So Much Happier Blog

 

Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

The Emotional Pressure Cooker

When we long for life without difficulties, remind us that oaks grow strong in contrary winds and diamonds are made under pressure.
— Peter Marshall

Last week I mentioned that most of us are trained through the way we’re socialized to minimize any emotions we feel that might be uncomfortable—for anyone, not just for us. The result is that we ourselves generally don’t know how we really feel and why, we don’t learn from our emotions, and we feel powerless to combat the rising tension that accumulates as we age over the persistent unresolved emotional gunk that we’ve swept under the rug.

When someone starts Tapping, they’re often surprised at the intensity of something they thought was relatively minor as we open it up and work through it. It’s well known by practitioners that the intensity of a targeted issue may seem to rise rather than abate in the first few rounds, but this is actually a result of the client tuning into what they’ve been studiously ignoring in the absence of productive tools and solutions. When further rounds are completed, and the heart of the issue is uncovered and addressed, the intensity will start to fall as expected. Then, when it dawns on the client how much relief s/he has experienced, s/he may feel a wave of gratitude, and hope that more relief is just around the corner. I feel this myself all the time when I Tap! It’s so encouraging to know that there are simple tools that can change everything about how you feel, and that every time you use them you’ll make some sort of progress.

It’s true that tuning into how we really feel may cause some momentary discomfort, but when we do this while Tapping, we’re able to vent some of the pressure that has built up and usually feel much better in the space of a few minutes to an hour. In addition, we are often able to gain some clarity about what we were afraid to look at. The meaning of the emotions we were avoiding starts to bubble up, and we see that we are being called to make new choices, either internally in the ways we think and judge, or externally by bringing new actions to our life’s circumstances. Emotions aren’t random. They arise for specific reasons, and unwinding their tangles draws us naturally down a path of healing and progress toward maturity and wisdom.

What if, instead of denigrating and denying how you feel, you could admit, befriend, and even celebrate your emotions without getting overwhelmed by or lost in them? What if doing so tapped you into your inherent brilliance and problem-solving capabilities? Wouldn’t that be a more peace-filled, fulfilling existence? Well, I’m here to tell you that all this is waiting for you when you get to Tapping. And good news—you can start anytime!

There’s a lot of shame drilled into us when we’re young about crying and about wanting love and attention that it’s inconvenient or difficult for the adults around us to give. Parenting is a tough, relentless job, and shaming is often a very effective tactic in shutting down an unruly child; it’s also a tactic that has been passed down through countless generations and seems to have proven its salt. However, a lifetime of suppressing powerful emotions, needs, and desires builds up internal pressure that contributes to all kinds of problems that only worsen the longer we allow the pressure to build. Shaming ourselves as adults, continuing the learned pattern, is a recipe for disaster for our health and happiness. Instead, we can learn to listen to what’s going on for us internally, and through self-compassion, gain clarity and strength, working productively with our emotions.

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Believe You Can?

Whether you believe you can do a thing or not, you are right.
— Henry Ford

Last week we looked at the importance of changing beliefs in order to make better choices and foster balance in your life. Often, the reasons we don’t make good choices come down to either being unaware of our habits and where they come from (hint: Our beliefs!), or from failing to slow down long enough to make a new plan and take a few sane actions to get moving in the right direction. This week, we’ll explore how to do all of this using EFT, or Tapping.

We’re all so used to the idea that whenever there’s an issue confronting us, we need to “figure it out” with the mind; if we can’t, we may be tempted to give up in disgust and despair of solving the problem. What I’m about to offer is a non-linear approach that may stand usual assumptions on their heads. It may not seem like it could work because it doesn’t involve logical mental exertions. We will surely be using the mind, but in different ways than perhaps we usually do, and you may need to step aside from the mind sometimes as it flaps around in confusion and protest.

In order to find the causes of your behavior, we’re going to start with your body and your emotions. When you sit quietly and tune into these, what do you notice? What is bothering you? Particularly when you think about whatever is most uncomfortable, what emotions come up, and what sensations in your body seem connected to these emotions? Take a few deep breaths and be patient while you wait to see and feel what surfaces. Usually we exert so much pressure in trying to stay unaware of discomfort that this may seem like a pretty odd thing to do, but there’s a purpose here.

