si dawson

experiments in self-improvement

Category: healing

A Simple Meditation

I’d been feeling pretty crappy for a couple of days.

None of my tools really seemed to be doing it for me, and all in all I’d been feeling quite lost.

Here’s what I started doing to fix it.

Saying “yes”.

And then saying “yes” some more.

And some more. (and some more)

Here’s the thing. By a huge margin, “yes” is the most positive thing we can say. Kinda obvious I know.

Interestingly, it also has a disproportionate effect on our brains when we say it.

Don’t believe me though. Try it yourself.

  1. Say “No” repeatedly and emphatically for ten seconds or so. Now see how you feel.
  2. Say “Yes” repeatedly and emphatically for ten seconds or so. Now see how you feel.

It’s not an accident there are so many books (yep, that’s over 500,000) pushing people towards “yes”.

In any kind of sales or negotiation (which if you stop and think about it is most of life), if you can get the person saying yes ABOUT ANYTHING, they’ll be significantly more likely to say yes to the specific thing you want them to (eg “buy this car” or “make me a sandwich”).

Saying yes changes our brains.

Now of course, even though saying yes by itself might be helpful, there are some simple ways we can really step this up a notch.

First is tweaking our posture. Improve our posture and we’ll immediately improve our state of well being.

So, I did that. I sat up straight. Ok, so I jammed myself against a wall, since I didn’t really feel like sitting up straight. But it still helped.

Second thing is to let go of any angry or opposing thoughts, or any physical tension that arises while we’re saying yes.

Yep, release the mental and physical noise.

Why does this occur?

Well, let’s take it in steps.

Why are we feeling crappy? Well, there’s going to be something upsetting us, right?

So, instinctively, we’ll be resisting this (because it’s upsetting). Ie, saying “no” to this whatever-it-is.

Now, when we consciously choose to say yes, what are we doing? We’re loving whatever-this-awful-thing-is.

We’re choosing to be loving about it. Which is always helpful.

However, any resistance is going to come racing to the top – ie, anything in us that is the opposite of loving.

Usually it’s pretty obvious. We’ll feel clutching or a physical tension in our stomach or chest. Our brain will be screaming “What the hell? No WAY am I saying YES. That guy’s an asshole” (etc *yawn* etc)

Well, that’s all very nice, but really, that resistance IS the reason we’re feeling crappy (not whatever the resistance is actually about).

It’s not the event that affects us, only our reactions to it.

It’s nothing to do with what’s outside us. It’s actually (as always) what’s INSIDE that matters.

Events don’t bother us. Our reactions TO those events bother us.

So anyway. Saying yes brings all this junk to the surface.

And then we can let it go.

Mantras are all very well and good. It’s definitely smart to focus on what you want. Eg, feeling more positive.

However, unless you actually work on the energy surrounding it, you’re not going to get very far. In other words, clear your FEELINGS about whatever it is that’s bothering you.

Saying “yes” externally while internally you’re screaming “no” is just gonna leave you spinning in an unhappy circle.

Hence, posture. Hence, releasing.

Oh, and water. Water is always recommended.

(I also find physically tapping anywhere I feel tension helps to unblock the energy and let it out too).

So anyway. This is what I did. I sat up straight. I drank some water. I said “yes”, over and over to myself. I let go of any noise (physical, mental, emotional) that floated up.

And you know what? I did start to feel better. Not the fastest I ever have – but when you’re super low, you’re really too low to do very much. It all helps.

The key thing is, it lifted me up enough, just enough that I could start using more powerful tools.

It got me back on track.

And really, isn’t that just what’s needed, at least every now and then?

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    I’ll Be Happy When

    As humans, we have a strong tendency to put off our happiness.

    We think we’ll be happy…

    • when we achieve some goal (new car, new job, “success”)
    • when we’re loved
    • when we feel safe
    • when we have $X
    • when “something” changes for us

    … and of course, the advertising industry plays right into this. They love this tendency – it makes it a doddle to sell us all manner of crap. All they have to (implicitly) promise is that when we buy their whatever, it’ll make us happy.

