si dawson

experiments in self-improvement

Shame

This is without a doubt the scariest post I’ve ever written.

I’ve tried to make this blog as useful as possible. With the exception of the odd frivolous entry, I’ve tried to give practical advice, stuff I’ve found helpful. What’s helped me that might help you. This means talking about things only after I’ve figured them out, after I’ve learned how to best get through them.

This is not one of those entries.

I’ve been reading I thought it was just me by Brene Brown, which is about shame.

After a decade of studying it, she defines shame as “the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing that we are flawed & therefore unworthy of acceptance & belonging.

The key bits here:

  1. It’s painful
  2. It’s a perceived external judgement (ie, about how we think other people view us)
  3. It’s isolating – makes us feel we’re alone
  4. It’s about something we feel we are (as opposed to something we’ve done)
  5. It’s about wanting acceptance

There are many other emotions that swirl around this, but what differentiates shame is that it’s about external judgement, combined with being about us (not our actions).

  • We feel guilt about things we do, but shame about who we are.
  • We feel embarrassment about events that are temporary, fleeting and eventually even funny.
  • Humiliation we don’t believe we deserve (eg it’s unfair), but shame we believe we do.

Other people can cause shame in us (criticizing who we are or what we’ve done – only if we interpret that as a personal flaw), but as always, we are our own worst enemy. Most shame is self-inflicted.

This is where the isolation comes in. Nobody likes to talk about shame. Nobody likes to admit it and that silence is, I suspect, the worst part of the problem.

Notice how people will only talk about rags-to-riches stories when they’re successful again (and thus distanced from it)? That nobody talks about riches-to-rags stories, unless they’re talking about someone else? That’s shame.

See the gradual realisation that Facebook is depressing us? (“Everyone else’s life is better than mine”) That’s shame.

We only want other people to see the best parts of our lives, and it’s a lie.

  • Every family is screwed up (in some way or other).
  • Everybody struggles – with addiction, depression, trauma, physical ailments, parenthood, self-comparison, work-life-balance, at least once in their life if not constantly.
  • Nobody is perfect – and by that I don’t mean “hair is sexily ruffled at 3am” I mean “is fucked in the head about something or other”

Because nobody talks about it, we think we’re alone, which only makes it worse.

So here’s where I’m at. Here’s my life, right now.

To give some perspective, I need to scroll back a few years. A while back, maybe half a decade ago I owned several properties (let’s just say, more than three). I flitted around the world whenever the whim took me. Stayed in $1200/night hotels. Didn’t think much of making $100k decisions based on a two minute phonecall (batting average on those? About 50%). I’ve dropped 50k in half an hour, and slept soundly that night. Made as much on a single deal with zero effort and thought “that’s nice.” Financially, at least, life was pretty sweet.

On a side note, I was pretty unhappy with who I was as a person (in a few ways), which is what lead to the spiritual journey I’ve been on since then – which this blog (mostly) chronicles.

About the time I started on this journey, my finances started taking a serious downswing. So, over the last few years, I’ve gone from the above situation to about a hundred grand in debt, with zero assets (nothing of any resaleable value).

I’ve been evicted twice in the space of two years. I’ve been taken to court. Threatened with debtors prison. Been forced to sell everything I owned to pay debts (& given the rest away because I couldn’t afford a moving truck). I owe significant money to a large number of people (friends & family alike).

I’ve had two girlfriends dump me because of it. I’ve watched my friends get tired of asking “are you making any money yet?” and slowly drift away. Several of them no longer talk to me (or reply with the barest of politenesses). This isn’t a criticism of them, they’ve been beyond patient – I can barely explain the situation to myself, I don’t expect them to understand.

I’m now 41 and living at home with my parents – the only place left that I could go. I’ve been here for a year (give or take), and (externally at least) still nothing has changed.

So where’s the happily-ever-after? There isn’t one – at least, not yet. And that’s exactly the point.

I’d been hoping I would eventually pop out the other end of things, so I could write a “Here’s what I’ve learned… now my life is all wonderful & shiny again” post. It hasn’t happened.

I haven’t written about this because it’s so shameful (and embarrassing, and humiliating).

