” when we walked up to their mothers. they saw that mom wasn’t afraid, so they weren’t afraid either. With the more “high headed” cows that were not pre-programmed or halter broken, their calves would notice mom’s fear and they developed it too. It stuck with them as well, and they were never as tame as they could have been.
Spoon, i am very much liking the exploding smurf
spoon: Thank you for this…
I am going to give it a go…xxoo
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spoon says:
“On the ’anniversary dates’ thing. Think of some thing that was but is no more. This can be anything but it is something that was in your life but can never be again. Someone that has died but just make sure that your ok with that it’s no more. When you think of it tap your hand or knee etc. Now think of the psycho today tap the same spot. Now think of the psycho tomorrow tap the place. Think of the psycho the next day tap. Next week tap. Following week tap. Next month tap. Three months tap. Six months tap. Go out as far as you had plans in your head. And any special plan times and anniversary. This will remove all the tabs in the future that we all set.”
Dupey
Ox Drover
You hit the nail on the head. Kids and we were all kids. Learn more by what they see then what they are told. The cows learn the same way.
The problem with this is we have beliefs that we don’t even know we have and they are effecting our lives. And most beliefs we don’t even no why it’s that way, we just do it. So stop blaming and just accept that it’s each of our responsibility to overcome our raising. Some had it worse but all was lacking even form the best parents. They are human too. This goes with getting over the psycho. The psycho is a problem but the real problem is why it was able to get us to accept it’s reality.
The ham story
http://www.annieshomepage.com/hamstory.html
Aesop
Glad you like it. This is my little creation. In NLP to get someone out of your head they normally talk about moving him to the dead file. Coding the picture just like someone else you know that has died. But it never really worked well for me. So I played with it and some worked ok for a while and then stop. I got mad one day and while trying something I just said it hell with it. Hit the button and exploded it. Made my head pop back. But it hasn’t returned in many of years.
It should take a lot of the emotions with it.
clair
Ever now and then I can put the words together right. 🙂 But I do make the spell checker cry every time I start typing. It’s whimpering now.
It is so easy to spend all our time blaming the psycho. It can feel soo good. But at some point it needs to stop. A friend of mine had some issues with her parents and it went on and on. I told her that the problem wasn’t the parents any more. This made her mad. Later I explained it again and told her that if the parents where to both died or if they came and said how sorry they were her problems would continue. Because the problem(s) was in her. A part of her. And every where you go there you are. So no escaping it. She told me about an episode of Malcolm in the Middle when the mom apologizes to her older son Francis and it went they way I had told her, the apologize didn’t help. Looked it up the title is “Ida Loses a Leg” Season 6, Episode 14, Aired Mar 20, 2005.
Happy May 3rd