    There’s a key problem though. Humans adjust. Quickly. Our “I’ll be happy when” list will definitely change over time (do you still want a GI Joe action figure for Christmas?), but it never empties.

    When we get the new job, then we want to have saved more money. When we’ve saved more money, we want a partner. When we have a partner, we want them to be nicer…

    At the core of this whole mess is a very simple truth:

    We’re not allowing ourselves to be happy.

    We’re putting up all these rules, these conditions – much like we do with love, or judgement

    Sure, a new car may be nice, but do we really want the car or do we want the feeling (happiness) that we think the car will bring us?

    Obviously there are practicalities with having a new car (it won’t break down as much, we need it to carry groceries, etc), but at its core, so much of what we want is because we think it’ll make us happy (feeling loved, feeling safe…).

    When we get that thing, we then push the goalposts farther away, thereby ensuring we’re never actually happy.

    We have the whole thing backwards.

    The secret here isn’t to get the stuff (although that’s fun too), it’s to decide to be happy before you get the stuff. At the very least, even if you don’t get the “whatever” you’ll still be happy. More useful is that it’s always easier to achieve a goal if you’re already happy.

    Now, the practical bit – how the hell do you do that?

    Well, the first thing to realise is that all these conditions are just pictures in our heads. We can let them go. Remember, you’re the boss. Of all of it. Every single silly picture in your head, you can let go of and replace with better ones. And really, why think about something if it’s just making us miserable?

    So, how do we find those pictures? How do we call them to the surface so we can let go of them?

    What I’ve found works well is just to ask myself

    “I’ll be happy when…”

    and let my mind fill in the gap. Nature abhors a vacuum, so our minds will automatically fill in the end of the sentence with… something!

    Once we have that picture – the whatever-it-is that will finally enable us to be happy, simply let it go.

    You can always ask yourself “Can I let this go?” but really, unless you’re answering yes, you’re lying to yourself – or deliberately harming yourself (this can happen too). The bottom line is, you can always let it go. You’re the boss of your mind.

    You’ll be amazed at the giant list of nonsense that will sprout up once you start asking yourself this. It’s ok. Just let each thing go, and you’ll feel yourself getting lighter and, yes, happier. By letting go of each thing, we’re gradually giving ourselves permission to be happy. We’re removing all those artificial conditions we’ve placed in our way.

    IT’S OK TO BE UNCONDITIONALLY HAPPY.

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      Stay Loving When Your Partner’s Not

      Ever had an argument with your partner (or, frankly, anyone important in your life)?

      Arguments typically go something like this:

      The other person gets pissed off and start whinging, shouting, criticising, or worse, refusing to say a damn thing at all.

      So then, of course, you get pissed off with them and you both continue to rark each other up.

      (and yes, if we’re honest, sometimes the arguments start from our corner too).

      In short: One person getting upset results in a race to the bottom of the misery pit.

      This. Isn’t. Helpful.

      Think about it: where’s the benefit in both of you getting upset? What does that gain you, either of you?

      Of course, when someone is going off their nut at us, there’s good reasons why we respond the way we do.

      • We want to be heard
      • They’re wrong and we’re right
      • We want them to love us
      • We want them to stop

      Let’s take these one at a time, it won’t take long.

      WE WANT TO BE HEARD

      Do you really think they’re listening while they’re pissed off? No, of course they’re not. Not really. They may grudgingly concede a point, but they’re not REALLY listening, they’re just trying to get to the end of the argument.

      If you want to be heard, it’s much, much better to try talking to them when they’re back in a calm, loving space again.

      THEY’RE WRONG AND WE’RE RIGHT

      So what? Who gives a shit who’s right?

      Seriously. In that moment when they’re upset, how is them having an epiphany and realising that they’re wrong going to help them (or you)?

      For a start, they’re probably not really even listening to you (see point 1)

      Secondly, this is us trying to control them. And nobody likes being controlled. Smartest thing is to let go of that.

      WE WANT THEM TO LOVE US

      Ok, now this is completely understandable.

      When someone we deeply care about is attacking us (or it feels like they’re attacking us), that can hurt.

      Why does it hurt? Because we want their approval.