If there’s something appealing about a 41 year old guy who is so incapable of looking after himself that he’s forced to bludge off his parents, I haven’t found it yet.

Is there any of the above I’d recommend? Well, getting rid of all your stuff; it’s challenging but ultimately freeing. Other than that, I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. Stressful doesn’t begin to describe it.

Is it an awful situation? Yeah, kinda. Have the last few years been awful? Yeah, pretty much.

Oddly (or perhaps not), I’m the happiest, most peaceful and most loving I’ve ever been in my life. I can thank all the healing (as I’ve been describing here) for that. That part of the journey I wouldn’t give back for anything.

So what have I been doing all this time?

Well, a ton of healing (as you know), which has been super helpful. Without that, I probably would be dead. No, correction, I definitely would be dead.

I started a company, in late 2009. That was doing ok until early 2010 when two things happened. One, Twitter had loving-but-stern words with me about the way I was doing things (which involved a complete code rewrite) and two, Paypal shut down my account – temporarily – due to one of their apparently-common “security reviews”. Short version: something I did (or didn’t do) flagged some obscure setting in their software. I wasn’t actually doing anything wrong, it was just a temporary hiccup on their end.

Still, something about the confluence of these setbacks really kicked me… somewhere, and I still haven’t managed to even start charging people for the service again, let alone be able to pay bills or start making decent money again.

The bigger story is this: I’m an entrepreneur. My first job was when I started a company at 14, selling technical drawing paper to my schoolmates. I’ve always, always had side businesses on the go, no matter what I’ve been doing elsewhere.

However, there’s been a strong underlying pattern. I write amazing code, or build amazing things, but I rarely if ever make money.

When I invest (property, stocks, whatever), I generally make out like a bandit, but businesses I’ve started (and there’s been a lot), no.

This is a pattern I want to break.

I don’t want to spend the rest of my life starting businesses, working hard, and getting nowhere. That’s stupid. It’s neither loving nor helpful to myself.

Of course, whatever is going on is just something emotional. I’ve created it, and I very definitely have the tools to break it.

I just haven’t been able to do so yet.

If I don’t, eg if I follow most of my friends’ well-meaning but misguided advice to “go get a job”, well, this issue will just continue to re-manifest for the rest of my life. I’ll keep recreating it in new and exciting ways. This is exactly what I’ve already seen happen several times, so it’s time for it to stop.

Making the time to sort this issue, even if it means abject poverty for a couple of years, is worth it for the pay-off over the next hundred.

Logically, there’s absolutely no reason why I shouldn’t be rolling in cash. I’m male, white, well educated, have a broad experience in a bunch of high value fields, hard working, skilled, motivated. All these things work in my favour. I fully realise how blessed I’ve been to be born into the situation I was. Whatever’s going on here has nothing to do with the obvious.

The thing is – I can tell myself all this. How counter-intuitive it is, how unlikely, and how necessary to sort it out.

It doesn’t make the situation any less shameful.

It’s not an accident I’ve been single for almost three years. How do you ask a girl out on a date if buying a coffee is something that will most likely take a month to budget for? What about a second date, wait another month? Awkward.

Plus, of course, shame is always accompanied by powerful feelings of “Not good enough.”

Statistically, most people work for others (as employees), whereas I’ve had a very non-standard career. This makes it difficult for most people I know to relate, let alone understand (isolating).

In Silicon Valley maybe, running a startup would be understood. Even there though, when a startup gets funding (from a VC, typically), that’s considered “success.” Until that point (or an IPO) they’re not generally considered successful. Even bootstrapped (ie, no external funding) startups are considered a bit weird, interesting, but not-as-successful.

Where my parents live is over an hour by bus from the nearest city. There are wild chickens that live closer to it than I do. It’s where I grew up and while it has its charms, this is the most provincial I’ve lived since I left home, 24 years ago. This is no accident. I thrive on the bustle of cities, and even telling people where I’m currently living is mildly embarrassing.

All these things – they’re all my perception of how other people will view me.

None of these things I’ve wanted to talk about with anyone (except my family, whom I love dearly). Even writing this is scaring the shit out of me.

