Saturday, November 26, 2011

Dealing With Negative People: Tip #3

Tip #3: Objectify the Comments Made

     More Stuff from Celestine Chua of The Personal Excellence Blog.
Negative people can be quite critical at times. They tend to drop insensitive comments that are hurtful, especially if they are directed at you. For example, I once had a friend who was quite tactless. She would drop jarring comments which were dismissive and critical. Initially I was bothered by her words, wondering why she had to be so critical every time she spoke. I also wondered if there was something wrong with me – that perhaps I wasn’t good enough. However, when I observed her interactions with our common friends, I realized she did this to them too. Her comments were not personal attacks – it was just her being the way she was.

     Recognize that the negative person usually means no harm – he/she is just caught up in his/her negativity. Start by learning how to deal with critical comments. Objectify the comments made – Rather than take his/her words personally, recognize that he/she is just offering a point of view. Sieve out the underlying message and see if there is anything you can learn from what he/she said.

***And Bill said, "Don't you hate it when we professionals take such a rational view of things? Like...Sieve out the underlying message and see if there is anything you can learn from what he/she said. Makes me want to stick my finger down my throat. Most of us are not even close to being that rational and unemotional. Criticism gets our goat. We do not like it and we do not like the people who do it to us. However, there is some truth in what Celestine wrote. See if there is anything you can learn from what she wrote. Don't laugh". Please visit Celestine's Blog. I think you will enjoy it.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Managing Your Life in a World Full of Moods

Tip #2: Hang Out In Groups

More Stuff from Celestine Chua of The Personal Excellence Blog.

Speaking to a negative person can be extremely draining. When I spoke to my negative co-worker, I would be mentally drained for several hours, even though we talked for only 20-30 minutes. That was because I was on the receiving end of all her negativity.

To address this, have someone else around when conversing with the negative individual. In fact, the more people, the better. This way, the negative energy is divided between you and the other members, and you don’t have to bear the full brunt of the negative energy.

The plus point of having someone else around is that people bring out a different side to an individual. By having another party around, it may bring out a more positive side in the negative person. I experienced this before and it helped me to see the “negative” individual in a different, more positive light.

* Bill Spears, PhD said..."Community. That's what I call it. The image that encapsulates the idea of community for me is a small group of people talking and listening while staring into a campfire. Community is the principal method that humans used to survive throughout the ages. And, it is a great method of survival around a negative person. Rarely will a group agree completely with someone about anything.

So, ole "Negativer" is "negativing"and the first thing you know someone or others in the group disagrees. It may be a planned event, put together for the specific purpose of negating the negative flow of the"Negativer". I once worked in a Alcohol and Drug Rehab Center. If a patient was disrupting the unit, he or she would "get grouped". The community would get together and the identified patient would be called to give an accounting for their negative or unruly or disrupting attitude or behavior. The method worked brilliantly most of the time. There can be some serious positive power for good in a good working group of sane people. The staff called it "Carefronting"."

Don't forget that some negative people are pretty funny.
http://youtu.be/ESHih2aruwE

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Managing Your Life in a World Full of Moods

You live in a world full of moody people. Everyone has a mood. Everyone is in a mood. You hear things like, "Are you in a  bad mood?" or "Wow! You're in a good mood!" Moods are the color of life. Can you imagine a day without emotion? Sounds bland and drab.

You cannot control the mood of a person. There are times when you cannot change your own mood. However, there are some ways of dealing with negative individuals, those who seem to constantly have a downpour of negativity falling from the sky of their life. Celestine Chua, author of The Personal Excellence Blog offers some important tips for dealing with negativity of others.

The following tips were taken from Celestine's  blog. At the end of Celestine's tip, I will offer a comment or two (indicated by an asterisk *).

Tip #1: Don’t Engage in the Negativity

One thing I found is negative people tend to harp on the bad things and ignore the positive stuff. They also have a tendency to exaggerate issues they are facing, making their predicament seem a lot worse than it actually is.

The first time you converse with a negative individual, provide a listening ear and offer help if needed. Provide support – let him/her know he/she is not alone. However, be sure to draw a line somewhere. If the person keeps harping on the same problems even after the first few conversations, then it’s a sign to disengage. For starters, try to switch topics. If he/she goes into a negative swirl, let him/her continue, but don’t engage in the negativity. Give a simple reply, such as “I see” or “Okay”. Whereas if he/she is being positive, reply in affirmation and enthusiasm. When you do it often enough, he/she will soon realize what’s going on, and will start to be more positive in his/her communication.
                                                     
                                                                 **************
* There are times when we are negative AND FOR DANG GOOD REASONS TOO! Negative is not bad. Sometimes life is not a positive experience. We can admit that. We can talk about it. Yes, we can be negative. I have never advocated a perpetual "Wink Martindale" smile. As my Papaw used to say, "It just ain't natural!" This post is not concerned about negative moments, rather it offers workable  tips for dealing with negative people; those who have the perpetual scowl of ventriloquist Jeff Dunham's puppet "Walter". Next Post...Hang out in Groups.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

It's Going to take Time and Practice

Managing Moods is a skill that can be learned. Acquiring a skill usually involves time and practice. Overcoming obstacles is part of the challenge. Even the most skilled people can lose it without practice. Tiger Woods was the greatest golfer in the world. He got that way through raw talent, training, education and practice. Tiger's world came apart as news of his sexual addiction became public. He was on the receiving end of much criticism and controversy. As a result of this and physical injuries, his golf game was put on hold. It has been some years since Tiger, once the greatest golfer in the world, exhibited the skill and expertise that was formerly so routine for him. Without practice and training even the most skilled professionals lose their edge. The skills required to effectively and consistently manage your moods are learned through education, training and practice.

Learning to consistently and effectively manage your moods will require time. Time cannot be managed. You can manage yourself as you experience time. Time management is really "you management". Think about how you live now. Think about how you invest your life each day. You will need to allot time to learn and practice MMS (Mood Management Skills). Rather than suggesting you spend a certain amount of time each day, I would rather suggest that you make MMS development learning, education and practice a priority.You do everything possible to know more and practice more.

Control of your "inner machinery" (IM) is an  important part of MMS. What are your "insides" doing? Become aware of each part of your body. Feel and identify what is happening to you. For example, "I feel uptight inside!" or "My head feels like it has a band around it" or "I feel really calm inside." Your inner physical being can tell you many things about what is happening in your thinking. Controlling your IM is a skill that can be learned. The best method for this ability, that I have found, is meditation. There are different types of meditation techniques. Find one that fits your needs and get good at it. Please do not pass over this step. You will find that becoming proficient at meditation and doing it routinely, regularly and perhaps even religiously will make a world of difference in the way you manage your life, your thinking, and your moods.