      Now, the subtle thing here is, if we want their approval, it’s because we don’t have it (if we already had it, we wouldn’t need to want it, now would we?)

      However, by sending out the message that we want, we’re also sending out the message that we lack their approval.

      By feeling needy, we become needy.

      What’s the solution? It may seem a little paradoxical, but let go of wanting their approval.

      Ultimately, you’re better off loving yourself than looking outside for approval. You have infinite love inside yourself – you just have to find and allow it.

      The more you let go of wanting love from others, the more you’ll find the love inside yourself.

      WE WANT THEM TO STOP

      Again, this is wanting to control them.

      Hint: IT WON’T WORK.

      (it can also be that we want to feel safe in our relationship – but see “feeling needy” above – the same thing applies. Let it go)

      Sure, you can control someone, for short periods of time. But ultimately? All that builds in them is resentment and the propensity to lie. In other words, to hide things from you so they can do what they wanted to in the first place.


      Here’s a gentle irony. Long time readers will see this coming a mile away. The fastest way to get someone to calm down when they’re upset? BE LOVING.

      It’s impossible to fight someone who’s not fighting back. It’s like pushing against air. You run out of steam very quickly.

      Don’t take my word for it. Try it some time. When your significant other is upset, to everything they say, reply (in your head) “I love you.” Let go of all non loving thoughts and feelings that arise. Feel as loving as you possible can towards them. Feel your heart open up and envelope them in your love.

      Just keep saying “I love you” and watch their resistance dissolve in seconds.

      It’s a choice. It’s always a choice.

      Sometimes it takes a bit of practice, or we forget, or we’re tired or whatever. But it’s always just a choice. Try choosing to be loving and see what happens.

      So if you do want them to stop, (and quickly) let go of wanting to control them and be unconditionally loving instead.

      Think about it this way. Why are they upset? Typically, for exactly the same reasons. They want to be heard. If you’re loving? You’ll be listening to them. They want you to love them. Hello? Bingo!

      If they do want to control you (and you don’t agree), well, isn’t that conversation going to go a lot better if you’re both in a loving space? If you stay in that place of love, you are the powerful one in the conversation. They will come to you (impossible to fight, remember?)

      The other thing that happens here is the more we let go of these reactions inside ourselves and choose to be loving to them, the easier it becomes to love ourselves. To calmly set respectful boundaries. To extricate ourselves from situations that are unhealthy for us. To help grow a mutually supportive, mutually growing and healthy relationship.

      Realising that just because our partner is upset doesn’t mean we have to be too is the first step to a massively improved life together.

      You can see this really easily with children. When a child gets upset, you have two choices:

      1. You can let them be the boss – ie, you follow their lead and become upset too
      2. You can remember that you’re the boss of you, stay in an upbeat, loving place, and let them come to you.

      When you stay in a loving space regardless of what’s going on for them, they snap out of it super quickly. Remember, you’re the boss. If you hold a loving space, the child will come to you. You’re the mama duck, whether they realise it or not they’re constantly following your example of how to behave.

      You have to let go of all judgement. All criticism. All non loving thoughts – but that’s surprisingly easily done. Just focus ALL your attention on feeling loving towards them. Let every other thought go.

      Kids are great to experiment with like this (their moods shift so quickly you’ll have lots of opportunities to practice).

      Once you’re comfortable staying loving when a three year old is having a tantrum, you can up the ante to a grown up. Coz really, do we ever truly grow out of this kind of nonsense? We learn more sophisticated ways of expressing ourselves, but our behaviour is often not that different from a three year olds.

      Additionally, people we’re not close to are easiest to do this with. The lower the level of emotional connection, the less attached we are to how they react to us.

      For example, if some random dude on the street goes nutty it’s relatively easy not to get swept up in his tidal wave of grumpiness.

      However, if your partner (or heaven forbid, mother) disses you, it’s a major affront.

      We want to be liked by people we like.

      We want to be loved by people we love.

      Remember the paradox above? If we want something, we’re subtly letting the universe know we don’t have it.

      In order to BE loved, we have to let go of WANTING love.

      It’s like that old saying – be the person you want to fall in love with.

