Showing posts with label lion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lion. Show all posts

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Feeling Fear: Turn the Lions into House Cats!

Quote of the month:
The only thing we have to fear...
is fear itself.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt

In March, we used the idea of lions and tigers and bears.... [Oh my!] to describe our fears. Now let's talk about what to do with that fear. The truth is, most of us don't like to experience fear. When faced with the possibility of actually feeling fear, most of us have elaborate methods we use in order NOT to feel it!

Why?

As FDR stated in the quote above.... we are afraid of fear. The nebulous fear that we have is that if we allow fear to surface, we will not be able to handle it.

Honestly, this is the most difficult post I've attempted to write so far.... because the truth is, this topic is not that easy to make "simple." Yes, I am suggesting that we expend a lot of energy NOT actually feeling the fears we began uncovering in the Why Process (December 2008) and further looked into in the post on fear (March 2009). Now I am now suggesting that we do try to feel them! So, before you aim your mouse for that "X" on the top corner of the page to close this out, give me a few more lines..... or paragraphs, to explain why this might actually be a good idea.

The primary reason this is a good idea is that by feeling the fear, it is released.... gone! Over! Most of us, myself included, often resist feeling, which actually holds the energy of that feeling inside. Initially, this can make one feel tired, achy, uncomfortable, overwhelmed. Over time, I strongly believe that emotions that are not felt, can lead to more serious illness. This is NOT to say that it's not real or it's all in our heads, but rather what is in our heads can affect what is going on in our bodies. Our heads are connected to our bodies by more than our necks! There is an intricate system linking our brains and our bodies, wherein each thought we have releases various chemicals into our bodies. There are many people who can speak on this subject with much more detail than I can... but even with this simple bit of knowledge, it makes sense that what we think, what we feel AND what we think about what we feel : ) can influence the body physically.

To cut to the chase.... the most simple way is just to do it.... just allow oneself to fully feel it... and then - the feeling is gone.....and you will probably wonder why you waited so long! Most of us do not do that...... myself included!!!!!!! Most of us resist feeling!

You've probably heard the saying, what you resist, persists.... As long as you resist, the feeling is going to stick around and try to makes itself known. So let me give you some techniques.

There was an old Blue's Clues (cartoon) episode on frustration when my son was little.
The advice they gave was to:

1- STOP,
2 - breath and
3 - think.


You know how I like to keep it simple. This really is great advice... but let's expand on it just a bit!

The basic keys to feeling fear.... or any other emotion are:
(Note: Each of these could probably be it's own post, so consider this as an introduction.)


1 - STOP - interrupt whatever the habitual pattern is that we usually fall into in dealing with fear. This is to give you a gap of time between whatever it is that is triggering you and acting. [The gap is used to determine what is really going on and eventually determining the course of action, if any.]

Answer the question, how am I resisting?

There are a multitude of ways.... probably as many ways as there are people. A clue for you is if you begin to notice any type of repetitive behavior such as smoking, reaching for a drink, reaching for a piece of candy... or even more socially accepted methods such as shopping, or working too much.... or even things you may not realize..... like glazing over watching a TV show, playing a video game or going out dancing. (None of these things is "bad" in and of itself.... I am simply suggesting that if you do any of these repetitively, there may be something more there.)

The way to tell if you are using a certain behavior to resist or avoid is quite simple according to Gary Zukav. Simply refrain from doing the behavior.... and see how you feel... see what happens.... If you begin to feel uncomfortable, there is a good chance you are using that behavior to resist.

2 - Figure out what it is you are feeling. If you are not clear on what is causing your repetitive behavior (and this is quite normal!!!!) try revisiting the post on the Why Process. Get as specific as possible about the feeling... I call it, "getting under" what it seems like is on the surface and seeing what is really happening.... what you are really feeling. Another clue here is to try to move towards fear, like the teen with the scratch on his car, who appeared angry, but in reality was in fear about his social status.
Then -

3 - Remember an important point from My Stoke of Insight by Jill Bolte Taylor. An emotion only takes 90 seconds to physically move through your body... it is like a wave with a beginning, a crest and an end. Initially it washes over you, the way a wave does, but then also recedes, the way a wave does.

So grab your surfboard ....here are my suggestions for "riding the wave".....