Reading this without some assimilation, application and action (AAA) will be of little benefit for you. Move on, do something different. You can learn the MMS required for managing your moods.
However, it will take education, training,  time,  and practice.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Mood management Skills

May I recommend a great workbook? Mind Over Mood, Greenberger and Padesky. These guys must be reading this blog. Get the workbook. Read it. Study it. Assimilate it (thoroughly understand it) Apply it (make it personal to your life, think critically about how you can incorporate it into your life). Learn the written thoughts. This is education. Not memorization. If you do not learn something new, you are stuck only with what you know, and that is not enough. Your old thoughts need testing. Your old ideas may need changing. If you get a book and put that book on a shelf in your house, you have more stuff in your house. If you study that book and learn the lessons contained therein, you have become a different person. There is hope.
   
       When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child.
       When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me.
                                                                                                    St. Paul
                                                                                             1 Corinthians 13:11 NIV


     Words are thoughts which are spoken or written. When you read a book, you are reading someones thoughts. You are participating in their imagination or their research or their beliefs. This is important. In order to change your life, you must think differently. There is no other way. But, what if you do not know what to think? Books and workbooks can usually help. You have to read and think along with the author(s). You have to hear with your mind the thoughts that have been written on the page. This is important as we begin some intensive, life-changing work. The first step toward learning to manage your moods is getting education. We would hardly think of going to school, getting educated, without the help of teachers and books. We can learn Mood Management Skills.

Mood Management Skills (MMS).

You may feel as through you are being held hostage by a mood, a feeling. That is about to change. Your moods are yours. They belong to you. You own them. You created them through thought or chemistry. Never think it is the other way around, i.e. your moods create you. However, a state of mind can be very hard to "un-state" and a "line of thinking" can be hard to break into. It can and must be done if you are going to regain your power and your enthusiasm for life again. I own my moods. I own my beliefs. I own my thoughts. Therefore, I now take back my life and my affective (mood world). Learning how to do this is the first step of acquiring Mood Management Skills.

Chemical Thoughts

Everything is chemistry. A thought is a magnificent chemical interchange within the brain. Brain chemistry is part of the overall chemical body. Although everything is chemistry, PMS is not a thought. Diabetes is not a mindset. The need for harmone replacement is not a matter of stinking thinking. Research shows that thinking can effect our physical condition either positively or negatively.

All of the physical realities mentioned above can cause significant shifts in mood. They are conditions. An individual suffering from diabetes can be thinking the most positive of thoughts. Their mood is dictated by the illness, unless effective treatment is administered. Elementary. Basic. Incredibly important distinction.

This is not a either-or proposition. Everything is chemistry. Monitoring and managing one's chemistry is synonymous with practicing good health, whether mental or physical. Managing thoughts translates into managing moods, all of which is a basic chemical endeavor. Managing moods means managing chemistry. We are learning this important first lesson. We will need to learn how to manage our chemistry. Sometimes we need to take medications, eat food that is more healthy, drink more pure water and ingest less chemicals that are counterproductive.  OK. Managing Moods Lesson #1 is getting education. Learning how to manage moods, manage chemistry and think correctly.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Birth of a Mood

Moods are...... and then they change. You are always in a mood. Moods do not come out of the blue. They come out of your body, always. Moods come from thinking. Moods also come from reactions of the body to certain chemicals (food and beverage), or the chemical reaction of the body from a lack certain chemicals (food and beverage). Moods come from changing body chemistry (PMS, hormones, pancreas, liver, thyroid, brain). Moods NEVER come from people or circumstances. You are always responsible for your moods.

Let's review a few key points.

(1) Moods are..you are always in a mood. Good, bad, positive, negative, depressed, anxious, whatever.
(2) Moods always change.
(3) Moods do not come "out of the blue".
(4) Moods come from within the body, always.
(5) Moods come from chemical reactions within the body.
(6) Moods come from thoughts.
(7) Moods NEVER come from people or circumstances.

Let this post be a guide for you. Evaluate your moods by asking the following questions:

(1) What are my basic moods, i.e. those moods that show up most in my life.
(2) What is my MOST basic mood?
(3) What causes most of my moods? Thoughts or chemistry?
(4) What foods have I used to change my mood?
(5) What beverages have I used to change my mood?
(6) How often do I blame others for my mood?
(7) How often do I blame a circumstance for my mood?

Perhaps, rather than simply being a victim of a runaway mood, you can learn Mood Management Skills. NEXT POST. Mood Management Skills.

Monday, July 18, 2011

"Birth of a Mood"

     Moods. Attitudes. Everyone has them. They characterize a day or a portion of a day. Sometimes they can have little to do with the circumstances. In other words, the day can be exactly like the previous day. Nothing has changed. Nothing, that is, EXCEPT your mood. And, it could have gone in any direction, Up/Positive or Down/Negative. Is there something that triggers that mood change?

     Yes. Thoughts are connected to each other. Thoughts act much like a math problem. (2 + 2 = 4) One thought leads to another thought, leads to another thought, and so forth, until a "line of thinking" is in place.
As rain creates gullies and rivets through a mound of dirt, so thoughts have a "pattern". All it takes is one thought (positive or negative) to create an upward accent into a positive attitude or a downward spiral into negatively. Why? Because thoughts are learned in patterns, like a mathematical equation.

     If you are walking through the forest. Suddenly, you hear what sounds like a rattle coming from the ground.Your first thought is important because it will led to other important thoughts. Something along these lines....(1) That is a rattle sound  (2) rattle snake? (3) where? (4) bite! (5) die! (6) %$#@(&!!!! (7) Jump (8) Run.If those thoughts are close to what you would think if you heard a rattle while walking in the forest, it is safe to say that you learned to think that way from others, from reading, from watching movies or from personal experience. We learn how to think. Our thinking is often logical and reasonable.

     But, not always. Sometimes, yes quite often, our thinking is simply there. No reason. No logic. Just a thought that leads to another thought, to another thought, that creates a mood, either positive or negative. How is it that some individuals seem to be negative every moment of the day, no matter what the circumstances? How is it that some individuals seem to have happiness, more positive energy, no matter what the circumstances of the day. "I have learned in whatever state that I am in therein to be content." (Paul in the New Testament). Fairly positive, I would say.

     Mood is emotion. Emotion is a result of thinking. Thinking is learned. (see Paul quite above). So, one positive thought tends to led to another one of the same gender. Likewise, a negative thought tends to look for other negative thoughts. The goal? A mood. Either positive or negative. Remember, you create your world because you create your thoughts. If you are a positive or negative person, give yourself responsibility for that personality trait. If you are in a positive mood, that's right....it's your creation.

