All Things Seemingly Good or Bad Works for Your Highest Good
In the last three days:
* How many times did something happen to make you worry something in your life wouldn't work out?
* How many times did you respond to the fear by relaxing into it--knowing life has a way of working out in your favor?
In the last three days:
* How many times did something happen to make you worry something in your life wouldn't work out?
* How many times did you respond to the fear by relaxing into it--knowing life has a way of working out in your favor?
When Life Gets Hard, Lighten Up
I admit throughout life I've succumbed to worrying about work, money and the future. But I've learned that when life gets messy, that's the very time I need access to my most nimble and flexible problem-solving abilities. And that's why I lighten up when life is hard.
Lightening up when times are tough changes how you think about your troubles and helps you gain more options for achieving better outcomes.
I know 'just lighten up' is easier said than done, but it can be done, and you can get better at it by choosing to practice making the switch in your thinking.
Learning how to stay upbeat in the face of difficulties ultimately results in a more overall optimistic attitude in you as you learn to work out of your higher brain instead of your lower brain.
When you're stressed-- learning to switch from your 'Lower Self' to your 'Higher Self' is the key to staying upbeat and nimble during tough times. Let me show you what I mean.
Learning how to stay upbeat in the face of difficulties ultimately results in a more overall optimistic attitude in you as you learn to work out of your higher brain instead of your lower brain.
When you're stressed-- learning to switch from your 'Lower Self' to your 'Higher Self' is the key to staying upbeat and nimble during tough times. Let me show you what I mean.
A Lower Ott and A Higher Ott
Years ago at the end of conducting a workshop on the paradox of change, a workshop participant--Hall of Fame Songwriter, Mack David--presented me with a little ditty he composed. With his cherub cheeks and a lighthearted grin he sang:
'The Lord begets and the Lord begot,
A Lower Ott and a Higher Ott;
But of all the Otts the Lord begot,
The best of all is a Meyerott.
Who? Sue!
And Nancy Too!'
It made me laugh--and it still does. There it was: The Lower Ott and the Higher Ott--what I had been calling My Lower Self and My Higher Self. This lighthearted ditty became just the ticket to keep me from taking myself too seriously for too long when I succumbed (as we all do) to taking the path of the Lower Ott during stressful experiences.
While you may lack a name that rhymes so well with begot, you too have a higher and lower self housed in your brain. And how you talk to yourself about difficult situations will determine which of your selves--your higher or lower self will do the problem-solving for you.
Do You Feel Pressured or Challenged Under Stress?
What's in a word? Lots! Whether you feel pressured or challenged under stress will determine if your choices for responding to your world are limited to your lower brain, or if more expansive options are available to you from engaging your higher brain.
The good news is if you change your thoughts-- from feeling pressured to feeling challenged under stress-- you'll unlock the key to opening options and to staying upbeat in the face of negativity.
Feel Pressured? It's a Real Downer!
Here's the thing--when you sink into feeling pressured, fearful or worried about a situation, you downshift into your lower--or reptilian brain. Your lower brain offers you very limited instinctual responses--much like those available to snakes whose instinct is to protect their territory and their young.
For you, this translates into your basic fight or flight reactions (the stress response) and results in the extremes of fighting and withdrawing such as outbursts, yelling, arguing, quitting, ignoring, denying, running away and pulling the covers over your head and never (ever) going back.
When it's not helping you respond to a crisis, your lower brain is not a very empowering or engaging place to come from, and it leaves you feeling weak, threatened, out-of-control and unsuccessful.
To Stay Upbeat, Upshift into Your Higher Brain
By switching your thinking from feeling pressured to feeling challenged, you move up to your higher brain--or cerebral cortex--where conscious, critical thinking is possible. Now you're in control. It is from this higher place you are capable of considering calm, clear, focused choices and listening to your inner wisdom.
Chose the Self-Satisfied Calm of Knowing You Can Handle Life
Why not give up the adrenaline rush of feeling pressured for the self-satisfied calm of knowing you can handle whatever life throws your way. The next time you feel the angst of your situation coming on, consciously choose to say 'I feel challenged' in place of 'I feel pressured or stressed'.
No, things don't always go as you planned. But you do have what it takes to successfully move through life's challenges. Look for the challenge and give up the pressure and stress.
'Relax and begin saying, Everything in its perfect time. Everything is unfolding. And I'm enjoying where I am now, in relationship to where I'm going. I'm content where I am, and eager for more.'
Abraham
2 comments:
Beautiful, Sue! I like to use a little humor to lighten up when thoughts could take a dark turn when another "challenge" arises. Like, in my best 1960s radio DJ voice: And the hits just keep on comin'!
Or I think of an upbeat song, like:
Take it easy
Take it easy
Don't let the sound of your own wheels
Drive you crazy
Lighten up while you still can
Don't even try to understand
Just find a place to make your stand
And take it easy
So good to hear from you Jean! And there you are, your upbeat self! Hope all is well in your world and that you are finding time to watercolor!
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