To be clear. I’m not posting this because I’m looking for sympathy. Or solutions. Or even empathy (although generally that is the ideal response to someone talking about something shameful). I’m posting it because we all have things we feel shame about, and not talking is worse than the discomfort of admitting them.

Yes, I am aware that once this is on the internet, it will exist forever, and be indelibly connected to my name.

Again, shame. And again, this is exactly why this should be posted.

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    The Long Dark Listlessness of The Soul

    One of the hardest things for me to let go of has been… well… I don’t know.

    A feeling of dread? Ennui? Listlessness? Dissatisfaction? Lack of contentment? A dark heavy cloud hiding at the edge of my awareness?

    I really don’t know.

    And that, in a nutshell, is exactly the problem.

    How do you let go of something that’s a combination of dozens of little factors, most of which are well below the level of consciousness? Something that has become so much a part of ourselves that we can no longer see it?

    I don’t think I’m alone in these feelings. If I were, there’d be far fewer middle aged guys with sports cars. Far fewer teenagers hurting themselves.

    So here’s what I’ve learned.

    There’s two parts to what’s going on in our noggin.

    The stuff we can see (or hear) – those hyper-critical inner voices – and the stuff we can’t. No no, that’s not the bit I’ve learned. That’s just the intro. Stick with me here.

    The stuff we can see

    This is (relatively) easy to dump.

    To clear this, you can simply ask yourself questions and go with whatever pops up. Just love it & let it go. Super simple.

    So, any emotion or feeling you can think of that’s non-loving, go with that. Whatever feels right. Whatever resonates. Whatever seems to get results.

    Some examples:

    I love that part of me that:

    • regrets…
    • has disappointment myself by..
    • feels let down by…
    • is never good enough…
    • is never good enough for… (mum, dad, partner, boss)
    • will never be good enough for…
    • wants…
    • wants control of…
    • wants safety from…
    • wants approval from…
    • resents…
    • hates…
    • still hates…
    • hates myself…
    • is unhappy that…
    • will never be happy until…
    • wants to change…
    • doesn’t want to change…
    • is still sad about…
    • is still upset about…
    • feels let down by…
    • is nervous about…
    • worries about..
    • always worries…
    • doesn’t believe I can…
    • is hesitant about…
    • won’t let me be happy…
    • is afraid of…
    • is bored of…
    • is ashamed of…
    • is embarrased by…

    You can see – all we’re doing here is going for any non-loving emotion that we think might be even slightly related to the darkness. If something resonates, great! We can let it go. If it doesn’t, no problem, just move on to the next.

    I went through maybe another 40 or 50 phrases – just anything that popped in my head. You get the idea, you don’t need to be spoon-fed.

    How To Release It

    Simply get quiet, say the phrase (for example) “I love the part of me that will never be good enough for…” and let your mind fill in the gap. Let go of any tension that arises – just love it & let it go. Keep saying it (in your mind or out loud, doesn’t matter) until you feel calm & peaceful about the phrase.

    This is also one of the reasons that writing morning pages works so well. Morning pages (or stream-of-consciousness writing) simply entails sitting down somewhere relatively quiet, and writing down everything that pops in your head. It gets all those voices out in front of you, out into the light of day.

    As a bonus, it’s also great practice writing.

    Often just acknowledging that these thoughts exist is enough to see through them to the truth and effortlessly let them go.

    THE STUFF WE CAN’T SEE

    No big surprise, this stuff is a little trickier to release.

    So how do you get rid of something you can’t see?

    Well, here’s the trick. Much like with dreams our subconscious is communicating with us.

    Working logically though it:

    1. If whatever-it-is isn’t affecting our lives, then it’s not a problem.
    2. If it is affecting our lives, then even if we don’t know why or what it’s about, we can describe that effect.
    3. Since our subconscious is the one hiding the root cause from us, we can let it do the work, let it connect backwards from our description of the effect to the root itself.

    If we want to heal dreams, we work on them as if they’re reality. Why? Because it’s the clearest way to communicate back with our subconscious – in exactly the language it’s using to communicate with us.