     Positive and negative moods carry a lot of energy. Energy is used to move things around.  A mood inventory will generally reveal which mood is our dominant mood and why. It always has to do with our education, i.e. the way we were taught to think AND which mood seems to work best for us in terms of getting things moved around the way we want them. Example: Some children have learned if they throw a temper tantrum they can usually get what they want. See what I mean? NEXT: "Your Dominant Mood and Why"

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

"What is that Imagination of Yours Seeing?"

                                  "Imagine if You Will"
     Your brain is a theater. You are the writer and director of all that happens on that stage in your brain. Is the brain and mind the same thing. No. The brain is an organ of the body. The stage upon which everything mental occurs.The mind is the image factory. The thinker. The consciousness. The emotive (feelings). The locomotive of the body. Your mind is the result of a functional brain. In other words, your brain produces your mind.
      Imagination is the brain forming mental images, conceptions, perceptions and sensations when the lights are out in the brain. Huh? The lights are out? Meaning there is not perception through the five senses. Close you eyes and imagine. In fact, you don't have to close your eyes in order to imagine anything. A writer, a storyteller, and yes, a liar is a fabricator of imagined reality.


     Your imagination can run wild with any kind of images ranging from sublime to horrific and everything in-between.  Albert Einstein said,  “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.” When I was a child my playmates and I discovered the truth of Einstein's words. We would often engage in an entire afternoon of "Make Believe". We sometimes called our game "Let's Pretend". I can recall the "vivid" world we created, complete with emotion and behaviors.
                                                             
      "OK, it's your turn to get killed. I will shoot you three times." I said. "OK, you shoot me three times and I will limp back to my horse and ride back to the hideout." My buddy said. "OK, you ride back to the hideout, but just as you ride up, I will jump out of that tree (pointing to the Mamosa tree that he was supposed to ride under on his make-believe horse) onto you and your horse." I replied. Then he said, and I said, and this went on for hours. By the time evening and dinner came, I had died 14 times, been run over by trains and stage coaches, found millions of dollars in gold, and got the girl 39 times.

     Someone asked me if I thought children's imagination today has been shortchanged by visual and auditory overload. No. The imaginations of contemporary children have been stimulated beyond anything my generation of chidren ever thought possible. We certainly had to use our imagination more simply because we did not have the visual or auditory imput that children have today. That is not to say that our imaginations were better, we just used them more.

     Imagination is a great gift. The content of those mental stories being played out on the stage of the brain is incredibly important. It determines the emotions and behaviors that will follow. A morbid imagination can be a curse. "Imagining the worse" is also a curse, robbing one of potential joy and serenity. Imagination is like faith in that it can move mountains that could not be budged with logic and reason. Train your imagination. Manage your imagination. Use it to motivate yourself to higher achievement. Imagine wonderful and positive worlds. Imagine yourself being happy, succeeding, getting the things you want and need in life. Imagination is yours to use as a healing balm. Positive imagination is one of your greatest gift to yourself. Nepoleon Hill said, "What the mind of man can conceive (imagine) and believe it can achieve."    







Imagination is like faith in that it can move mountains that could never be budged with logic and reason.





 
 
 
“Conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative.”


Oscar Wilde

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Decisions, Decisions, Decisions

     We are, at least in part, the sum total of our decisions. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. For every choice that we make there is a consequence. Most of these consequences float by undetected. Not all, however. Some of our choices have BIG consequences. Life changing, life rearranging consequences. And, we often do not know ahead of time which decision will be that life changer, life rearranger. Just saying.

     One of the most important aspects of living a life of contentment and composure is rational thinking. Rational thinking is thinking that is intially skeptical, not rudely, but in a way that is opposite gullible. It is thinking that is "evidence based" and "thought through", "thought out", "calculated thinking", using every available means of making a good choice. Sometimes our choices must be made immediately, without space for much calculation. The ole Boy Scout motto is "Be Prepared". It is possible to learn how to think rationally. It is possible to study thinking skills. In fact, if you will click on the iTube videos at the top of this blog page you will find some lectures, talks about Critical Thinking. After you read this blog post, go there and take some time to study Critical Thinking Skills. You will benefit greatly if you do.

     Take responsibility for your choices. Stop blaming every Tom, Dick and Harry for your situation. Of course you have been effected by others....WE ALL HAVE. Take your life by force. The force of choice. You have a choice. You are making choices right now. You could do different. You could live differently. You could work somewhere else. You could be with someone else. You could be more fulfilled. You could be happier. You could be more in control of your life. Your choices make all the difference. Like Robert Frost said, "Two roads diverged into a wood and I took the one less traveled and that has made all the difference."
                           A choice, no doubt. It makes all the difference, every time.

Oh, one more thing. If you allow others to choose for you, consequences will come. But, you are forfeiting the basic ingredient of human freedom.....decision making.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

"What Does Happiness Have to do With Love?"

      The wise man sent the young "happiness seeking" mother to The Love Tree. She was dissapointed because  it was happiness not love that she was seeking. Is there, however, a correlation between love and happiness? Remember, correlations are not necessarily causes. In other words, love does not necessarily cause happiness, but it may be involved with it some how.

     What is love? Like happiness, love is two things: (1) it is a feeling (2) it is a behavior. The feeling of love for a person is a feeling of affection, desire for relationship and, in some instances, a desire for sexual intimacy. Love as a behavior is kind, patient, and compassionate (see 1 Corinthians 13).

     I have been asked on occasions if I thought there was a difference between loving someone and being in love with someone. Yes. The basic difference is behavior vs. feeling. "I don't want anything bad to happen to her. I mean, she is a good person and I want her to be OK." (Kindness).  "Dr. Spears, I love Adolf  (Behavior) but I'm not IN LOVE with him." (Feelings). Translated....."Somebody needs to start packing here!" It seems to me that loveless (feeling) marriages produce intense unhappiness.

     We use the word "love" in place of  "like" sometimes. I love popcorn just does not really fit the idea of love. You may have a strong like for popcorn, but feelings of intimacy or desire for relationship is stretching it a bit. (You might want to take a look at a rather new word used for love...limerance.)

