Overcoming Challenges
My blog is opgedra my kinders, Arend en Simon, vir wie ek
oneindig lief is. En aan die mense wat my inskrywings lees! My wens vir julle is om gelukkig te
wees (met die op- én die aftye); om egte vreugde, bevrediging en dankbaarheid
in julle lewe en werk te hê asook vrede te ervaar.
Die aanvaarding van veranderinge ís moontlik.
As dit soms ongemaklik en moeilik voel, dan is julle op die regte pad. Kweek
die bereidwilligheid om juis dit wat jul wil vermy te herken, toe te laat, te
ondersoek en dan met sorg te hanteer... dán word dit beter. Laat ek hier
onder verduidelik...
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In
life, your internal and external world constantly change.
There is impermanence and there are new
challenges – nothing stays the same – change
happens.
Sometimes
your fixed ideas about yourself or another person’s behaviour or a situation are
such that it leaves no room for the inevitable flow of life to happen...
Joke: The female student kneels down in front of the professor in
his office. She whispers: “I will do anything
to pass this exam!” He answers: “Will
you do ANYTHING?”; “Yes, anything!”,
she whispers. He whispers, in return: “Will you study?”
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Let
me use the example of most learners’ and students’ struggle with
procrastination. Most find it challenging to start tackling a difficult task or
to prioritise subjects in order to reach their full potential. It leads to ineffective
time management which is quite stressful and may lead to forming inappropriate
habits.
Numerous
studies about the brain and stress, such as the ones conducted at the University of Denver and
University of Columbia, found that non-judgemental, present moment awareness makes
a huge difference. To befriend your thoughts, emotions and your experience can
bring about transformation in challenges that you face. Meditation (the
practice of being aware) improves performance in self-regulation, resisting
distractions, and learning from past experience in order to positively affect
decision-making. Scientists point out that it is particularly important in the
face of uncertain and fast-changing conditions.
One of the
reasons that mindfulness is really catching on is that it can be delivered in a
way that is stripped of any religious connotations, making it entirely acceptable
to the wider population.
When you believe your comfort is being threatened, or
you are unsure about your competence or if you are feeling “under attack”, you
interpret these as threats to your existence. It blocks your wider perspective
because you only see the ‘problem’ – imagine you are being held in a kind of
grip and looking through a tunnel.
From samatters.com
We protect the self to survive. It is a natural
part of our human development. We want to avoid or resist what is painful or
threatening as if our life depended on it (and it usually doesn’t!).
We are wired to hold on to, firstly, what feels
good and comfortable and to follow (temporary)
pleasure states in the moment. Secondly, we might get critical and furious at others. The third red flag is avoidance of uncomfortable situations; for
example by overworking or getting lost online.
To reflect, ask yourself how
this might happen for you:
·
Are you avoiding something?
·
How many hours in your day do
you spend in front of a screen?
·
Are you watching a television
series or film rather preparing for your test or exam?
·
Are you constantly
buying things?
·
Are you constantly unhappy
about others’ behaviour?
·
Are you blaming someone for
something?
·
Are you fixated on something
like eating or drinking?
·
Are you cynical at times?
If some of these questions resonate for you, you are opposing reality. These patterns of behaviour and/or your difficult
emotions let you know that you are caught in what you can experience as a grip.
Your bodily sensations are sending you a message
that you don’t like reality at that moment. Your muscles tighten to help you defend
yourself. You may feel tension especially around your eyes but also your jaw,
neck, belly etc.
If life is all about protecting the self then it is
keeping you from really living in the present. If you believe your thoughts as being
the truth, you can’t keep others into account or even attend to your own needs.
In addition, it makes it difficult for you to feel real joy or love.
From cartoonstock.com
The
question is: How do you deal with
distractions and how do you ‘go with the flow’ to live life to the fullest?
Let me make it
clear that going with the flow does not mean accepting and condoning everything
in your life. It does not mean allowing someone to walk all over you! Instead,
you notice what is wrong and respond in a way that effectively deals with it.
Assertive actions are needed in some circumstances and not deliberate ignoring (It
also means choosing to do the right thing even if it means you won’t be popular).
You develop the intuition and knowledge to know when you are able to change
something (and how to do it!) and when to accept what is.
You want to be able to look outward and not to be caught up
in your thoughts and emotions. You are enabled to do that by the practice of mindfulness
and being compassionate. These are skills
that can wake you up to pay attention, to feel compassion for others and for
yourself and to make a difference in the present moment.
It is like taming a wild horse
- if you handle the horse with respect and patience you get much further.
Mindfulness
in stressful moments in your day includes the
following: uncomfortable feelings and sensations and patterns
of behaviour like the above mentioned.
Keep your attention on your sensations and do not wallow in your story! Your thoughts are real, but your thoughts are not the truth. You break the stress loop by staying with sensations and noticing if you add more stressful thoughts. Gently come back to your body if more thoughts arise.
What to do:
· Body and awareness
When
these stresses arise, see them, pause and gently pay attention to your body and
stay aware of how your muscles tense up.
