Tuesday, April 19, 2016

What are you thinking about?

The mind is a crazy and dangerous thing!  Thoughts become things.  Thoughts direct our behavior...and worst of all...thoughts affect our state of being...aka  our emotions!
Do we really spend enough time thinking about our thoughts?  An oxymoron perhaps.  
What are we telling ourselves each minute, each hour...each day?  Are we saying we aren't pretty enough?  Smart enough?  Are we normal?   Do we question essentially every choice we have made?  I do.  And of course I do!  Life is full of uncertainty.  
The beauty is that at any given point...any second...we have the ability to stop thinking and start observing.  Everyone benefits when we turn off our thoughts...even for a moment. 
I might be ON my way to work...worrying ABOUT work...thinking bad things about myself or where I'm at.  And at that precise moment I can choose....to stop thinking about those things that I have no control over...that won't benefit me or others. 
I choose to make a gratitude list.   I think of all the things I'm grateful for...from my home to my hearing...from my animals to the fact I can think and speak.  I have a roof over my head, food to eat and loving people in my life....it's pretty great when you break it down. 
Stop thinking if thinking hurts!  it does little good for most of us;   we don't think original thoughts.  We think in patterns...we think in habit. We hurt ourselves more with our thoughts than any war, recession or ex-lover could. 
Take a break from thinking;  start feeling...being...existing. 
We can always decide not to think...even just for one moment.
Nameste

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Stars can't shine without darkness

"Accepting feelings doesn't mean acting on them. It means you don't fight with their existence. You can let them be there while you get on with your day"
Padraig O'Morian
Don't fight;  accept.  So simple but so challenging!  I'm drawn to this concept likely because of two convincing reasons:
  1.  When I succeed at accepting and I stop fighting, I am more at peace with myself, my emotions and my experiences. 
  2. Just like Mom and Dad told us..."eat your vegetables!  they're good for you!"  I KNOW that acceptance is good for me....so I keep trying.  I load my plate up with broccoli because I want to be ..healthier!
For many people, myself included, I strive for "happiness, peace, contentment".  Of course!  However, having only "pleasant" emotions isn't very realistic, or even always desirable.
I enjoy Canada because I like the changing seasons; when spring rolls around I'm excited.  If I had spring and summer all the time I'm fairly certain I'd take it for granted.  Just like when I go to the cottage and the first day seeing the lake - the sun dancing off the water -the sounds of the boats and warmth of the sun...it's heaven.  On day 5....missing my wifi!  If I lived on the water I would take that for granted too!  I know myself!!
But gettingstars dark back to one's desire to feel happy, peaceful and contented....if I was always all those things I'm sure they would lose value somehow.  
I need the dark to appreciate light.  I need the negative to see the positive. And so instead of fighting my feelings, it's better for me to accept them...whatever they are.  I don't have to act on them;  I can just let them be.  Because they will change.  

I also don't have to fear them, or strive to change them.  No emotion is "wrong" or "bad". They just "are". 
Nameste

Sunday, April 3, 2016

A thought is not an instruction

A thought is not an instruction. Recall this phrase when your mind tells you that you "must" do this or you "should" do that.
By:  Padriag O'Morian
I find this concept very valuable.  Sometimes we are on auto pilot.  And a thought CAN feel more like an instruction - especially when it comes to changing our behaviors or how we perceive ourselves. 
I've heard the saying  "don't should all over yourself".  It's not productive and can negatively influence one's self esteem.  Being gentle and kind to yourself teaches us to do the same for others. 
Nameste