    So, do exactly the same thing here.

    Be as explicit and specific as you can, but don’t worry for a second about anything below what you can see.

    If you get a deep cloying feeling every Monday morning, then go with that. Same as above, just say “I love having a deep cloying feeling every Monday morning.” Repeat this, letting go of all emotional, mental, physical tension that arises, until you feel at peace.

    If you don’t get any resonance (despite having the feeling), try amping the language up a bit. “I completely love..” “I deeply love..” “I love everything about…” etc. Just go with your gut.

    The more you listen to your intuition, the more you’ll realise it has all the answers you’ll ever need.

    Don’t worry if your description might sound ridiculous to anyone else. You’re not doing it for them, you’re doing it for you.

    If the thought of spending time with your inlaws makes you feel purple and violent, then “I love feeling purple and violent when I see my inlaws” is perfect. Once you feel peaceful saying that, of course, you can step it up even further “I love spending time with my inlaws.” Ha ha. Good luck. You’ll be awesome. It’ll be gone in minutes (or faster).

    Obviously this will bring up a lot of tension, but that’s exactly the point. All those feelings are coming up to leave. They’re just feelings, nothing more. There’s no need to react to them or be afraid of them. Just send them love, welcome them up and let them go.

    So, just keep paying attention, describing whatever you’re feeling as accurately as you can and then releasing it.

    Nothing wrong with a little mindfulness.

    Don’t be surprised if you get radically different descriptions every time you come back to it. Typically (and particularly with the stuff that our subconscious is hiding from us) larger or more immediate issues will mask smaller or older ones.

    That’s ok. You’re an onion. Peel away a layer and what’s below it? Yep. Just another layer. It beats being a potato (just kidding Mr Potato Head).

    The sign that you’re making progress is when stuff that used to bother you doesn’t in the slightest any more. You couldn’t care less about it, or it just seems funny now.

    If your visual description of what you’re feeling no longer resonates for you, that’s because it’s gone. If the descriptions are changing, that’s because you’re working down through the layers.

    It is, as they say, all good.

    I know if I look back at my life, I’ve had a definite dark layer to my existence, bubbling along beneath everything else.

    Historically I’ve masked or escaped from it – with alcohol, caffeine, sex or bursts of flat-out enthusiasm. I can look back now and see that it’s cost me relationships, “You’re down and nothing I do gets through to you.”

    That’s kinda crap.

    Over the last month or so, I’ve worked my way through all of the above; First the visible then the hidden stuff below that, and I can feel with absolute certainty that something has left my life.

    Something big, something dark. Somethings (plural).

    Life just seems.. lighter somehow. Easier. Less overwhelming. Less threatening. Less difficult. More fun.

    What’s gone? Well… I really don’t know.

    And that, in a nutshell, is exactly the point.

    I don’t need to know. I never needed to, and really, who cares? It’s gone and I feel great.

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      Native Bush

      I was recently asked what bush looks like around here.

      Well, today I went for a walk.

      I'm a sucker for a stylish suspension bridge

      Many of the interesting walks around here start with this wonderful bridge. Apologies the sky isn’t bluer, but on the upside, less sunburn risk. Good walking weather.

      The shade of these gorgeous trees is visible from miles away

       

      walking in the bush

      waaaaalking

      waaaaaaaaaaaalking

      Lots of walking.. but then, that’s the fun of it, right?

      Part way along is this segmented swing bridge, which shakes like crazy - great for terrorising nephews. Uhh, not that I would. No. Of course not. Not shown: upset nephews.

      There's a bubbling brook which runs alongside the path.. interspersed with the occasional waterfall

      What is it about water? So incredibly soothing. The Japanese definitely know a thing or two, with their garden design.

      and if you ever wondered what New Zealand hills look like, pretty much like this (foreground left is a shrubbery, not a hill)

      There’s a very particular shade to the greenery in New Zealand. The light is quite silvery. It’s especially noticeable if you’ve travelled to Australia (where the light is more golden). So, many of the trees here have that rich, dark green shade. Once you know it, you can pick it anywhere (eg, a single frame from the middle of Lord of the Rings).

