Ancient Lesson #4 – Fear

“The fears we don’t face become our limits” ~Robin Sharma

“Do one thing every day that scares you.” ~Eleanor Roosevelt.

Imagine that you’re cruising along on the ocean in a beautiful speed boat. Everything seems perfect. The sun is shining, you’re with friends or family and everyone is getting along (I guess that must mean you’re with friends then, not family – ha ha). The wind feels so good in your face. You can smell the salt in the air. You’ve never felt happier. Suddenly the boat stops and everyone is jerked around and all are frantically trying to catch their balance. The boat stops dead in the water. What has happened?

You look down below the water line of the boat and see nothing but tangled up seaweed or kelp. Your engine’s propeller and/or rudder (yes i was in the Navy but don’t know all the parts of a ship – just the head since I got seasick) is caught and the seaweed is tied all around those parts. You’re not going anywhere else. You are stuck. Your mood changes. The mood of the others change. Many are unable to get their balance once they got knocked off balance. People start talking loudly. It progresses into arguments and then downright fights. What has happened?

This is how fear works. It’s all deep within us. Everyone has fear. It’s just a matter of degree and location. If you have created a safe life for yourself, you can just cruise along happy go lucky. Usually we pick friends that are similar to us so everybody’s ok.

Then something comes along that begins to stir that fear deep within. Maybe some bodily symptoms, maybe work instability, financial instability, problems in a relationship, family member illness, anything out of your comfort zone – that life you created. Now what?

You don’t feel so happy anymore. You may start to bring your friends down or you may pull away and find friends that aren’t so happy anymore. Those old happy ones are making you uncomfortable now.

You can maybe slow down but keep going for awhile. But, the more that that fear works its way to the surface, the more it’s like you’re venturing further into that bed of seaweed. Pretty soon, you’ll be stuck – because you haven’t addressed that fear. You’ve just kept going like it didn’t exist. It doesn’t want to be ignored so it figures out how to stop you in your tracks so you have to address it. The kelp is all around you.

If it jostled your boat enough initially, you could be thrown overboard and now you’re flinging your arms around, kicking your legs and fighting for air. You can’t breathe. Sound familiar. Panic sets in. If you keep fighting that fear, you’ll lose to it. If you stop struggling and address it, you should be able to make your way free in a slow and methodical manner.

Don’t ignore the things you’re afraid of. Acknowledge them, talk to your fear and find out what message it wants to give you. Once you understand what it’s all about, you can begin to save yourself and get back to that life you want to be living. You have to soothe your brain and reassure it that all is safe (I actually talk to my brain. You should have been there at ATY when for five days I talked to my brain sometimes out loud as I walked around in a circle for the first 5 days). While you are reassuring your brain and nervous system that it is not in danger (remember it’s a fight or flight machine), you will be restoring blood flow to the decision making area of your brain. This will help you figure out what you need to do about that fear. Then you will be better equipped to handle it. To soothe your brain look up exercises (no, not that kind) for your parasympathetic nervous system or Google “polyvagal” exercises.

Your fear is there. There are beds of kelp all over the place. You will encounter one of them eventually if you haven’t already. It’s vital that you examine your fears so that you can clear the path for your boat. As Eleanor Roosevelt said “Do one thing every day that scares you”. This will help you learn where your fears are.

Ancient Lesson #3

I decided I should call these lessons LOL lessons – Little Old Lady Lessons – LOLLs

Anyway- this week’s lesson is called the Package and Mail system

When things are bothering you and weighing you down, they are most likely thoughts and memories about the past or your own internal predictions of what’s going to happen in the future. For some reason we all think we are fortune tellers.

You have heard me repeat ad nauseum that worrying or focusing on the past or the future is simply a waste of valuable resources that you could use trying to accomplish the things you would like here in the present moment. “But how do I do that?” you ask. “I’ve spent my whole life worrying about all these things. You just want me to up and stop? That’s not fair.”

I’ve developed a technique that works for me and maybe will help you change this behavior. I was a pro at both worrying about the past and fortune telling. This is the ultimate in multi-tasking. I could do both of those things at the same time and I was definitely a champion at them both. They did me absolutely no good and plenty of bad.

When I find myself focusing on one of those things or on anything that is not within my control, here’s my process:

– I visualize finding the right size container for it – it might be an envelope if it’s only one thing or is small but with me it used to have to be a big old box. I’d get the box and the packing bubble snap stuff and oh, yeah, some packing tape.