In the beginning, what you notice may be a confused jumble of a whole bunch of sensations, competing emotions, and related thoughts. When this is the case, I sometimes like to ask people to do a round or two of Tapping while “ranting,” basically just giving voice to everything that’s bothering them in no particular order, listing off everything that comes up without overthinking it. This allows us to tread the perimeter of the pile-up and get a general map of the landscape involved. It also helps with the “What do I say?” dilemma that sometimes stops people from actually beginning a Tapping practice, because you can’t do this wrong! Once the Tapping has helped to calm and focus you somewhat, it’s often easier to pick just one thing to work with. Tapping works best when we get very specific about something and focus on it singly until it shifts and changes, so this precess of getting specific is an important skill to build.

Once you have made a choice about one thing to target, you’ll want to describe the issue, write it down if you can, and note how intense the emotions are, as well as the sensations in your body, when you feel the emotion. Give the intensity a subjective number on a scale of 0-10 so you have a good sense of where you’re starting. Then, you’ll Tap around the points repeating a short reminder phrase that sums up or symbolizes the feelings for you. As you do this, you may notice that at some point, you have seemingly random thoughts that come up. Often, these are extremely relevant to what you’re focusing on, and can tell you more about your underlying beliefs and the life experiences when you took those on. If this happens, you can use one of the many Tapping techniques to work on the originating event and change how you feel about it. This does almost all of the work for you in changing a belief, though you may have to repeat it to address multiple experiences that have contributed to the belief.

Another tactic to try is to Tap on the statement of the problematic belief itself. For instance, Tap around the points while repeating, “There’s never enough time,” if that’s the belief you want to work on. When you give it a subjective intensity number, you’re rating it on a scale of 0-10 for how true it feels, where 10 is 100% true. As you do this, you may find that the number reduces, and/or you may find that, again, memories surface that will clarify where this came from. You can then work through those experiences to reduce their hold on you. Once you’ve done that, the belief change you want is often a natural byproduct of the work. Once the intensity of the belief is low, you can use Tapping to supercharge any affirmations you want to use around the issue going forward.

This is just a broad outline, but it should give you a good sense of a couple of useful approaches for working on limiting beliefs. As always with Tapping, you start with expressing what feels true, no matter how outrageously negative it may be, and you do not try to force a change. As you Tap and continue doing this, the change will begin to happen in its own timing, even if you don’t notice it right away. Take breaks if you need to and come back to it later. Try different approaches. Keep breathing. As long as you’re not taking on something that feels too big or otherwise overwhelming, just keep at it and eventually, there will be a shift. If you get stuck, find a practitioner and get some help. When you free yourself from limiting beliefs, great reserves of energy can be unleashed, and then your life can open up in ways you might never have imagined before. Take it from me that this is a triumphant experience, one that you can’t put a price on, and one that ripples through every area of your life adding joy and confidence that builds as you continue this kind of work.

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy Wendy Frado

Crash Landing!

Well, that’s not what I thought would happen…

Sometimes we overestimate what we can pack into a day, a week, a month, or even the hour or two we have free in between other commitments. This is entirely normal, and sometimes it’s just due to unexpected issues arising in the midst of something routine that you thought would be smooth sailing. But what if this is the norm, how you’re living your life habitually? If you constantly overschedule yourself, there will be a lot of misery subtly built into your routines. You’ll feel like you’re always running on empty. You’ll tend to be irritable, grumpy, and resentful of requests, even from people you love. You’ll have to push yourself to do everything rather than powering your actions on enjoyable anticipation. And the truth is, this just isn’t necessary.

If you’re in this position, there can be a few things going on, and a few solutions that can quickly help:

  • You were taught that you should always be striving, and it’s lazy, or bad, or even dangerous to take time for relaxation when there are things still on the to-do list. This one can be the hardest to grapple with, because what we learn when we’re small can seem so true that we don’t even notice that there might be other options—the beliefs we were fed before our conscious mind really developed can be invisible, and therefore hard to change without help. In this case, you’ll need to either find yourself some assistance, or commit to setting an intention to find the beliefs that are running your behavior, and spend some time noticing what you’re thinking when you’re most stressed. These beliefs are invisible only until we concentrate on finding them. Once you turn a spotlight on your mental processes, it doesn’t usually take more than a few days to get an idea of why you’re acting the way you are. Once you have seen the inner workings, you can do the good work necessary for changing your problematic beliefs. Tapping is an amazing tool for this!

  • Somewhere along the line, you got used to trying to meet everyone’s expectations without remembering that you always have a vote. This one can also be fairly tricky to deal with too, because if the pattern is very old, as in, you learned in childhood that you should be seen and not heard or some other negating message, you’ll have to do some work on understanding where this comes from and changing your beliefs about what you deserve and what is possible. This takes some doing, but it’s so worth it!

