Articulating Silence - Deciphering Dreams - Exploring Inner Landscapes

Showing posts with label Alignment of Body. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alignment of Body. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

To Keep The Mind and Heart Integrated







"When the Mind and the Heart are congruent with each other, living in this sense of integration is actually very easy to do. This does not mean that there are no challenges; it simply means that the suffering is optional."               
 ~ Dr. Michael Lennox

My dear friend Nancy was filling my head this morning with all sorts of inspiring articles.  I am always amazed at how much information she has at her fingertips.  She is very knowledgeable about random websites with incredible information.  ( NanYoga-AlongthePath@blogspot.comSo instead of being bogged down by this rainy morning, I feel very integrated and safe to be me.
 
Life is filled with challenges.  Some we eagerly embrace and succeed while others may bring us to our knees.  What is an issue for one person may not be for the next.  Change and conflict are entwined throughout our days and many dark nights, all of which are unavoidable.  We cannot eliminate the challenges in our life, but we can control the emotions we invest into any situation. 
 
Eckhart Tolle has written and lectured numerous times about controlling the pain created by our emotions.  This is based on our ability to embrace our challenge without becoming stuck in heavy emotions.  He encourages to keep our eyes on the task and move through the fear without taking on unnecessary pain.  We get to choose how long and how deeply we want to continue suffering. 
 
This is not to say that we can avoid pain completely, but it does say that we can minimize the depth of a situation by our emotional response.  When we honestly address our emotions they do not become repressed or deeply complex.  We will feel pain and sorrow, rejuvenating our spirits at our own time and place, but we will not become overwhelmed and reside in our sorrow.
 
If a friend hurts my feelings, I can respond to myself by thinking, "Wow.  They must be having a really bad day," or "She was really rude to me and I am not going to talk to her."  By personalizing the situation, by taking on responsibility for my friend, I get enmeshed in additional emotion.  I may even choose to gossip and tell another friend about what happened, making things even more complex.  In our minds, a small incident can become totally out of proportion.  So if I originally just gave my friend the benefit of the doubt that she was having a bad day, I could move forward easily without wasting my energy flopping around in self-pity. 
 
I realize the example above is not critical, but it is nevertheless an example of two ways of reacting to any given situation.  Another option would have been to stop our friend and say,
"Hey, you just really hurt my feelings."  This is a means of clearing up the situation immediately.  Generally, we will find that our friend misspoke and had no intention of hurting our feelings.
 
There are life challenges more severe like hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, fires, and illness.  These things cannot so easily be dealt with, but we still have the choice of where we want to put our focus.  We can mourn our loss, but we still choose a response.  We can choose to fall into fear paralysed or we can begin to make a positive plan out of what little we may have remaining.  Our personal energy is a force and is best used when maintained in one healthy direction rather than fragmented into emotional concerns. 
 
Although I have not mastered this entirely,  I do have numerous opportunities to keep my heart and mind integrated in an attempt to move through bumps along the way.  I don't always immediately remember to keep my self congruent, but I am getting better at catching my emotional behavior before it wanders into the depths of depression or fear. 
 
The best setting for me is reflected in the picture above.  I don't want to travel on a super highway,  I want to stay in the middle of the less traveled road.  I want to have nature on either side of me with the beautiful heavens above.  I desire to hear birds singing and follow my path until I come to a stream with rocks to sit upon.  As night falls, I will place a full moon in the sky and sprinkle tiny stars for all to see.   There will be a circle of fire gathering sisters and friends,
a safe place for stories and me.
 
 
 
 

Monday, February 11, 2013

Psychological Resistance

 
 
 
 
Pain is a relatively objective, physical phenomenon; suffering is our psychological resistance to what happens. Events may create physical pain, but they do not in themselves create suffering. Resistance creates suffering. Stress happens when your mind resists what is... The only problem in your life is your mind's resistance to life as it unfolds.
 
Dan Millman 
 
 
 
There is much in life we resist, primarily change that could possibly alter our comfort zone.  We like to feel safe as we can feel more creative and exploratory.  When unknown change abruptly appears, we meet it with resistance rather than facing what it brings. 
 
Even when the change has been initiated by our own merits, there is some element of risk.  The change may even be welcomed, but there will be a small part of us lingering in the familiar with the slightest resistance.
 
Resistance can be based in fear and lack of trust.  In life, change is a constant teacher.  The greater the resistance, the more complex the lesson becomes. We can strive to face change with an open heart and not simply react out of fear.
 
Every morning upon awakening, we can ask Spirit to help  us be alert to the challenges brought to us.  We can trust what is brought to us means us no harm, but deeper understanding of our selves and the world.  This does not mean condoning every change, but pausing to make decisions without fear.
 
Greeting life with resistance rather than trust keeps us in choppy waters instead of being in the flow.  It is like  trying to swim up stream, going against the current, and avoiding what will only resurface another time.  Resistance makes life more difficult and we are not as capable of remaining in alignment with body, mind, and spirit. 
 
We are referring to psychological resistance, not physical.  Psychological resistance is a choice based in fear.  Feelings that surface are often rooted in our past from other experiences.  These unresolved emotions from the past can easily distort our present reality.  This is why there is great importance in living in each moment ... not the past, and not the future ... in the present moment.