You can bring thoughts into your awareness with language. Instead of adding more stressful thoughts, you could say, “Ah, here is a grip!” or "Oh, thinking".
You can bring thoughts into your awareness with language. Instead of adding more stressful thoughts, you could say, “Ah, here is a grip!” or "Oh, thinking".
· Allowing
Letting
discomfort be there doesn’t mean you
are saying it should be there.
Be
aware of the result of the distressing thoughts without condemning or trying to
suppress them.
Keep your attention on your sensations and do not wallow in your story! Your thoughts are real, but your thoughts are not the truth. You break the stress loop by staying with sensations and noticing if you add more stressful thoughts. Gently come back to your body if more thoughts arise.
· Inquiry
Staying
with your sensations, ask, “What’s happening inside my body? / What’s here?”
If you
are in your pattern of avoidance, ask yourself, “What are you running
away from?” If you are curious and do not take it personally (That is
why you use the second person in your inquiry), it enables you to pause and
honestly answer this question and face these fears. With practise you are
eventually able to respond and not to react.
Honest answers contain our fears (like feeling
incompetent) and taboos (like hatred towards somebody) and
it takes a lot of guts to face them because it feels vulnerable
and unpleasant. Remember we are all facing fears and uncertainty - you
are not alone and it isn’t personal.
· Kindness
Bring a
little gentleness to yourself to enable you to access enough tenderness to be
with the unpleasant.
After this
part of the process it requires that you to do nothing at first – just being in loving
presence with what is unfolding. This will enable you to accept reality and
take responsibility, to act differently than before and to be kind to others too.
Let us
get back to our example of a resistance to study. You may feel angry about it
or blame someone for it – you might be feeling like a victim. You may automatically
grab your phone to distract yourself, but this is where you recognise the
pattern and pause. Instead of following the old habits, frame it as such and
pause more to feel the sensations in your body.
Asking yourself, “What is it that you are avoiding?” is a valuable tool to allow you to face what lies underneath the feelings: Maybe it is discomfort, or anger, or maybe it is fear. It can be a feeling that there is a loss of some nature and beneath that a grief about that loss. Or you might feel like you might fail.
Asking yourself, “What is it that you are avoiding?” is a valuable tool to allow you to face what lies underneath the feelings: Maybe it is discomfort, or anger, or maybe it is fear. It can be a feeling that there is a loss of some nature and beneath that a grief about that loss. Or you might feel like you might fail.
Taking
a step back and actually allowing these feelings while focusing on the
sensations of it (and not adding judgement – like “I’m deficient!” to yourself is essential) help in this process of
accepting reality. It involves feeling the pain of the loss or even hatred and
allowing yourself to accept that it belongs there. By saying, for
example, “Frustration / Anger / Anxiety / Fear / Grief is here now!” you
are actively accepting all parts of you (because they are part of reality) and give care to yourself. This process brings the healing.
Getting
real with whatever you identify help you not to identify with being a victim or
judging yourself as being bad and can enable you to take responsibility.
Contrary to what you think, it gives you hope if you don’t follow the unhelpful
habits that give you temporary pleasure or relief.
You
soon realise that the time you ‘lost’ spent on something not pleasurable in the
short run, pays bigger dividends in the long run. (Or when you feel frustrated
and your parent keeps on telling you what to do and conflict arises between
you, it is possible and normal not to like somebody you love): “It
belongs - it is not your fault!”
You can make the choice of
sitting down at your desk, setting your timer and studying to the best of your
ability. Like this fox, you are relaxed and ready to be creative!
From cracked.com
From cracked.com
Mindfulness doesn’t take the suffering away, but it gives it a bigger basket to tenderly
hold and know your pain and that, it turns out, brings new options in any
situation and consequent healing. Healing is coming to terms with things as
they are.
From
pinterest.com
Practise
mindfulness 10 minutes every day with an App like Headspace) and be present to various stressful moments in your day by
tuning into your bodily sensations.
3 tips for effective mindfulness:
·
Expect that your mind will be busy because that is its nature – observe your thoughts and
feelings.
·
Effortlessness –
ease off trying-hard-to-relax;
rather practise non-doing (sensing the movement of your breathing).
·
Ease of mind
is like the Blue Sky, always present
– ease isn’t somewhere else, it is already in you.
(The same goes for laughter –
instead of having your laughter get ‘swept away by supposedly serious issues’,
let it surface again. The writer, Kurt Vonnegut said those are the funniest
subjects to joke about!)
For professional and customised advice, you should
seek the services of a counsellor, someone that uses a mindfulness approach,
who can dedicate the hours necessary to become more intimately familiar with
your specific situation. I do not assume liability for any portion or content
of material on the blog and accept no liability for damage or injury resulting
from your decision to interact with the website.
What
is the Complete Study Course?
The
Course is meant to give you or your children practical insight on how to learn more effectively and with less frustration. The lessons in this
course can help in learning many different subjects and skills. Whether you
love language or
math, music or physics or history, you will have fun, and learn a LOT about how
to study!
It
is provided to students on school or university level.
Contact
Details
Lucia
Brand
082
782 4747
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