  • Your stress levels have gotten out of hand, and you feel like you have to run to keep up with a fast-paced life over which you feel you have no control. This is extremely common in today’s world. There is so much to balance, and expectations of what we should be able to do (based on what other “non-us” people are doing) bombard us from all sides. Since you are a unique person with unique abilities and desires, much of this really makes no sense at all, but we take it on anyway. In this case, you need to give yourself permission to make your own decisions about what makes your life good; you then need to make a plan for how to rebalance based on this and carve out time to counteract any tendency you have to just churn and burn through every day without making conscious choices about what’s actually happening in the here and now—is it serving you and what you really want?

  • You’re a driven, goal-oriented, or very competitive person who genuinely loves getting things done, and ticking things off your list is part of what makes life fun. If this is you, you’re lucky to have consistent access to motivation, but it’s easy to burn yourself out to the point that this becomes essentially an addiction. You must take regular compensatory measures to counteract the effects of so much hard work. If it helps, you can add sleep, leisure activities, lazy family time, and alone time to your to-do list so you can acknowledge that recharging is still “doing” something very important. Notice what works here, what renews your sense of excitement at getting back to your tasks, and make sure that those are a consistent part of your schedule.

Life is complicated, and it’s often impossible to predict just how your days will go. We all get tired, overwhelmed, and disheartened sometimes, but if you start keeping an eye on why you’re doing what you’re doing and how consistently you’re at your best, you can begin to do a better job of recovering from overwhelm and predicting ways to create a better balance. Challenging yourself is often a good, inspiring thing. Consistently running yourself on unrealistic expectations, on the other hand, just produces disappointment, shame, and frustration. None of these will help you; motivating yourself with healthy vitality, balance, and inspiration will fuel your life beyond what you might believe to be possible.

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Who's Your Inspiration?

People often say that motivation doesn’t last. Well, neither does bathing—that’s why we recommend it daily.
— Zig Ziglar

Who or what would you change for if the stakes were high?  Motivation, which is the willingness to confront challenge and surge toward a specific purpose in the face of uncertainty, can be a tricky beast to harness.  If you're struggling with motivation, there are causes you'll need to handle at the root.  At the same time, until that work is finished and beyond, there are some hacks that may help you to get through tougher times.

When you're languishing in the "blahs" and you can't seem to want to do anything, the biggest culprits to look toward in today's world are 1) physical needs that aren't being met, which cause a constant energy drain (such as proper nutrition and adequate sleep) and 2) a lack of clarity about what stirs your passion and enthusiasm, or a failure to leverage your passion effectively.  Both of these should be thoroughly addressed if you want to reach maximum performance, but here's a shortcut that can act as a booster in the meantime: Figure out who you're drawn to serving and enlist their help in goading yourself into targeted action.  

It's amazing how many of us will take action all day long if someone we love needs us, but never take action for ourselves!  This is often because of unfortunate beliefs that were instilled in us (such as "To be a good person, I have to put my own desires and needs last") by family or other cultural elements.  It can then become sheer habit for you to live out these beliefs, and they may run in the background virtually invisible to you, seemingly a core part of your identity, hard to clearly recognize let alone consciously change.  Finding the beliefs that keep you feeling stuck under a mountain of reasons why your life is the way it is, and why you can't have what you want, can be a complicated process, but if you become comfortable with Tapping, it becomes a lot easier! Suddenly you don't have to figure out how to untangle this hopeless ball of string with just your logical mind. Your far-more-powerful subconscious mind starts to get on board when you Tap, and can lead you through a non-linear, but still amazingly effective, process of discovery and release from limited perspectives.  If we have a solution to all the overwhelm that keeps us frozen in place, it's much easier to take action in the name of our own goals.

When you want to effect change, first setting up underlying support structures that will create a stable platform on which to anchor your work is a smart strategy.  Having healthy exercise routines and mental, emotional, and spiritual practices in place can really help us to be in it for the long run.  In addition, finding crafty ways to build your overall motivation and focus is well worth your time so that you have a variety of options on call whenever you just want to lie down and quit!  No matter how positive you are, there will be times when you're running up against an obstacle that feels like it might be the last straw.  For me, that's usually technology!  I do appreciate all the incredible inventions that we have access to in modern life, but when my computer is refusing to talk to my printer for reasons unknown, the thought of spending the afternoon trying to mediate an argument between virtual entities with inscrutable motivations can make me want to climb the curtains.  People I get.  High-tech machines, not so much.