     Ok, so what's love got to do with it? Those lyrics would make a good song. What, if anything, does love have to do with happiness? Is there a correlation between them; love and happiness? Yes. Look at the qualities that constitute the Biblical idea of love found in 1 Corinthians 13. Love is patient, kind, does not envy, does not boast, just to name a few qualities. Are you happy when you are being envious, impatient, unkind or boasting? Not usually. You can learn how to be patient, how to be unenvious and kind. When you do, you may just find the secret that St. Paul was talking about when he stated that he had learned the secret of happiness.
"I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want."
Love just might be that secret. Something to think about.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Love and Happiness

The young mother went away. Soon she returned to the wise man. 
"I am sad unto death", she said brushing tears from her downcast face.
"Why are you so sad?" the wise man asked.
"What I desire most for my children is the very thing that I desire most for myself." she replied.
"You are sad because you do not have it?" the wise man asked.
"I do not have it nor do I know how I shall ever have it." she cried.
"My child" the wise man said lovingly, "If it is happiness you seek, you will find it growing on the tree by the road."
The young mother looked surprised. Her crying stopped. Her hope suddenly soared as she remembered the tree. She had passed it many times. So many times that she hardly even noticed it any more. Quickly she hurried away. Soon she arrived at the tree. 
"It is not love that I seek!" she screamed as she slapped at a leaf on the tree called Love.  (End of story)

What is love?
Is there a correlation between love and happiness?
Can love be learned?
 

“Happiness: Temporal Emotion and Shadow of Contentment”

     Happiness is a feeling and happiness feels good. Depression is a feeling and depression feels bad. We usually think in those simple terms. Good and bad feelings. Feelings are temporal. They have a beginning and an end. If you are happy, enjoy it because it will not last forever.

     Happiness is a feeling attached to your thoughts about various circumstances going on in your life. My son was born healthy. I was happy that he was born and happy that he was born healthy. My son was injured while playing baseball. I was not happy about that. I was rather worried. He soon recovered from his injury and I was happy again. Happiness is situational, in the sense that we have thoughts about a particular situation that causes us to feel happy.


     So, happiness is a feeling and feeling are temporal. Unless. Unless? Unless the feelings are caused by some organic malfunction. For example, an individual may suffer emotional destress from vitamin deficiency, hormone depletion and endogenous brain illnesses. With proper medical treatment, these illnesses can usually be managed effectively.

     In most cases, however, we are not dealing with an endogenous physical condition that dictates our emotions. Our feelings are created rather by what we are thinking at any given moment. It is not difficult to see how my feelings of happiness and worry were related to what I was thinking about my son’s situations. So, we could conclude with some sense of correctness that our thoughts are the primary creators of emotional conditions. Not so much the circumstances, but rather our particular thoughts about the circumstances dictate our emotional condition.

 With that fact in mind, we could perhaps try forcing ourselves to think positive thoughts about every situation in life and stay happy. This is, however, quite unreasonable, unhealthy and unworkable. Rather than deny that some situation is hurtful and strive for a perfect state of emotional happiness, we can more realistically find our shadow of contentment, serenity, and peace of mind. In spite of circumstances it is possible to experience happiness because it is both a state of being and a single temporal emotion.


     St. Paul in his letter to the church at Philippi alluded to what he had learned about circumstances and happiness (contentment).


Phillipians 4: 10F     "I rejoiced greatly in the Lord that at last you renewed your concern for me. Indeed, you were concerned, but you had no opportunity to show it. 11 I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. 12 I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. 13 I can do all this through him who gives me strength.”


    This idea is not limited to the Christian theology of St. Paul, even though his focus on “him who gives me strength” would no doubt be definitively Christian. Paul states the methods he used to achieve contentment or happiness can be learned. This is good news for all.  Instead of being an emotional victim of any and every circumstance, we can learn to remain in a continual state of contentment.  This fact is truly “amazing” (to use my daughter Meredith’s term).

     Mathieu Ricard is a genetic biologist, best-selling author, photographer, and Buddhist monk. Residing in the Himalayan region for over forty years, he is noted as “the happiest man alive”, for which he humorously says there is not a shred of evidence. His most recent book, Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life’s Most Important Skill, is required reading for this blog. Agreeing with St. Paul, Ricard says happiness is much more that a fleeing, temporal good feeling. He notes that happiness is a state (shadow) of contentment that is an acquired skill.

     Our first issue at hand is a workable definition of happiness. (1) Happiness is a temporal emotion caused by our particular thoughts about a circumstance in our life (2) Happiness is a contented state of mind determined by prior learning and practice of certain altruistic qualities rather than circumstances. We will now discuss some of the methods we can use to learn happiness, life’s most important skill. Next!

Monday, June 13, 2011

The Wise Man and The Young Mother

     "What do you wish more than all else for your children?" the wise man asked the young mother.

"Happiness!" she exclaimed. "Yes, above all, happiness. I wish for them to be happy!"

"And since this is one thing that you wish for more than any other, are you going to leave this matter to chance or are you prepared to give your children instructions as to what this happiness is and how they might get it?" he asked.

The mother looked sorrowful.

End of story. Now please take a piece of paper and a pen. Write your answers to the following questions.


(1) Why was the young mother sorrowful?

(2) What is happiness?

(3) What instructions would you give to your children as to how they could find happiness in
their lives?

The next BTIEB will focus on Happiness, what it is, how to get it and how to keep it.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

New Needs and Old Behavior

We are some needy people. All of us. And, we are like birds going from limb to limb trying to find something that will satisfy our neediness. There is something to that prayer that says "Give us this day our daily bread". Because we are needy on a daily basis.

Sometimes the needs are familiar. I am thirsty. I am hungry. I need a job. I need love. I need some rest. We know how to satisfy these familiar needs. We get a drink. We get something to eat. We get a job. We find a relationship. We go to sleep.

Sometimes the needs are strange and perhaps confusing. Feelings related to going off to college and being away from home for the first time. Getting married and starting a family. Going through a divorce and being single again. Having a debilitating illness. Leaving the workforce and entering retirement. Becoming a widow or a widower. These are needs that are not abnormal. But, they are needs that require some adjustments in our thinking and our behavior.

There is a line In the Big Book of Alcoholics that says, "Many of us tried to hold on to our old ideas and the result was nil until we let go absolutely." New situations can create new needs. New needs often call for new ways of thinking. Old ways of thinking and old behaviors may not satisfy new needs.

It may be difficult to admit that what worked for you at one time in your life does not work now. You may have been able to satisfactorily satisfy all your needs by thinking and behaving certain ways. Now you find yourself in situations that do not respond to old ideas and old behaviors. In short, you are being forced out of your old self and into a new. Many resist this push from new life situations and new needs and they "try to hold on to their old ideas" and behaviors. The result? Nil. Nothing changes. Needs are not satisfied.