      Many of the hills are also covered in gorse (an introduced pest), which are covered in SPIDERS! These are Nursery Web McMansions. When the spiders are ready, out pop thouuuuusands of baby spiders. Exciting!

      Lunchtime we found a gorgeous stand of pines to lie under and eat

      Peaceful. Gorgeous. No doubt pining for the fjords. Also surprisingly comfortable.

      and look! Fud! (also, coffee. Extra yum!)

      Even on an overcast day, the hills are pretty damn beautiful

      The path back treks through a picturesque stand of macrocarpas

      In case you’re curious about macrocarpas (I know you secretly are). They’re also really good for making fake swords and whacking your friends with. So I’ve been told.

      Mum also weeded pretty much the whole hill on the way down, removing introduced pests (in this case ragwort. Not related to regular warts)

      There are massive stands of ferns everywhere

      When they're tiny, oh boy, they're like a flurry of grass

      and when they grow up, they can take over entire hillsides

      To see just how red those leaves are, check this contrast

      back to civilization!

      You may recognise this park.

      The view south from that same initial bridge

      Even on an overcast day the beauty around here takes my breath away.

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        Learning To Love Everything

        Unconditional love is a slippery little bugger.

        The basic problem is judgement. As soon as our brain screams “This guy doesn’t deserve love” or “Yes he does!” then voila, it’s no longer unconditional.

        Yes, even deciding someone does deserve love is not unconditional.

        But ok, let’s back up a bit. Why the hell bother with love anyway?

        Several reasons:

        1. Being loving is the highest, happiest place we can be
        2. It’s healthiest for us
        3. It’s the best for those around us (i.e., those we care about)

        Check it: think of someone you really like. Now imagine them in front of you, while you’re being the nicest you possibly can be. You’re doing something they enjoy, saying something they adore hearing, and they’re happy happy happy. How do you feel? That’s right. Unbelievable.

        Now true, there’s definitely an endorphin kick to improving someone else’s life (philanthropists aren’t in it just for the tax breaks), but the real secret is that it feels great to be loving. Even more so than being loved. Now that is a surprise.

        Based on modern media, you’d think the happiest you could ever be is when someone (preferably on a horse, wearing armour, maybe holding their lance) loves you.. but it’s quite possible for someone to love the hell out of you while you remain stubbornly miserable. Trust me, I’ve been there (uhh, sorry, ex-girlfriends).

        Why do you think limerance, those early stages of a new relationship, feels so great? It’s not just because someone is flattering us (while forgiving our *cough* more human aspects). It’s because we’re being unconditionally loving (ie the same) to them.

        Not only that, but as our new lover holds a mirror to the best parts of us, we are unconditionally loving towards ourselves. For a brief moment all the self-criticism pauses and we are truly self-loving.

        Being loving is peaceful, happy and it’s zero stress. It enhances our health and makes us a hell of a lot nicer to be around. Perfectly desirable, you might say.

        On the flipside, non-loving feelings feel crappy, and who wants that?

        Keeping Our Brain Out Of It

        Since being loving feels so great, why wouldn’t we want to feel it all the time? So how do you love consistently, without the ol’ lizard brain jumping in the way?

        The trick is to make the decision to always love. Then keep reminding yourself as often as possible. This way you never have to make another “Does this person deserve love?” type decision. If your default response is to always love, you never need to think. It keeps your brain out of the picture altogether.

        Now, I’m not usually a fan of either-or thinking, but in the case of love it’s useful.

        Every thought or feeling can be easily divided into loving or non-loving. If it’s non-loving, we can simply let it go (I’ll explain how in a bit) and replace it with the opposite, loving feeling.

        It’s the kind of assessment you can do without going via your brain: Loving is super easy to see; non-loving is everything else.

        Keeping our brains out of it is critical. It stops us tying ourselves up in knots. Ye olde Keep It Simple, Sexy.

        Getting Started

        Best of all, it really doesn’t matter if you suck at being loving – or if you feel you’ve never experienced love. Every time you let go of a non-loving thought & decide to be (more) loving, things get a teensy bit better. It’s just a practice. Every step you take is a step in the right direction. It gets much, much easier the more you do it.