We're all different, so finding what motivates you will take observation.  With some focus over even a week or two, you should be able to isolate a few ideas or activities that really get you excited about life.  To find them, ask yourself questions like, "If I could stop time and do absolutely anything I wanted with no consequences for weeks at a time, what would that be?"  If you answered "Sleep," then that gives you a clue about what you need in your life to recharge!  Imagine that you've had 6 months to a year to just laze about and do nothing, and then try this question again.  You'll probably come up with a thing or two that you'd love to do or explore.  

Chances are, though, if you're not already adept at motivating yourself with passion, there will be someone else in your life for whom you would get out of bed no matter what.  Knowing this is gold!  If it's true for you, guess what?  You can now enlist that person's help in any number of ways in your efforts toward a goal or a making a new habit stick.  Sometimes all it takes is reminding yourself that you're exercising, for example, so you can be healthy for major events in your loved one's life that are still years away. You can also ask them to act as a cheerleader, and give them frequent updates on your progress so they can encourage you regularly.  For some people, the idea that their actions affect their pets is a super-potent driver. Those who work with energy in healing practices know that your health, both physical and mental, affects the health of those around you, including that of your companion animals, in both subtle and more overt ways.  Helping oneself in order to help a pet can be a very motivating way to commit to change. This is one of those hacks that can boost your motivation when nothing else is working because love is an incredibly powerful force that can be harnessed to impel us into action. As an added bonus, doing things for those you love makes you feel great, as long as you're doing them out an authentic loving spirit and not out of an attempt to control other people or events.

No matter where you are in your journey toward utilizing consistently effective self-motivation skills, you can build toward mastery in this area little bits at a time.  Gaining the ability to motivate yourself no matter what's going on takes work over time for sure, but any effort toward building these skills will leave you more empowered and self-aware than before.  Waking up to what works for you, and putting what you've noticed to work for you, will help you to build strong habits that will serve you well in the pursuit of all your goals.  Pick a suggestion from above and get started!  You deserve to feel excited about getting up in the morning, and these will help you get there.

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Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado

Keeping Hold of Your Heart

The roots of all goodness lie in the soil of appreciation for goodness.
— The Dalai Lama

Despite the fact that this world gives us access to greater technological advances and opportunities for cooperation and success than ever before in known history, it's also true that it can be an incredibly hard place to live.  We all have to keep so many plates spinning at all times, and we're often stretched very thin; so is everyone else.  This plus an exploding world population, increased levels of pollution, lower-quality food than what was generally available a few generations ago, etc. etc., can make for a pressure cooker of an experience.  Without a steady, committed daily practice of some sort of calming modality such as meditation, mindful breathing, prayer, gratitude journaling, or Tapping, you're likely to be building layers upon layers of stress into your mind and body that will add up to lots of unhappy, unhealthy days.  

I'll just take this opportunity to remind you that physical exercise is also a key element in the construction of a life that works.  It helps you naturally bust stress and feel happier, it helps your body's overall health in so many ways that you probably already know about, and it keeps you strong and limber so you can enjoy using your body all throughout your days.  Sleep is also incredibly important.  You know I'm going to keep reminding you about all these things!  If you're not minding your body, mind, and spirit each day, you're not living your best life, and I want the absolute best for you.  But more than all these, and less possible by far without them, we long for creativity—the creation of new ideas, solutions, and artistic expressions.  We might want to create them or just observe and appreciate them, but either way they bring a great deal of zest to life that creates enthusiasm and energy.  Therefore, whether you consider yourself a creative person or not, I urge you to find ways to bring more creativity into your routines.

If you're not currently in creation mode, get out there (or stay in!) and consume some creativity that others are offering for your enjoyment.  Keep in mind, though, that when you do this, you go on a ride of sorts that someone else has designed.  You have a great deal of choice in the kinds of experiences you can elect in this realm, so you should think and choose wisely.  Decide what kind of ride would be most helpful to you at this moment.  Do you want something thrilling and death-defying to wake you up and add some excitement to your day?  Something sweet that will restore your faith in humanity?  Something about people who have risen to challenge to become the best in themselves?  Something that just makes you laugh until your belly hurts?  I personally don't go after experiences based on horror, as I find these to be the opposite of energizing for me, but we're all different.  Experiment to find the kinds of experiences you really enjoy riding along for, and then allow yourself to enjoy them regularly.  These journeys can be musical, they can involve films or stand-up comedy, visual art, culinary adventures, documentaries, Ted talks or other educational lectures, books, whatever you'd like to try this week.  But keeping new experiences rolling in helps keep you from becoming stale or retreating into a smaller life experience than you could be having.  Why not avail yourself of everything you have access to?