What's the answer? New ideas, new thinking, new behaviors for new needs. There is no short cut. The wise man will not tell his pupil to think and behave as HE did in the old days. He will tell his pupil to think and behave as he should in the new day.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Is There a Heaven?

Steven Hawking, the brillant physicist, recently shared some of his thinking about heaven. Bottom line.....IT AIN'T THERE AND NEITHER IS GOD! He contents that the need for life after death is for those who are "afraid of the dark". Dr. Hawking is an Astrological Physicist. He theorizes,calculates and pontificates on matters related to the Cosmos. Hawking has some authority to speak of Heaven since we are always pointing upward into his "field of study", the sky, when we talk of Heaven. So, he says if we are looking for a place called Heaven in the world he studies, we are not going to find it.

My question is not weather Hawking's is right or wrong, but how he arrived at his conclusions?
Although I have never met him, I do know that Hawking's is a scientist and scientists follow the scientific method. His thinking about Heaven comes from his belief in his calculations, theories and general wealth of empirical data gained from his scientific research. So there, I've answered my own question.

Do you believe in Heaven? If you are a believer, what are your concepts of Heaven? What is it? Where is it? Your beliefs about anything have some point of genesis. You believe BECAUSE....You have reasons for your beliefs/thinking. What are your reasons? That is my point in this Blog. Think about why you Think the way you think.You may find that there are credible reasons why you believe. Then again, you may find some of your reasons rather incredible.

Our first step toward becoming the person we want to be is to discover how we got to be the person we are. And that involves a through investigation of our thinking, our beliefs. Then we can go a step further and investigate why we believe those things.

So, what do you believe about Heaven? What about Hell? What about God? What about creation? What about evolution? Now ask yourself why you believe all that?

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

You Could Think Differently

     We learn how to think and we learn what to think. Our thinking is augmented by a language(s) that helps us name and define objects and interpret our experiences. Influential people are a large part of the paperwork of our thinking. They tell us this or that about that or this, and we, for the most part, believe everything they tell us. What child thinks his parents are lying to him about the Easter Bunny, the tooth fairy or Santa Claus? Mom and Dad are right. Grandad knows everything about everything, or so we think, and Grandma is simply the wisest person ever. Our ministers know God on a first name basis, and they tell us what to think about Him or Her or Whatever. They also tell us what God thinks of us. Almost without exception we believe everything these God authorities say. Teachers, of course, are right up there with other "know-it-all's". 
     We respect all these pervayors of information, and rightly so. They are conceived to be bearers of truth, albeit their truth. Sometimes their truth is synonomous with the very teachers who taught them. Their truth is not something that Dad told them, it is Dad or Mom or grandma or grandpa or reverend or teacher encapsulated in ideological or conceptual form. Rejecting their truth is like rejecting the very people who taught them that truth.

Then, around the time of pubic hair and pimples, something dangerous begins to happen inside us. As we enter into our adolescent  phase of development, we begin to arrive at some conclusions that are different from our revered teachers. Our newfound conclusions often create quite a "stir" among the previously uncontested enlightenment, or establishment (as we called them in the 60's). We may feel as though we have become the enemy or vice versa. And the "stir" often results in verbal battles and punishment for thinking differently. There can be ourbursts of violence, spanking, hitting and killing. (See Kent State).

*****That kind of rigid thinking and combative behavior is what I refer to as the "Spirit of Fundamentalism", which I will write about in a future blog.*****

     Let it be known that you CAN and you SHOULD change your thinking when old ideas are not working, or old truth begins to make no sense, or when new ideas and truth comes to you. It is always prudent to examine your thinking making sure that it is based on truth, your truth, and not just hearsay or someone else's ideas. You might experience chastishment or resistance from those who may feel threathened by your change. You can be assertive in your resolve to be a Critical Thinker. You can also be gentle and patiently mindful that those resistors have been taught to think certain ways, and perhaps have never considered any other way of looking at it. They may consider their ideas sacredly synonomous with their former teachers.

    

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Reading is Thinking Too

My mother thought reading was important. Still does. She is 79 years old and probably the most prolific reader in our 50 member family. When I was a kid Mother would visit the library to make sure the "Bookmobile" was going to come by our house during the summer months. Reading has always been part of my life, and is largely responsible for the way I Think.

When you are reading, you are thinking the words you are reading AND you are having thoughts about the words you are reading. You are thinking these words;the words on this page. Read these sentences out loud. "My thinking determines how I feel and what I do. My thinking is my reality. I think every moment of every day. I can learn to think thoughts that make my life truly happy and content." You read those words, you said those words and you thought those words.

You have read words that caused you to feel comforted, or humored or angry or whatever. Your thoughts were directed by the words you were reading. Reading is thinking. If you are trying to get a direction for your thinking, trying to "slow your thinking" or trying to learn how to think a certain way, I suggest you read/read/read/read. If you "hate to read" and therefore do not, I suggest you get out of your self-imposed limitation and prison of your own narcissism by picking up something worthwhile to read.

Reading thoughts that have been written is thinking too. Go ahead and do some classical thinking by reading a classic.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Thinking Dark and Seeing Light: Nope

By now you realize the principal theme of this blogging effort. Thinking certainly determines a lot of what you might consider your life. The fact is so obvious that we tend to move quickly past it, and into more complicated aspects of living. But, let's get back to basics in this post. Thoughts are your world. So, if you are going to have bright days, you will  need bright producing thoughts.

You cannot think positively and feel negatively. You cannot believe and not believe at the same time. We can believe some things and disbelieve other related things. Like for instance, you may believe some things in the Bible, but not everything. You cannot think negatively and feel positively, think good and act bad.
                                                
                                                          "As a man thinks so is he."

Quit blaming your darkness on something other than your thinking.

Wait a minute. We interrupt this Blog to point out this VERY IMPORTANT TRUTH. There are times when what I just wrote is NOT TRUE. You may be feeling very dark, blue, sad, down and hopeless. You have tried positive mental attitudes and positive cognitive exercises to no avail. There are times when nothing we think can alleviate our darkness and depression. We are clinically depressed and need help. There are times when endogenous depression has us in its grip and we need a pharmaceutical intervention.

Having said that important truth, I will return to the most common manufacturer of misery.....thoughts. Once again, we cannot think crazy and live sanely. We cannot be sober and drunk at the same time. Learn how to think thoughts that produce the kind of life that you want. Be aware of those thoughts that make you miserable, sad, anxious and  irritable, and replace them. There is no short cut and no easier way.

The good news is that we actually have such control over how we respond to life and determine, to a large extent, how we feel on a day-to-day basis.  