  • Repeat your True Colors Phrase (January 2009) to remind yourself that what you are feeling is not entirely true (this is similar to the idea I've mentioned previously of re-programming a computer, taping over an old tape or resynching the I-pod.)
Though this explanation is from a spiritual perspective, there is a scientific explanation as well. The brain has developed connections from repeated behavior. This can be likened to walking over and over on the same dirt path. After a while, a trench is formed. The trench can be more difficult to climb out of than stepping off the path earlier on... as more and more connections have now formed in the brain... but it is still quite possible to climb out of the trench. You do this by forming new connections in the brain. The True Colors Phrase is one of those new connections.
  • Try to step out of the emotion the way Gary Zukav describes stepping out of a river (the emotion) and on to a bridge above so that you can both view it and are not swept away by it. Eckhart Tolle calls this consciousness or being in the "observer" mode.  This means to try to observe the emotion rather than "becoming" it.  For additional reading on this subject, see The Voice, 8/2009 and the Observer 9/2009
I have a name for it too. I call it "sitting with it." A way to think of it is as "allowing." It has to do with just "sitting with" the feeling and allowing it to pass through you or wash over you. Not fighting it, not resisting it... AND not acting on it in the way you typically might. For 90 seconds attempt to allow it pass through your body. Watch a clock if you have to. If you must, at the end of the 90 seconds, scream into a pillow, kick your mattress or punch a punching bag! I also suggest journaling afterwards, yoga, exercising, or meditation!
It is us (the ego) who spends the remainder of the time (and our energy) resisting the feeling in all sorts of ways as described above. Anything that takes longer than 90 seconds....lets you know there is resistance of some sort going on. But don't be hard on yourself, EVERYONE resists something...most of us many things!
  • Let me add.... a final step
    BREATHE!!!!!! Part of the others but worth mentioning.
AS ALWAYS, I suggest starting with something simple....something that does not really create a great amount of fear. I am going to start with the example of someone getting in line in front of you in the "10 items or less" line with 16 items.....clearly more than they should have...

A quick why process...... maybe it is anger.... ask why does it make you angry?
It's not right?
It's not fair?
It's making you wait longer?

Why does that make you angry?
I always end up getting the short end of the stick.

Why does that upset you (vs. why it might upset me?)
It makes me feel unimportant.


A-HA! See, that is the real feeling! The fear! Outwardly, before, you might have rolled your eyes or looked at another person in line as if to say, "Can you believe this guy?" but now you know... it is really caused because you are feeling unimportant!!! (In my example, your reason may be different!)

Whatever YOUR particular reason....try just "sit with it." Use that extra time in line to actually feel the anger.... please DO NOT ACT..... just feel.... inside. No one else need know what is happening inside you.

A point I want to make very clear here is that lashing out at someone, becoming violent or abusive, yelling at someone.... these are ways people may typically think they feel their emotions. I want to clarify that these behaviors are a CHOICE one makes AFTER the feeling arises. It often happens SO rapidly that we do not feel it as separate or as a choice... but it is. I am suggesting STOPPING BEFORE that choice is made and experiencing the feeling fully. If you can do that, there will be no need to yell, etc. [I may have previously suggested mindfulness and meditation once or twice....ok maybe 6 or 8 times before..... to help with slowing this whole process down!!!!]

See if you feel something in your stomach (uneasy stomach), your chest (faster heart rate), your throat (tightening) or your face (hot, red, etc.) Breathe! This is the actual energy of the emotion moving through your body. Allow it to! Breathe! You will see that after it is finished.... IT IS GONE!

**NOTE - if this is a particularly difficult issue for you, please pick another one such as a traffic jam, a long line at the bank, someone cutting you off in traffic, bad weather....etc.... just something that is not your most difficult issue.....something little first that will pass through you much more easily and with much less resistance.]
I always suggest starting with those issues that don't "push your buttons" so to speak because this is like developing a muscle. You don't go out and run a marathon without training. This is like developing spiritual muscle. With that muscle...... you really can turn those lions and tigers....into house cats!

I would love to hear your feedback as well as any questions you may have or topics you may be interested in for the future. You may comment at the bottom at the blog where it says "comments." All posts will be archived on my blog along with other useful information at: Simply Spirituality or http://simplyspirituality.blogspot.com/

To continue reading next month's post on Intuition, click here.