I came across this list of films that might foster empathy, according to the author, which I found interesting.  If there's a quality you're trying to build into a strength, consuming supportive creative products can be a part of your practice toward that end.  You can also poll people around you with different tastes to find a list of potential ideas.  Even just a few minutes per day spent appreciating the product of someone's creativity can give you a tremendous life and remind you of what's good when there's a whole lot of chaos and madness around you.  Find something to sample this week, and feel free to comment with some of your favorites below!

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Being You, Basics Wendy Frado Being You, Basics Wendy Frado

Indulge a Little

Happiness is not a matter of intensity but of balance, order, rhythm and harmony.
— Thomas Merton

This is a holiday week in the U.S. and I want to keep it simple, so today I'll just offer a thought or two about the benefits of enjoying the good things in life.  Small indulgences can be a part of living a healthy, balanced life and enjoying the ride; life is hard enough without denying ourselves things that bring us joy.  This could include putting down the to-do list long enough to watch the sunset, or savoring a glass of wine here and there.  It could mean carving out time to read the kind of book made for a hammock and a summer afternoon.   In this spirit, I'd like to pass on some positive facts about about my favorite treat, dark chocolate (and of course there may be positive health-related aspects to whatever your own preferred version of indulgence may be, as many things that relieve stress can be considered healthy).  This article lays out some of the known boons of small amounts of high-quality chocolate on our health.  Here's another article you might find interesting if chocolate is your vice of choice.  Keep in mind that you can find bars made with honey, stevia, and other more healthful sweeteners than sugar if that's your concern! Have a wonderful week and enjoy some small indulgence that you love and can enjoy in moderation.  

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Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado

Happiness According to Yale

Be happy for this moment. This moment is your life.
— Omar Khayyam

In the last century, much of psychological study was centered on plumbing the depths of neuroses.  There's now a corresponding inquiry into what helps us to build and maintain happiness.  Currently, one of the most popular courses Yale has ever offered is a course on how to build and maintain happiness, which seems to evidence two things—that today's Ivy League students are pretty stressed out, and that they want to learn another way of operating.  Good for them.

Since you're reading this, I suspect you are interested in such things as well!  Therefore, I thought I'd share an article in which someone who audited this class gives us a book report on what he learned.  It's a tour of the teacher's research on this worthy topic, and while I found myself disagreeing with a few of the points presented here and there, I thought you'd find it valuable and enjoyable to explore.  You can even take the full course for free here if you want to.  I think that's pretty cool. 

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Being You, Energy, Basics Wendy Frado Being You, Energy, Basics Wendy Frado

Getting Sane about Emotions

If you don’t think your anxiety, depression, sadness and stress impact your physical health, think again. All of these emotions trigger chemical reactions in your body, which can lead to inflammation and a weakened immune system.
— Kris Carr

While I posted something else somewhat like this not long ago, I think it bears repeating that we've been a bit culturally mesmerized by the idea of quick, easy solutions to life problems that deserve our full respect and attention.  When we're in any kind of pain, it's so tempting to just silence that discomfort with a pill, a quick fix, a distraction, or by compartmentalizing around the pain.  The sensations can be so frightening, and our mental habits so reactive, that we can't handle considering our options long enough to find a possible long-term solution.  (I'm not saying that finding short-term relief is a bad thing at all, but using it as a way to numb out warning signals is maybe not the smartest thing to do over the long term.)

And after all, in the absence of good alternatives, this habit makes complete sense.  Pain is no fun at all!  It feels bad, it drains our energy and will and enthusiasm, it drops a roadblock in front of everything we want to be doing with our time, and we are certainly not taught any practical tools for dealing with it.  Instead, we're often fed the line that pain and discomfort are just what it is to be human.  Once you've got them, you better get used to them because you're not getting any younger, and you should just stop being such a whiney little baby about it!  This attitude is a product of millennia of generations who had extremely limited life expectancy and little access to information about health and healing.  The body/mind/spirit can often be astonishingly resilient, but solving any problem takes energy.  We have to be willing to invest it.  We also have to be willing to stubbornly hold to the belief that there may be solutions out there, even if they don't immediately present themselves.  That takes mental discipline, which also takes energy to build.