Bill's Thinking is Everything Blog: Preview "Thinking Dark and Seeing Light: Nope"

Bill's Thinking is Everything Blog: Preview "Thinking Dark and Seeing Light: Nope"

Friday, April 15, 2011

Paying Attention to Your Mind at this Moment

     This information comes from a link that I like at Wildmind Buddist Meditation.
Remember I said that I like Jon Kabat-Zinn’s definition of mindfulness.

“Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way; On purpose, in the present moment, and
nonjudgmentally.” Kabat-Zinn, if you haven’t heard of him, is a famous teacher of mindfulness meditation and the founder of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center.

     First of all, mindfulness involves paying attention “on purpose”. Mindfulness involves a conscious direction of our awareness. We sometimes (me included) talk about “mindfulness” and “awareness” as if they were interchangeable terms, but that’s not a good habit to get into. I may be aware I’m irritable, but that wouldn’t mean I was being mindful of my irritability. In order to be mindful I have to be purposefully aware of myself, not just vaguely and habitually aware. Knowing that you are eating is not the same as eating mindfully.

     Let’s take that example of eating and look at it a bit further. When we are purposefully aware of eating, we are consciously being aware of the process of eating. We’re deliberately noticing the sensations and our responses to those sensations. We’re noticing the mind wandering, and when it does wander we purposefully bring our attention back.

     When we’re eating unmindfully we may in theory be aware of what we’re doing, but we’re probably thinking about a hundred and one other things at the same time, and we may also be watching TV, talking, or reading — or even all three! So a very small part of our awareness is absorbed with eating, and we may be only barely aware of the physical sensations and even less aware of our thoughts and emotions. Because we’re only dimly aware of our thoughts, they wander in an unrestricted way. There’s no conscious attempt to bring our attention back to our eating. There’s no purposefulness.

     This purposefulness is a very important part of mindfulness. Having the purpose of staying with our experience, whether that’s the breath, or a particular emotion, or something as simple as eating, means that we are actively shaping the mind. Left to itself the mind wanders through all kinds of thoughts — including thoughts expressing anger, craving, depression, revenge, self-pity, etc. As we indulge in these kinds of thoughts we reinforce those emotions in our hearts and cause ourselves to suffer.

     By purposefully directing our awareness away from such thoughts and towards some “anchor” we decrease their effect on our lives and we create instead a space of freedom where calmness and contentment can grow.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Most Important KIND of Thinking

     Think about what you think about.

     You have no doubt heard, "An idle mind is the devil's workshop." Idle mind? Probably means not thinking about what you are thinking about....or simply being unaware of what you are thinking.

    "Penny for your thoughts". A question that often comes to us as we stare off into space, as if we are in the deepest kind of thought. Our usual response? "Huh? I don't know."

     One of the many things I admire about Buddist philosophy is the concept of "Mindfulness". I like Jon Kabat-Zinn’s definition of mindfulness.


                         “Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way;
                          On purpose, in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally.”

     It is vitally important that we pay attention to what we are thinking, since our thinking determines our feelings and behaviors. Our life is our thinking. We would not neglect a small child, leaving him or her unattended. Neither should we leave our mind, our thinking, unattended. I will soon post a full article related to Kabat-Zimm's definition of mindfulness.

     Notice the Video Collections related to Critical Thinking, which is found in the Gadget "The Most Important Kind of Thinking. AND, I would challenge you to become a better thinker by learning how to think more critically. Critical thinking has nothing to do with being negative or critical of others or ideas. It is a way of thinking that seeks truth more than anything else. There is freedom in the truth and there is joy in the unbiased hunt for it. 

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Ever Figure College Costs?

Take a calculator and go to work on costs of college. Not Harvard or Yale or Duke, but a state university. Before you are through, you will have a sore hand and a tired mind. And maybe feel a little panicky. Those warnings about how quick they grow up and how expensive college is going to be when they graduate from high school come home to roost. There are any number of ways to think about the challenge of funding college, if you are like most people who live from pay check to pay check and have only thought of saving for college as a great idea, but unrealistic.

Funding college is only one of thousands of challenges we face in a lifetime. Each day brings routine problems or heavy duty difficulties and dilemmas. Nothing has changed. Life has always been this way. The challenge on the front end involves making decisions that lead away from disaster. Like the request of the Lord's Prayer,"Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil", we can make intelligent choices that work in our favor, preventing many avoidable trials. Critical thinking is invaluable at this point. Getting competent counsel is also
important.

How we think about life that swirls around us and in us is the most critical issue. The two attitude mountains of positive and negative ultimately determine the outcome of many problems. We cannot control life, but we have absolute and final control over our thinking about life. In fact, our brain perceives and defines every event of our lives. Our thinking is the key that unlocks positive possibilities or, in fear, shuts the door and hides. The problem is not funding college, unless your thinking tells you it is. Funding college is not impossible
unless your thoughts take you down that negative street. "Everything is possible to him who believes" (Jesus), and Believing is a way of thinking.

The Budda said,What we think, we become.
All that we are arises with our thoughts.
With our thoughts, we make the world.
- The Buddha

When we grasp the significance of what Jesus and Budda said, when we believe what they said, our entire approach to life can change and we can know empowerment that comes from within our
psyche.

Thrilling really.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

THE BIG THREE OF ME

I going to write for the next few days about what I call, THE BIG THREE OF ME.

The Big Three of Me consists of self-image, self-esteem, and self-worth. You possess The Big Three to one degree or another. Self-Image is our starting point because self-esteem and self-worth are determined by self-image.Your self-image is an incredibly important part of your life.There are very few things in your life that carry more power to affect you, positively or negatively, than the image you have of yourself..

 Self-Image is how you see yourself. When you look in a mirror you see an image of your body. How you see your physical apperance is a large part of your self-image. But, body image is only part of the picture. You are thinking all the time and your thinking begins and ends with you and your relationship with your environment. Self-Image is how you see yourself in relationship with your environment. Your environment has many facets. Your self-image is your opinion about you in relation to all those facets.

If someone asks you how you see yourself with regard to your intelligence, don't say, "I don't know." You do know. But, if you are like so many, and I include myself in that number at one point in my life, you may not think very much about what you think about. In other words, you are thinking but you are not alert or conscious of your thoughts. You have a self-image related to all things and you know what that image is.
Self-Image includes every area of your life. Are you good at math? Are you talented. Do you see yourself as a "people person?" Are you an affectionate person? Are you athletic? The list is endless. And the image is seldom a snapshot. It is a DVD, a movie.

