wellness + healing

your friend, anxiety

 
 

Tummy trembles. Brain fuzz. That discombobulating feeling that you're not quite sure what you should be doing but you should be something to keep your act together. Anxiety. Sometimes it slips away with a few deep breaths, other times you need to beat it off with a stick or some little white pills.

Naturally, we want try to get as far away from anxiety as possible - which usually just results in us being anxious about being anxious. You resist and so it persists. But what if rather than pushing it away, we actually welcomed anxiety when it showed up? What if, rather than dreading the discomfort it brings, we looked at anxiety as a delivery service of inner truth and other such soul goodies? Because every time anxiety shows up, it's our psyche's way of saying, "Knock knock, I've got something to show you about yourself that you really should see."

Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard explained anxiety is a natural condition. (How liberating!) He believed that anxiety is "a cognitive emotion that reveals truths that we would prefer to hide but that we need for our greater health." And that it's a valuable to for shaping our ideal lives. Think of it this way, beneath the butterflies in your stomach, behind the clouds in your mind ... is your greater truth, and it's trying to break on through.

TURNING ANXIETY INTO POWER
STEP 1: Face reality. "I'm anxious."
Simply notice your anxiety. Firstly, you need to be aware of your actual indicators of anxiety ... they can be different for everyone. A lot of the times anxiety is trying to talk to us and we're just not picking up on the physical or mental cues. For me, anxiety manifests in what I call, priority confusion. If I wander from room to room in the house, unsure if I should tidy, check my email, walk the dog, or write a novel, then I know something is up. I'm typically very laid back and laser-like decisive so if I can't figure out what's first on the to-do list, I know that anxiety has come callin'.

When you see the signs of it, all you need to do is simply state it. "I'm feeling anxious." There. You said it. You probably feel better already. Getting real is always the best first step.

STEP 2: Inquiry. "So, why am I anxious?"
This is the step that requires real work. It's the kind of inquiry that calls for both concentration and compassion ... a tricky combo. Having an "inquiry image" might be helpful. I often see dilemmas as layers of soft, earthy sediment within myself, and each question is a drilling down through the silt. "So why am I anxious?" I ask myself. "Because I don't want to be late." Not quite, that doesn't feel true. "So why am I anxious?" I repeat. "Because I've got so much to do." Nope, that's not it either, it's not making sense to my heart. "So why am I anxious?" I drill down. "Because I'm afraid that when I show up I'll be rejected." Bingo. (more...)

posted 4 Mar 09 in: White Hot, inspiration + spirituality articles   ·   tags:   ·   36 comments

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Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth, Ina May Gaskin

 
 

every women needs to read this

posted 18 Dec 08 in: family + kids reads, read. listen. link., read: printed + e-books + mags   ·   tags: , ,   ·   comment

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Birthing from Within, Pam England + Rob Horowitz

 
 

posted 7 Dec 08 in: family + kids reads, read. listen. link., read: printed + e-books + mags   ·   tags: ,   ·   comment

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Grace and Grit, Ken Wilber