I find that on the subject of emotional pain, we have very little guidance available, perhaps because emotions don't lend themselves to neat and tidy scientific study.  In this article, we have an examination of the most common approach to addressing depression, specifically in the West.  Unfortunately that approach tends to leave out much consideration of context, and tries to make an excess of any emotional state about a purely mechanistic chemical process.  As a life coach, I find this particularly frustrating, because I find that no part of our lives exists as separate from the rest, and nothing is ever this simple.  We tend to have all the same challenges/misconceptions around the other big, unpleasant human emotional experiences, including sadness, grief/loss, anxiety, fear, and anger.  None of these exists in a vacuum, and there's usually at least some experiential reason for feeling them.  For some, these experiences become more intense, but we can all recognize them as familiar; while the human experience is broad, it's not unique in its sensations.  We all have all the basic emotions in common, and they all tend to be produced out of similar experiences.  In my Tapping  work with groups, I find that this realization actually tends to be quite reassuring for people.  We often think we're much more isolated in our pain than we are, but it turns out that even in a small group, there will inevitably be a lot of crossover regarding what's on our minds.  With honesty and the support of others, we can find ways forward that are a relief.

I do understand that everyone is unique, and bodies can sometimes malfunction such that someone has a tendency that needs constant intervention.  I also know that it can be uncanny how when when we improve life situations that cause misery, physical symptoms can sometimes dramatically improve.  Even finding ways to just release some stress and feel a bit better about something unpleasant that hasn't changed at all can help the body to inch toward healing itself.  I hope that the way emotional difficulties are dealt with in the future evolves to include a broader, more wholistic approach that allows people more latitude to access multiple approaches.  If each person could customize an overall plan that helped her/him to feel more supported and understood, I think our results would be drastically better.  My contribution to being the change I wish to see in the world in this area has had to do with seeking out modalities that can gently bend a person's future toward greater balance, and sharing those publicly as best I can.  If you feel so moved, I hope you'll do the same.  The realm of emotions is one in which we drastically need improvements to become available as evidenced by the number of people acting out their pain with varying degrees of violence toward others.  If we can normalize even the desire for people to find better long-term solutions, and start getting information out there about good work that's being done on such things, that will be the beginning of positive change.

 

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Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Energy Wendy Frado

Getting Free of the Past

Because I remember, I despair. Because I remember, I have the duty to reject despair.
— Elie Wiesel

In light of the reported suicides of some very famous and successful people this week, it seems more important than ever to get out whatever information I can about what we know about the pursuit of happiness, and how we can be most effective in it.  I'd like to remind everyone about the large-scale CDC study on adverse childhood events and their effects on adult health and happiness that you can find information about here.  The story behind it is pretty interesting—a scientist was working with a group of people on weight loss, and was flummoxed about why some people would lose an enormous amount of weight in the confines of a scientific study, but drop out before it was over or then gain it all back very quickly after the study's conclusion.  As he looked deeper, this led to startling findings about what types of experiences trigger weight gain and loss.  The results are some of the most important information about health you'll probably ever read, but I bet most of you have never even heard of this study.  

I hope you'll take a look at those links, but in short, traumatic experiences wreak havoc on physical, mental and emotional health.  If you're bothering to read this, that may not seem like a revolutionary statement.  Yet the medical community still has not acknowledged, in many ways, that major illnesses are influenced by more than genes and mechanistic chemical reactions within the body.  The events of our lives have profound effects on our futures, and who we have the opportunity to become.  And even the most rich and famous among us often don't reach out for help or can't find all the help that is available to address the things that hold us all back from our inherent potential.  What about those with few resources and many competing responsibilities?  We can do better than this.  

We can all keep an eye out for those around us who may be struggling and help them connect with information that might help, or just lend a sympathetic ear so that no one in our circle feels alone.  We can commit to learning about all the options that exist to help us all spring back from the ways in which life happens.  We can all work on instituting some sort of a daily practice that helps to preserve our sanity and make us more of a resource to the world around us, even if this is no part of our career responsibilities.  In today's world, it's so easy to feel isolated even in a world teeming with people.  Whatever else I'm doing, I hope I help others to know that they are not alone, and help is available all around.  You know that I'm a huge proponent of EFT (Tapping) in the quest for health and happiness, but it's just one of many, many helpful modalities.  We can all find something that can help us through our next steps, whether it's cognitive therapy, traditional systems of health/medicine from all over the world, or modern blends of numerous techniques used together.