You are not born with an image of yourself. Your self-image comes from the millions of messages that you receive from parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles, brothers and sisters, teachers, preachers, friends, enemies, books, television, movies and millions of other sources (including your own messages) of information about you in relation to your environment. Some
of these messages are true. Many are false. Examination and inventory of the messages is always a very good idea. I have heard individuals say, "But, I have always believed that about myself" or "People have always told me that I was (fill in the blank)." But, is it true?


Some of the self-images we have are true and we either have to accept them or change them. The Serenity Prayer carries a very  important idea in than regard.
                                                         God, grant me serenity to accept things I cannot change.
                                                         courage to change things I can,
                                                         and wisdom to know the difference.


That prayer would apply very well to your self-image. Your self-image carries your ideas and images of you. It is often the "Permission Center" for your daily life. It also can serve "Prohibitions on Dreams, Possibilities and Goals". It can be the biggest liar, illusionist and thief, or it can be best motivator and encourager you've ever known. Just make sure that it is telling you the truth.

Review: Self-Image is how you see your self. It is a movie more than a portrait. You are not born with it. You get it from everywhere, everything, everyone and yourself. Sometimes it is true and sometimes it isn't. IT MAKES A HUGE DIFFERENCE IN YOUR LIFE.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Some Pretty Darn Good Thoughts To Think

I found this on Stumbleupon and thought you might like it. Also interesting to discover how Geisel came to write his famous Dr. Seuss books. Check it out. Helping children learn how to think a certain way.

Here is a list of popular sayings or “Seuss-isms” from
Theodore Geisel “Dr. Seuss” (1904 – 1991) author and illustrator.
1. A person’s a person, no matter how small.
2. You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself, any direction you choose.
3. Today you are you, that is truer than true. There is no one alive who is youer than you.
4. From there to here, and here to there, funny things are everywhere.
5. Don’t cry because it’s over. Smile because it happened.
6. Today is your day! Your mountain is waiting. So… get on your way.
7. If you never did, you should. These things are fun, and fun is good.
8. I meant what I said, and I said what I meant. An elephant’s faithful, one hundred percent.
9. So the writer who breeds more words than he needs, is making a chore for the reader who reads.
10. And will you succeed? Yes indeed, yes indeed! Ninety-eight and three-quarters percent guaranteed.
11. Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are simple.
12. All alone! Whether you like it or not, alone is something you’ll be quite a lot. – Dr. Seuss
13. The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you’ll go.
14. Today was good. Today was fun. Tomorrow is another one.
15. Think left and think right and think low and think high. Oh, the things you can think up if only you try!
16. Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not.
17. I’m afraid sometimes you’ll play lonely games too, games you can’t win because you’ll play against you
18. I’m sorry to say so but, sadly it’s true that bang-ups and hang-ups can happen to you
19. I know up on the top you are seeing great sights, but down at the bottom we, too, should have rights.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Don't Tell Me You Don't Know What I'm Talking About

No, I did not write this. I copied it and pasted it because it is really helpful.


15 Styles of Distorted Thinking

1. Filtering: You take the negative details and magnify them, while filtering out all positive aspects of a situation. A single detail may be picked out, and the whole event becomes colored by this detail. When you pull negative things out of context, isolated from all the good experiences around you, you make them larger and more awful than they really are.
2. Polarized Thinking: The hallmark of this distortion is an insistence on dichotomous choices. Things are black or white, good or bad. You tend to perceive everything at the extremes, with very little room for a middle ground. The greatest danger in polarized thinking is its impact on how you judge yourself. For example-You have to be perfect or you're a failure.
3. Overgeneralization: You come to a general conclusion based on a single incident or piece of evidence. If something bad happens once, you expect it to happen over and over again. 'Always' and 'never' are cues that this style of thinking is being utilized. This distortion can lead to a restricted life, as you avoid future failures based on the single incident or event.
4. Mind Reading: Without their saying so, you know what people are feeling and why they act the way they do. In particular, you are able to divine how people are feeling toward you. Mind reading depends on a process called projection. You imagine that people feel the same way you do and react to things the same way you do. Therefore, you don't watch or listen carefully enough to notice that they are actually different. Mind readers jump to conclusions that are true for them, without checking whether they are true for the other person.
5. Catastrophizing: You expect disaster. You notice or hear about a problem and start "what if's." What if that happens to me? What if tragedy strikes? There are no limits to a really fertile catastrophic imagination. An underlying catalyst for this style of thinking is that you do not trust in yourself and your capacity to adapt to change.
6. Personalization: This is the tendency to relate everything around you to yourself. For example, thinking that everything people do or say is some kind of reaction to you. You also compare yourself to others, trying to determine who's smarter, better looking, etc. The underlying assumption is that your worth is in question. You are therefore continually forced to test your value as a person by measuring yourself against others. If you come out better, you get a moment's relief. If you come up short, you feel diminished. The basic thinking error is that you interpret each experience, each conversation, each look as a clue to your worth and value.
7. Control Fallacies: There are two ways you can distort your sense of power and control. If you feel externally controlled, you see yourself as helpless, a victim of fate. The fallacy of internal control has you responsible for the pain and happiness of everyone around you. Feeling externally controlled keeps you stuck. You don't believe you can really affect the basic shape of your life, let alone make any difference in the world. The truth of the matter is that we are constantly making decisions, and that every decision affects our lives. On the other hand, the fallacy of internal control leaves you exhausted as you attempt to fill the needs of everyone around you, and feel responsible in doing so (and guilty when you cannot).
8. Fallacy of Fairness: You feel resentful because you think you know what's fair, but other people won't agree with you. Fairness is so conveniently defined, so temptingly self-serving, that each person gets locked into his or her own point of view. It is tempting to make assumptions about how things would change if people were only fair or really valued you. But the other person hardly ever sees it that way, and you end up causing yourself a lot of pain and an ever-growing resentment.
9. Blaming: You hold other people responsible for your pain, or take the other tack and blame yourself for every problem. Blaming often involves making someone else responsible for choices and decisions that are actually our own responsibility. In blame systems, you deny your right (and responsibility) to assert your needs, say no, or go elsewhere for what you want.
10. Shoulds: You have a list of ironclad rules about how you and other people should act. People who break the rules anger you, and you feel guilty if you violate the rules. The rules are right and indisputable and, as a result, you are often in the position of judging and finding fault (in yourself and in others). Cue words indicating the presence of this distortion are should, ought, and must.
11. Emotional Reasoning: You believe that what you feel must be true-automatically. If you feel stupid or boring, then you must be stupid and boring. If you feel guilty, then you must have done something wrong. The problem with emotional reasoning is that our emotions interact and correlate with our thinking process. Therefore, if you have distorted thoughts and beliefs, your emotions will reflect these distortions.
12. Fallacy of Change: You expect that other people will change to suit you if you just pressure or cajole them enough. You need to change people because your hopes for happiness seem to depend entirely on them. The truth is the only person you can really control or have much hope of changing is yourself. The underlying assumption of this thinking style is that your happiness depends on the actions of others. Your happiness actually depends on the thousands of large and small choices you make in your life.
13. Global Labeling: You generalize one or two qualities (in yourself or others) into a negative global judgment. Global labeling ignores all contrary evidence, creating a view of the world that can be stereotyped and one-dimensional. Labeling yourself can have a negative and insidious impact upon your self-esteem; while labeling others can lead to snap-judgments, relationship problems, and prejudice.
14. Being Right: You feel continually on trial to prove that your opinions and actions are correct. Being wrong is unthinkable and you will go to any length to demonstrate your rightness. Having to be 'right' often makes you hard of hearing. You aren't interested in the possible veracity of a differing opinion, only in defending your own. Being right becomes more important than an honest and caring relationship.
15. Heaven's Reward Fallacy: You expect all your sacrifice and self-denial to pay off, as if there were someone keeping score. You fell bitter when the reward doesn't come as expected. The problem is that while you are always doing the 'right thing,' if your heart really isn't in it, you are physically and emotionally depleting yourself.