        Oh, and you can always try (I did, with great success) “I love that I suck at loving”, “I love that I can’t (feel) love” and so on. Whatever feels right to you; It all helps.

        As an end goal, if it was possible to be loving all the time about everything (spoiler: it is), then you’d feel great every second of every day, no matter what happened around you.

        To start with, even feeling great for a moment is better than not, so it’s totally worth trying. You find joy on the journey and every step towards that goal gets more joyful, and easier.

        Of course, if you consciously want to feel crappy about something, this may not be the approach for you.. but that’s ok too. Everyone chooses their own path.

        “I Am Loving” vs “I Love”

        Now, what I’m talking about is being in a state of loving. Ideally always, but every second helps.

        English is a little tricky here, since when we say “I love cheese” we’re talking about our attitude towards cheese. “I am loving cheese” indicates a state of being. It’s a subtle difference, but an important one. Unfortunately, “I am loving” is a far more passive sentence, so it’s less useful in practical terms, but I’ll get to that in a bit.

        The short version is this: it’s quite feasible to say “I am loving about this” while holding onto non-loving feelings. Remember love the sinner, hate the sin (and other hypocrasies)? Yeah, that.

        So even though we’re aiming for “I am loving cheese”, it’s most powerful to say “I love cheese.” Uhh, or other, you know, not-cheese stuff.

        How To Do It

        Right. Enough of the chit-chat, how do you do this?

        It’s very simple. You remember how to let things go, right? (hint: just choose to.) You’re the boss. Every voice that pops up “Wahh, I can’t because..” well, they’re wrong. Persistent, convincing, LOUD, yes, but wrong. You’re the boss. Just keep reasserting yourself, and bit-by-bit you will reclaim your inner power.

        Now, think of something you hate. Something that bugs the hell out of you, really tickles your monkey. Now say (out loud, preferably.. and tapping your karate chop point, if you feel like an extra boost):

        “I love (whatever it is)”

        Feel the tension rising up? Getting pissed off? Brain screaming loudly “No, I don’t love it, because….[insert whatever bullshit reasons here].”

        Yeah well, guess what, that bullshit coming up is not describing the issue, it is the issue. Letting go of those thoughts & feelings is what matters. That’s the paradox, the crux of it all. You let go of those feelings and voila:

        a) it doesn’t matter whether the external situation continues or not, and

        b) half the time the damn thing will disappear anyway.

        Crap sticks around until we learn what we need to, then it moves on.

        Love is the strongest positive emotion, so invoking that is guaranteed to bring up all opposing thoughts & feelings.

        Just keep saying it and keep letting go until it’s all gone and you feel loving. That’s it.

        You’re The Boss Of You, Always

        This whole thing is about re-asserting your authority. You’re the boss, of your thoughts and of your feelings. You’re choosing to love, so that’s the end of it. Keep choosing it, keep letting go, and all that crap will disappear, leaving you peaceful and happy. The more you do it, the happier you’ll be.

        You’re the boss, remember. If you choose to love something, even if you’ve hated it your whole life, well, that’s the way it’s gonna be from now.

        Also, remember, you’re doing this for you, not for (what or whomever it is).

        Say someone’s really hurt you. Ok, well, that sucks, sure. But listen, you feeling crappy about it now is only hurting you. Continuing to feel non-loving about it is only harming who? Yes, you. So, choosing to be loving is choosing to feel better about it. It’s deciding that you are the boss of how you feel.. and whomever it was that hurt you doesn’t have the power to continue making you feel bad now.

        You are the boss of you, not them.

        When you first do this, it may seem like the toughest thing in the world to say “I love (this terrible thing)” but you’ll get the hang of it. Just stick in there. Keep reminding yourself: You’re the boss.

        A lot of times, just setting the intention is all that’s needed, and those non-loving feelings will dissipate in seconds. Yes, seconds. Sometimes with messier stuff you might need to sit with it a bit, or come back to it the next day. Maybe if it’s really overwhelming throw some EFT at it, but the key is to aim for feeling genuinely loving about it.