Above all this, we need to destigmatize the work of addressing mental and emotional pain.  Experiencing pain of any kind is not shameful, and admitting that you could use help with the aftereffects of difficult life experiences is one of the strongest, most courageous things you can do.  Not to mention one of the most effective, because as long as you struggle with daily life, you are denying yourself and the world around you the best results of your inherent brilliance unleashed.  Let's stop acting like everyone should be able to just suck it up and handle everything that's ever happened to them alone and in silence.  Some kinds of life events are overwhelming.  This approach is killing us.

We're going to keep talking about how to get happier, but whatever you do, don't go back to sleep.  Please engage with your own needs, your own life, and the others around you, and let's work on growing past this fatal ignorance together.  When people find out about all the helpful tools that exist, hope returns and the work of reclaiming desperate, frozen aspects of our complete selves can begin.  Balance and happiness may take time to build, but what is a better use of our time than learning these life-saving and quality-of-life-saving skills?

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Basics, Being You, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

The Health Risks of Loneliness

A true community is not just about being geographically close to someone or part of the same social web network. It’s about feeling connected and responsible for what happens. Humanity is our ultimate community, and everyone plays a crucial role.
— Yehuda Berg

There is increasing scientific evidence that loneliness is extremely unhealthy.  We all know that it feels bad, but it is now apparent that lonely people have worse health outcomes than those who are not plagued by loneliness, often to a striking degree.  This article mentions many ways in which the problem presents itself, but one of the most amazing statistics I found in my travels was that chronic loneliness has negative impact that is comparable to smoking about 15 packs of cigarettes a day! Well, when you put it that way, I guess we all need to pay attention!

There can be many reasons for rampant loneliness, as the causes of it are obviously subjective.  Some of the main factors may be:

  • The pace of modern life, which leaves little time for the kinds of unhurried interactions in which we build feelings of closeness with others
  • The fact that we often don't live in close proximity to those we care most about, when in olden days we would have lived in small villages where everyone knew each other, and everyone we knew was physically close
  • Young people may experience a great deal of social isolation until they build social skills and find acceptance in a group of friends.  This can take much longer than is healthy
  • Older people who made friends in school through proximity with others may not have built adequate social skills to continue making friends throughout life.  Social skills are generally not specifically taught, so those not naturally talented in this area may struggle for a lifetime
  • Because the expression of emotions is still considered taboo in many ways, those in the midst of adversity may retreat inward; admitting to having difficulty could lead to being judged as weak.  They then don't receive the healthy support that could help them get through the tough times, which reinforces the experience of loneliness
  • Mental and emotional health assistance is still stigmatized, so many who could really use professional health of some kind don't seek it
  • Social media, where many get a lot of their interactions these days, can foment nastiness and resentments in public discourse as much as they connect us with creativity and support

Obviously these are just a smattering of the possible causes of modern loneliness, but do any of these sound familiar?  Knowing that your long-term health may depend on it, what do you think you might do differently in order to foster deeper, more satisfying relationships?  We'll look more at possible solutions going forward, but why not start thinking about ways that you can make the most of the social time you do get?  

How can you stay present with the most important people in your life?  If you have a choice to make about how to spend time and one of your choices might deepen a friendship, can you choose that one this week?  Can you write a note or have a quick conversation with someone about something meaningful to remind both of you of the bond of trust you share?  I bet if you just keep thinking about this in the background of your routines, you can find little ways to appreciate and build the relationships you have in small but impactful ways.  Relationships are built and nurtured over time, so there's never a better time to start than now.  The benefits of growing better habits are and will remain of the utmost importance to the quality of your health and happiness.

 

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Teaching Happiness

Be happy for this moment. This moment is your life.
— Omar Khayyam

Many of us struggle with creating happiness, motivation, and fulfillment, in large part because we weren't given the tools to successfully foster these things on a daily basis as part of our schooling.  It's never too late to learn, though, and that's what this blog and my work are all about.  It was refreshing, then, to read this week about how various governments are beginning to experiment with adding the development of important happiness-related skills to their school methodologies in order to help kids to be healthier mentally and emotionally, and perform better in school.  Predictably (I think) it works really well.  

Here's a link to the article I read, and I thought I'd just go ahead and pass it along this week.  I hope it serves as a reminder that increasing focus on learning things like giving ourselves credit for what we do well, feeling grateful, and empathizing with those around us has real and measurable positive results.  What can you do to model these results this week?