      So, if you want someone to love you, be loving to them – without condition or consideration of reciprocation (that’s the trick, of course).

      (Obviously there’s all the usual caveats here about co-dependence, setting healthy boundaries and avoiding being used).

      Think of it like holding jelly. If you squeeze it too tight, it’ll all slop out between your fingers.

      Same thing here.

      And you don’t want your love slopping out between your fingers, now do you? No, of course not.

      The challenging thing is – how much someone needs love is directly proportional to how much of a pain in the ass they’re being.

      You could easily put a positive spin on this though. The more upset someone is, the more powerfully you’ll affect them by staying loving.

      You’re not gonna make much difference to someone’s life if they’re already in a happy and loving place.

      If they’re upset though? You being loving, caring, supportive is EXACTLY what they need. Staying loving is the most loving thing you can do for them.

      Best of all, if you don’t get it right this time (and you both end up upset), there’ll always be plenty more chances to practice until you learn to stay happy and loving no matter what.

      Being happy – isn’t that we all want?

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        Tetris Relationships

        There’s an amusing saying:

        “If Tetris has taught me anything, it’s that errors pile up and accomplishments disappear.”

        I don’t know a better quote for describing the effect of holding grudges.

        Where this is particularly noticeable, and damaging, is in the area of relationships.

        Everyone is growing. Everyone makes mistakes. Everyone is occasionally tired, thoughtless, distracted or careless.

        Things happen and people get hurt – no matter how careful we are towards the person we love (see also: every parent ever).

        This is a normal part of life, and to be expected.

        Where it all gets messy is when our partner makes these mistakes and we choose to hang on to those mistakes instead of letting them go.

        Eventually, this will kill any relationship. How can it possibly survive when every time we look at them our head and hearts are filled with the thousand awful things we remember them doing?

        As always, it’s helpful to keep things simple. Make a choice:

        Do you want to have a loving, happy relationship …

        … or do you want your relationship to die?

         
        I realise that sounds melodramatic and a prime example of either-or thinking, however on a long enough time scale, that’s your choice.

        Of course, if you’re only in the relationship for the short term or you really don’t give a shit about the other person, then feel free to ignore everything I’m saying.

        The thing is, if we don’t proactively choose to let go/heal/whatever the myriad of minor (and not so minor) bumps and scrapes that eventuate from any average relationship, then we are actively choosing to let the relationship die.

        No one can sustain under that much pain. Eventually, the traumatic blocks stack up until they hit our ceiling and it’s game over for that relationship.

        If we refuse to learn, if we refuse to let go of these blocks, these hurts, we’ll be doomed to live the same relationship over and over. Watching blocks build up, experiencing all that pain until eventually we’re forced, once again, to quit.

        The other thing here is – much like Tetris, you have to keep working at this constantly. Couples counselling once a year or once a decade isn’t going to cut it. You have to get up every damn day with the intention of letting go of whatever pain comes up.

        If we don’t let it go, we’ll be doomed to think about it again and again, letting that wound fester like a rotting abscess.

        Every time we rethink about something that has wronged us, to some degree we are reliving that trauma. We’re strengthening the neural pathways. We’re making it worse for ourselves.

        What may have been a fairly minor misunderstanding, after we’ve thought and rethought about it dozens or hundreds of times can expand into a soul crushing trauma of biblical proportions. How on earth can we be expected to remain loving towards someone with that kind of storm raging through us?

        Plus, of course, much like Tetris, small hurts or mistakes lead to larger ones.

        Why is this? Because we look at events through the filter of our minds. If we decide (for whatever reason) that a person is, say, untrustworthy, then everything they do will be viewed through that filter. Every little word and action will be judged and suspected. Grudges lead to judgement.

        In short: once we have a belief, we use our brains to find data to validate that belief.

        Now sure, some people are untrustworthy, that’s fine. But a lot of the time we paint people incredibly unfairly, simply because of some trauma or other that we’re carrying around. Half the time it really has nothing to do with them at all.

        On top of that – this is someone we’re supposed to be in love with. Shouldn’t we be at least trying to be loving towards them? How can we do that if we’re harshly judging every little thing they do and say?