Until next month....
Here's hoping you keep your spirituality simple!
Penelope
Picture of the month:
Puff the Housecat, FL, July 1998

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Fear



Quote of the month:
You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience
in which you really stop to look fear in the face....
You must do the thing you think you cannot.
-Eleanor Roosevelt

Back in the days of cavemen, one might find themselves running in fear for their lives from a tiger, a lion or other wild animal. Today, most of us are not physically running for survival, but fear still plays a role in our every day lives.

As the caveman, most, if not all of us have fears that we are also running from. In our case, the "something" we are running from is generally of an emotional nature rather than physical nature....and many times we are not fully aware of it. We looked at this in the December blog, during the Why Process. That process attempts to clarify just what it is that causes you stress. Underneath that stress, is something that scares you.

Let's take a simple example.....
From
November's post, we talked about attachments and how at different stages of our lives we identified with different things..... a child with a bike, a teen with a car, with clothing or with friends.... We talked about how a teenager might act on emotion when it comes to any of the things listed. and how a teenage boy might over-react by hitting someone, if they scratch his new car.

Breaking that down, what is going on there? Is he running from something, similar to the caveman? We are going on the assumption that the boy is identified with the car. He feels like he IS the car, or that the car represents something about who he is. So, a simple why process (see December's post for more information) might go something like this.....

Why did you hit that guy?
I'm mad!
Why?

He scratched my car.
Why does that make you feel mad?
Now my car doesn't look good!
So? It still runs. Why does the scratch make you mad?
(Think why is it this way for you? vs. Why it might make me angry.)
If my car doesn't look good, it makes me not look good.
It's just a car. How does it do that?
If I don't look good..... I might not get a date....
or If I don't look good.... the guys might not think I am cool..... etc.

Do you see the fear underneath the anger? The outward appearance is anger, but what is causing it beneath is the fear that he won't be seen as cool, or the fear that he will not get a date?

Of course this is a simplistic example, but the simplicity of this can be applied to other situations our every day life. Substitute a father yelling at a little league coach for the teen age boy, and a perceived "bad call" for the scratch on the car. Or substitute an angry driver with road rage for the teenager, and someone passing them or making a mistake while driving near them for the scratch.

Here is another example.... a child cheating on a test.....

Why did you cheat?
Because I have to get good grades.
Why?
So I can go to a good college.
But why did you cheat?
I am not smart enough to do it on my own.

In this case, substitute a job for the test and taking credit for someone else's hard work for cheating....

It is also important to note that the Why? can be different for everyone. The outward behavior of taking the credit may be the same, but the fear underneath could be varied.
For one person it might be looking good,
another being successful,
another might be afraid that the boss doesn't like them,
another might want to impress their spouse,
another might be out for more money, power, prestige, etc.
The list is really endless.

Although an over generalized statement, for the most part, "bad" or negative behavior is generally an indicator of some sort of fear underneath causing the behavior.

If you don't think this applies to you, let's go back and revisit your Why Process. Remember when you came up with something that was causing you stress? And asked yourself why....

It may take some time, but at the core, you eventually will get to a fear of some sort....but that is the good news!!! At least when you really know what is driving your behavior, you have the opportunity to do something about it. I also want to add here (and it may be the topic of a future blog) that there is no right and wrong here and no judgment. These are areas of your own life that you identified as causing you stress. The idea is to understand that you have a choice to experience your life differently and that we ALL have these types of fears.

The problem is, when you feel the fear of a lion or tiger chasing you....you run! One does not always think rationally in that situation. The intention of this month's post is to suggest that you look a little deeper at the things in your life that are causing you stress and consider the possibility that you may be in fear about something. If you can do this... I'll say again, that really is the good news! Once you see the "tiger," you can do as Eleanor Roosevelt suggests in the quote above.... and turn around, stand your ground, stare it in the face and not back down. More on that in a future post!

To continue reading next month's post on You Can't do it Wrong! click here.

I would love to hear your feedback as well as any questions you may have or topics you may be interested in for the future. You may comment at the bottom at the blog where it says "comments." All posts will be archived on my blog along with other useful information at: Simply Spirituality or http://simplyspirituality.blogspot.com/

Until next month....
Here's hoping you keep your spirituality simple!
Penelope


Picture of the month:
Lion, Lion Country, FL, March 2001