        That’s all there is to it. It’s just a choice. Like choosing to lift your arm. Seriously.

        So, for all the screaming our brain does – really it’s all bullshit. It’s our amygdala, our lizard brain trying to frighten us, telling us we have to freak out or we’ll die.

        It’s always bullshit. You choose how you feel.

        This doesn’t mean you have to put yourself in harm’s way. You can safely cross a road, but it’s not necessary to do it quivering in fear with tears streaming down your face. Get in a loving space first, and no matter how scary the road used to be, you’ll be optimally placed to cross it in a way that is most loving for you and everyone else involved.

        Yes, it can take a little practice, but that’s ok. What’s the potential downside? You stay feeling as crappy as you do now about that situation. Not much of a risk.

        Loving The Big Stuff

        In terms of getting started, you’ll get the biggest bang-for-your-buck by starting with the stuff that pisses you off the most. That’ll shift the most detritus, and having you feeling better the soonest.

        Note above what I was saying about the subtle distinction between “I am loving” (the desired end state) and “I love this” (the most effective thing to say).

        Now, there are many terrible things people do to each other, so let’s Godwin this discussion right away: What about Hitler?

        11 to 17 million people killed. Jews, gypsies, blacks, Poles, Soviets, Jehovah’s Witnesses, homosexuals, the disabled… all slaughtered in cold blood. How could we possibly love that? Wow, in fact, as I write this, even thinking “I love Hitler” is bringing up emotion, and I was born 30 years after he died.

        Here’s the point: Even if I was in a position to do something about Hitler, I can do it from a loving place, or a nonloving place. Guess which is better, more powerful, will yield optimal results? Yep, that’s right.

        Just ask Gandhi, he kicked the British Empire out of India. They had all the guns but he had all the love.

        So, the reason we’re saying (in this ridiculous example) “I love Hitler,” is because what we’re doing is bringing up every single contrary thought and emotion, no matter how deep.

        “I love (whatever)” is the single most powerful statement for pulling up this junk and clearing the subconscious.

        The intent here is to get to a state of unconditional loving.

        • Does this mean we have to agree with what happened? No, of course not.
        • Are we doing it for their benefit? No, we’re doing it for ourselves, so we feel better.
        • Will it all disappear at once? Not necessarily, but every step closer is better for you.
        • Does this mean we will put ourselves in harm’s way? Of course not.

        Becoming loving doesn’t mean that by some magical transference we suddenly lose 50 IQ points.

        Quite the opposite. When we’re cleared of muddying emotional reactions, we’re no longer reacting like amoeba – stimulus-response, stimulus-response. Being loving brings clarity.

        (Now, since we’re all little energetic sending & receiving stations, ultimately it will affect the other party too, but that’s a whole other conversation)

        Additionally, in order to get to that loving place, we will clear out all the pain, anger and emotional trauma we’ve built up around the situation – whether real or imagined (and our imaginations are terrible things when it comes to self-torture after a traumatic event).

        Let’s say you have a crappy relationship with someone at work. Do you really believe they don’t know you’re pissed off? We’re a lot more sensitive than we realise, even if we can’t always identify why. Getting into a state of loving about that person helps you. It makes your life better, regardless of their (mis)behaviour. Additionally, how assholish do you think they’re going to be if you do genuinely love them? Ha ha, really not. They’ll pick up on that too.

        As surreal as this sounds, I’ve seen this several times in my life. People who’ve absolutely hated me, or even wanted to kill me (yes, I know!) – when I got into a place of pure loving towards them (which really just meant dropping all my antagonism) the situation naturally resolved itself, without me doing anything at all. They called saying they’d missed me, or out of the blue paid for a flight for me to go see them.. or, they just up and disappeared out my life altogether – and I don’t just mean “leave” I mean, “move city” or “move country.”

        Never underestimate the power of love.

        So, to get a damn good start, just work through all the stuff in your life that brings up non-loving feelings. Take ’em one at a time and just say “I love this”, feeling as loving as you can manage and letting go of all internal tension. If you can’t manage that, start with “I choose to love this.” Persist. You’ll get there.