        The key, of course, is not too get too carried away with our minds. Realise that it’s our belief that is making us “find” supporting evidence. Once we drop that belief, voila, most or all of that evidence will fall away with it. We’ll see that our prejudices have been colouring our observations. Our pain has been creating more pain around us.

        The great thing is – when we knock out a grudge or limiting belief, it’s like knocking out a line in Tetris. Except it also ensures that it will (almost) never come back. When we heal the hurt that caused us to believe someone was untrustworthy, we will have learned that lesson. For a start, we’ll be able to accurately interpret their actions. Secondly, we’ll stop attracting seemingly untrustworthy people into our lives. We won’t need to; we’ve learned what we needed to learn, the universe can now move us on to our next lessons.

        Best of all, unlike Tetris, the more we let go of the slower the blocks stack up. It’s a game which starts insanely hard and gets easier and easier the more we play.

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          Holding A Grudge

          Holding a grudge is one of the dumbest thing we can do.

          That said, it’s also one of the easiest things to do.

          In essence, what IS a grudge?

          When we believe someone has wronged us, and we hang on to that memory.

          Notice some key things here:

          • It doesn’t matter whether they did actually wrong us or not, just that we believe they did
          • It doesn’t matter what their intent was (or even if it was intentional)
          • Along with the memory, we hang on to a huge chunk of negative energy
          • All this colours any future interactions with that person

          So why do it?

          Generally, we hang on to grudges for some combination of the following reasons:

          • We feel justified (“It’s fair” or “They deserve it”)
          • We think it’ll keep us safe in the future
          • We think this is how we learn from the experience
          • We feel they owe us something (payback, restitution)

          However, there’s some flaws in this reasoning (well, duh)

          For a start, really what we’re doing is making ourselves feel crappier. Why even do that?

          We’re carrying around a huge bundle of negative emotion/energy, such that every time we think about that person, we feel bad. Also not smart.

          On top of that, it’s damaging our relationship with that person.

          If someone has done something bad to us and we can completely remove that person from our life? Well, that’s great. Really though? Most people we interact with aren’t like that. We often don’t have that freedom (workmates, friends, family, lovers).

          The final nail in the coffin? It’s never going to make the original pain go away. All it does it make it suck longer and harder (and not in a fun way).

          Now, as well as the original hurt, we’re attaching all this additional negative energy on top of it.

          Over time a grudge can and will take on a life of its own. The original hurt becomes more or less a footnote, but every time we’ve thought bad thoughts about that person, it’s added a little more to a giant pile of nastiness that is building in our minds. Witness how grudges between families (or countries) can survive long after the original participants have died.

          Holding a grudge won’t help us accurately interpret a situation. Suddenly, every interaction with that person will be filtered through the pain of that grudge. Every possible word and action will be (mis) interpreted as similar to or adding to that pain.

          All it’s doing is maximising our own suffering and damaging our relationship.

          Why do this?

          If we’re smart, we have to remind ourselves that we’re the boss. We are not our thoughts. We are not our feelings.

          We need to re-assert ourselves over this noise and choose to let the pain go.

          Obviously tools like EFT or releasing can help with this process, but even things like good old fashioned (genuine) forgiveness can do the trick. If you’re truly genuine about letting it go though, it’s important to acknowledge the pain we’ve caused that other person too.

          Something as simple as imagining the person in front of you, and saying “I’m sorry. Please forgive me.” can be enormously powerful for healing the damage we’ve done even by holding a grudge (let alone anything else we may have said or done).

          Remember though – really, you’re not doing it for the other person’s sake. If they’ve hurt you that badly and they suddenly died, you wouldn’t be THAT bothered, would you? No, the real reason you’re doing it is for your OWN sake. To permanently get rid of all that crappy energy.

          The real test is if you can think about that person, think about the situation, and feel nothing but calm and loving. Asking their forgiveness is a super powerful way to deeply and completely clear out the last vestiges of crappy energy.

          We all carry grudges around. Some big, some small. Start with the biggest and work your way down the list. Every single one you can drop will result in your own life feeling and genuinely being better.

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