*FromThoughts & Feelingsby McKay, Davis, & Fanning. New Harbinger, 1981. These styles of thinking (or cognitive distortions) were gleaned from the work of several authors, including Albert Ellis, Aaron Beck, and David Burns, among others.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Your Pathological Critic

Hi. I'm Bill and I'm a blogger. Yes, I blog. After I decided that I wanted to blog I was awaken in the wee hours of the morning by my Superego. That's what Freud called the conscience and Byrn called the inner parent. Flip Wilson called it "de Devil!" I call it the Pathological Critic.
This voice (not audible,of course) is a real turd sometimes. It will tell you all sorts of things that turn your perfectly great day, or night, into a stumbling, fumbling, tossing, turning night or day of self-hate and guilt. The Pathological Critic will criticize every thing about you. "You look horrible. You sound like an idiot. Nobody in their right mind would like you--much less love you. You don't actually think they are going to pick you do you? She hates you. He loathes you. You never win. You are the most unlucky person. How could you think, say, do such a thing? People will be talking about your stupidity for years to come." Everyone, to some degree, has one of these inner loudmouth critics. One of my patients said, "I don't have a Pathological Critic, I have a Pathological Group."
While I was considering the possibility of blogging my inner critic told me that writing a blog would be vain and arrogant. To think that I actually had something to say that was worthwhile and beneficial was ridiculous, he said.
I have heard this terroriser for so many years. I know what he sounds like. And, I also know how to respond. "SHUT UP!!!!!!" I also have gotten very good at not only catching the critic lecturing me or preaching his words of shame and discouragement, I also know how to argue with him. "I am not vain and arrogant. But, so what if I am. A little vanity and arrogance adds spice to life. I would rather be vain and arrogant than guilt ridden and hating myself."
The Pathological Critic is an enemy of self-worth. Remember self-image is how you see yourself. Self-esteem is how you feel about what you see. Self-worth is how you value what you see. If we are going to live happy, content and self-actualized lives, we need to be aware of our inner critic. This critic is not to be confused with our sense of right and wrong, our morality. No, this is our Pathological (sick, crazy) Critic. That inner negative voice that talks crazy about us, to us. Catch the Critic and get good at disputing his/her/their lies.You will be a lot happier when you do. Later.

Don't forget to check out a couple of great blogs that I follow.

Friday, February 18, 2011

THE BIG THREE OF ME: SELF-ESTEEM

Self-image is how you see yourself in relation to everything in your environment. You are not born with an image of yourself. Self-image is discovered, learned and accepted. Messages about you began to come to you while you were still in your mother's womb. After you were born those messages increased, coming from every direction. Parents, grandparents, kin folks, neighbors, friends, television, computer, books, teachers and the list goes on. Your experience with life created some self-messages about how you saw yourself in those experiences. And, you had a lot of feelings about what you saw. Those feelings about yourself are self-esteem.

Self-image is how you see yourself, self-esteen is how you feel about what you see. The mind is a theater and the images your have of yourself are the images on the screen. As you watch that movie you have feelings about what you see, as you would in any theater. Those feelings about yourself are self-esteem.

So, if you have poor self-esteem you generally feel negatively about how you see yourself. Self-image determines self-esteem and self-worth. It would be difficult to feel happy about yourself if you see yourself in a very negative, incapable, incompetent manner. Self-images need to be inventoried and examined in order to know what they are and whether they are true or false.

Your day-to-day emotional state is largely dependent on how you see yourself and how you feel about what you see. Happier people tend to be more happy with how they see themselves. A confident person is generally happier than an individual who sees herself as incompetent and vulnerable. Self-image and self-esteem can be changed for better or worse. A self-confident child can be ridiculed and shamed in such as way as to destroy that confidence. An anxious person can begin to see themselves as competent and capable.

Self-esteem is a critical component of your life and largely dependent on your self-image. It is always a good idea to take a self-image, self-esteem inventory. Making sure that what you see is what is really there and finding if those things about which you feel so negative are actually true. Remember, you can change the way you feel about yourself by changing the way you think about yourself. So, go ahead...do it.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The Langauge of Thinking

Thinking is an excercise of the mind that is both a language and pre-language experience. If you are the curious type you might find the work of Jean Piaget (1896-1980) of interest. This research biologist was interested in how individuals obtain control over their environment through their cognitive (thinking)development.

For a moment become aware of your conciousness. You are now present and you are alert to that presence. If I ask you to think about your presence, what happens? You most likely begin to "speak", i..e. think in your preferred language. And, just what is the content of your thinking? In order to know the answer to that question you must be concious of what you are thinking about. Think about what you are thinking about.

When we practice thinking about what we are thinking about, we become concious of what we are saying internally. This is critical to cognitive management. Language is important because we think in pictures and pictures have names and meanings. These names and meaning are words and words are part of the structure of language.

We can learn a new language, but it not necessary to learn a new language in order to change our thinking. We can change the words we use to discribe our concious experience and using different words changes our perception and interpretation of reality.

So, if you want to change your private world, you can change your vocabulary and use different words to descirbe your experience. Will it change you experience? Yes, because nothing has meaning until you assign meaning to it. No expereince has purpose until you assign purpose to it. And the words you use to assign meaning and purpose generate emotions and behaviors. Think about it.

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