– I see myself picking up the things I’m worried about – let’s say some lab tests, a dental appointment that’s coming up in two weeks, and whether or not I’ll be able to start my trek again NEXT YEAR. We can start with those things.
— So i gather them all together on the table and place them in the box, putting that bubble stuff between worries so they are nice and safe.
— Then I hold the edges down and lean over the package to make sure it’s held tightly as I apply the packing tape to keep things from falling out.

– I go find a mailing label and watch myself label it to the universe. If you are away you can address it to your home thinking you can better handle it when you get home. Since they are just worries, there really is nothing to handle better but if you really don’t want to get rid of them for good, you can use that. I send everything to the Universe so it can deal with them and most likely dissolve them since they are just taking up space anyway. The point it, I’m sending them out of my mind (conscious and hopefully out of your subconscious too) right now.

– Once the package is addressed, I observe the nearest mailbox – and for our purposes, all mailboxes will handle any size package. It gets too complicated if you think you have to go to the post office to get rid of some of these. I don’t know about you but I’m good at procrastinating on that and I would never get the package there. So, we’ll use our imagination and allow the mailbox that’s right across the street to accommodate anything we want to send.

– Out my front door I go, trotting over to stand in front of the mailbox.

– I open the lid and place my package there. Then I gently push it down into the box.

– I close the lid and say “goodbye”. The package (my worries) are no longer anyplace i can control or even see. I am done with them. The Universe will receive them and I no longer can clutter up my mind with these thoughts and worries.

– I move away and go about my business. If my mind starts to revert back to those thoughts, I remind myself “oops, you don’t have them anymore. So you can’t do anything about them. They are in the mail. Move on to something else Terrie.”

And if that doesn’t work, you can do a new letter or package.

Hope this helps you envision how pointless it is to worry about things that either have already happened or might never happen.

Enjoy a wonderful week full of LOVE and Happy Valentine’s Day tomorrow.

Ancient Wisdom Lesson 2 – Focus on What You Can Control

I hope I don't lose track of the numbers but so far so good - after all, it's only  the second week..lol

This lesson probably should have been number 1 it's so important and it's one I just came across last year and am still working hard on it. I know I've probably already talked about it in multiple posts. It's just that important.

We must realize there are things we can control and things we can't control. I know I have spent a great deal of my life focusing on the things I can't control - the past and the future for instance. The past is over and done so it's only good for providing fun memories to use for joy and for learning lessons. The future hasn't come yet and we really can't control the outcome of much of anything (that we discussed in process over outcome last week).

So what can we control? Our actions and our response to things in the here and now. Worry does no good and changes nothing. I have spent a great part of my life in the worry game and I have never won. Predicting the future never works because we don't have that ability despite how hard we try. Why have i wasted so much time and energy on these things before last year. I think some of it is because we need to feel in control and instead of working to control the right now, we want to try to control everything else. I also think it depends on our upbringing. My father and mother were polar opposites. My father was sure there was something terminal happening every time my mother sighed whereas my mother never worried about anything. I, unfortunately, took after my father in this one.

How do you change your behavior?

1 - Be aware of this concept! Now that you've read this post, you are aware. See how easy that was?

2 - Make a list of all the things in your life and put them into two columns. One column is those things you can control. The second column is those things you cannot control.
Example:
Editing my book - I can control
People buying my book - I can't control
People liking my book - I can't control
Being happy the book is done - I can control
Considering myself a success when it's done - i can control
Being successful with the book - i can't control
Training for vol state - i can control
Finishing vol state - i can't control
Living another 20 years - I can't control
Being happy every day of however long i have left - i can control
Leaving for work on time (if i were still working) - i can control because i don't have any family to take care of
Getting to work on time - i can't control (unless because of the pandemic i was working at home).
Getting everything on my grocery list - i can't control (there are supply shortages or the store may be out)
Looking for everything on my grocery list - I can control but just because i look doesn't mean I'll be able to get something.
etc.

I would write down everything that happens in your life or that you want to happen. The two years I missed vol state because of illness i didn't plan on nor could i foresee. If i had been focused just on being in the race (which is exactly where i was mentally) i would (and did) spend a lot of energy on "wishing it were so". What I planned on didn't happen and instead of focusing on the process (something I could control) and take pleasure in that, i was focused on the future (which i couldn't control) and was terribly disappointed and let down when it didn't happen.

Once you've made the list hang it up and when you find yourself focusing on anything, either look at the list or ask yourself "is this something I can control?" If it is, then go all out on it. If it isn't, you have to let it go. That is the hard part because we always want to change something that is not up to us. But practicing it with small things will help you do it with the big ones.

This will give you so much more time and energy that you'll be surprised. Try it out for a week or so and see what happens.

Have a wonderful week!