        How will you know what to start with? Easy. Whatever pops in your head. Don’t save it till later, get in the habit of just doing it wherever you are, whenever. That way you’ll be dropping stuff all day every day.

        Non Loving Thoughts and Feelings

        Now, non-loving thoughts can be a bit harder to identify than giant chunks of things-we-hate.

        The subtle thing here is – how often do we think about something? Well, it’s hard to know, isn’t it. We have tens if not hundreds of thousands of thoughts a day but how many of those are we consciously aware of? Very, very few.

        Tell you what though, the emotional payload that comes with these thoughts definitely affects us. Maybe only for a fraction of a second, but boy, it adds up.

        So how do you get rid of stuff you can’t even see?

        Here’s one neat way. Any time you have a non-loving thought, eg, “I suck at this”, respond in four ways:

        1. Let go of the thought (choose to stop thinking it, imagine it floating away, whatever works for you)
        2. Repeat “I love the part of me that sucks at this”, and release all tension
        3. Repeat “I love sucking at this”, and release all tension (ho ho, this is a goodie)
        4. Finally, emphasise “I rock at this!”, releasing all tension.

        Do this till you feel great.

        Note the subtle variations in two and three. Not just loving the thought, but also any beating yourself up that came with it.

        The phrase “I love the part of me that…” is super helpful here. It helps dissociate yourself from whatever-it-is, just enough to help let things go.

        The trick, as I said, is the unconditional bit. Leave judgement at the door, ignore the why or why not and do it for everyone and everything. Get out of your head and into your heart.

        Additionally, don’t worry too much about trying to figure any of it out. If you have an icky feeling, just say “I love this icky feeling” and let it go, without trying to nut out what it’s about or why. It’s much more effective.

        I’m finding that often if I’m be feeling lethargic (say), I can spend a couple of hours trying to get to the bottom of why I’m lethargic and maybe figure it out. Alternatively, I can just say “I love that I’m feeling lethargic” and it floats away relatively effortlessly, without me ever having any idea what it was about. And really, if it’s gone, then who cares why?

        I’ve been doing this for the last couple of months now, and every day is getting better than the one before. There’s a ton of related stuff I’ve discovered that ties into this but I’ll cover that later. This is the core. Do this one simple thing (love everything) and you’ll be amazed at how much better you feel, as you love all those non-loving thoughts & feelings away, and life gets exponentially better.

        If you have trouble remembering the details, just do this: Any thought or feeling that arises, simply say “I love the part of me that…(whatever it is)” and let go of all tension that arises. Feelings come up because they want to leave. Repeat until you feel loving.

        Give it a shot. See how you feel. Guaranteed you feel better, in exchange for almost no effort at all. How loving is that?

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          Apathy vs Acceptance

          Inner peace is very easy; Just stop giving a shit.

          Well, you know, for crappy versions of ‘inner peace.’

          It’s very easy to think we’re at peace and have finally accepted something, when really we’ve accidentally slipped into apathy.

          You might be peaceful, but you probably won’t be happy.

          All healing, growing or goals we have are only ever with one intent (if you look underneath it all): happiness.

          So why is apathy an issue? Because we can’t be deeply happy about something if we’re feeling apathetic.

          It’s easy enough to tell if you’re hanging out in apathy: simply pay attention to the attendant thoughts and feelings.

          Apathy is surrounded by grief, disappointment, despair. Thoughts like:

          • Why bother?
          • There’s no point anyway
          • There’s nothing I can do
          • It’s out of my hands
          • I just don’t care any more
          • I’m powerless here

          Acceptance has a very different feel. It’s similarly neutral, but there’s a core of love that surrounds it.

          A good tip here is to watch for humour. If the situation feels gently amusing – and no, not sarcasm or black humour – regardless of how it goes then you’re in acceptance.

          In a nutshell, the difference between apathy and acceptance is the difference between giving up and letting go.

          Of course, once you see the signs for apathy town you can easily move to acceptance by just letting go of those thoughts & replacing them with loving ones, as usual.

          Just a little trap to watch out for on this occasionally tumultuous road to bliss.

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