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Is Now the Best Time for Change?

Clever people master life; the wise illuminate it and create fresh difficulties.
— Emil Nolde

Last week we looked at some of the reasons why it can be difficult to create change in your life. We'll continue the same line of inquiry this week with some information about how our brains function and how we can best set ourselves up for success given their needs and limitations.  In his book Your Brain at Work, David Rock lays out the conclusions of a wide array of scientific studies on brain functioning. If you're someone who wants to be highly efficient and productive, you might want to read it yourself, but I'll let you in here on a few ideas it offers that are relevant to this discussion.  This is just a quick summary, so some of these concepts may not seem self-explanatory, but the evidence for them is there.

  • Completing actions you know how to do on "autopilot" is easy for your body as it doesn't require the expenditure of much energy. Learning new things, on the other hand, is an energy-intensive activity that can quickly drain your brain's reserves
  • Even processing new experiences when you're not trying to learn anything at all is taxing. Evolution has encouraged us to be wary of the new because anything unfamiliar might be a threat. Too much newness tends to ramp up our fight/flight/freeze response, which quickly exhausts resources and switches off our reasoning functions
  • Dialing down internal distractions, otherwise known as "inhibition," is another demanding task that burns through resources quickly. Deliberately focusing on something to the exclusion of all else takes effort, so you can only do this effectively for a relatively short time before you'll need to take a break to refuel. Rock does not immediately specify, but food, sleep, deep breathing, and exercise all help us to recover from such efforts
  • Switching focus back and forth  rapidly as we do when multi-tasking is also draining, and doing this decreases our efficiency such that studies show no net gain in efficiency.  Multi-tasking takes the same amount of time and energy as doing each task separately because of the efficiency we lose. It also decreases the quality of our work. The only exception to this is when one of the tasks is so ingrained as to be an "autopilot" task for you
  • As much as we'd like to think that we can work at full attention all day, studies show that we only get a certain amount of highly effective thinking time per day.  This makes it essential to be smart about how we prioritize the most important tasks so they can be addressed during our most energized moments

I hope you're noticing the through-line that when we try to work against our physical needs, we make the likelihood of our success in creating new habits much harder than it has to be. I think there's a reason why so many people find that exercising or adding a daily practice to their lives works better first thing in the morning. Not only do scheduling surprises tend to get in the way less, but we tend to have the most physical/mental resources available to us before the day's onslaught of requests and requirements starts to bombard us and use them up.

How can you start to be more strategic about moving your most important and most demanding tasks to your highest-energy times of day? (Maybe these aren't typically morning for you—we're all different, and you should absolutely notice what works for you most consistently and leverage it for yourself as you continue to learn.)  How can you protect these times from random interruptions so that easier tasks only land outside of them?  Maybe that means turning off your phone during these periods of more intense work.  Maybe that means putting a Do Not Disturb sign on your door so that everyone in your house knows that this is private time.  Maybe you'll decide to get up a little earlier so that you can get started on your day when the world is quieter, or wait until after coffee and a healthy breakfast before attempting deep concentration.  I encourage you to start thinking about this and experiment with how these principles can help you move more quickly, and with less friction, toward your most exciting goals.  Life is busy, but with some intentional planning, we can often carve out more ways to be productive than it might seem if we just blunder through our days putting out fires.  And when you find a scheduling pattern that helps, celebrate it!  Small victories add up to bigger ones over time.

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

How about Some Good News?

I am in the world feeling my way to light ‘amid the encircling gloom.’
— Mahatma Gandhi

There are always so many voices trying to tell us that the world is going to hell in a handbasket.  Some people are addicted to external drama that can prevent them from noticing and dealing with their own back yards.  Business interests recognize that fear is a powerful motivator that can increase their profits when it's leveraged to make them seem absolutely necessary.  Some people just want to be seen as a savior, someone who has the answers so that others will follow and validate him/her.  Whatever the motivations behind them, dealing with all the messages we encounter daily that are filled with bad news can be a real bummer.  One of the ways you can regain some of your vitality and enthusiasm is by dialing down or tuning out the volume of those doom-and-gloom messages and finding opportunities to be aware of the ways in which life is good.

Life will always be a mix of dark and light, happy and sad.  It's smart to take prudent, practical steps to make ourselves safer and to think ahead about what will be needed in the future, but excessive worrying and stress destroys our happiness.  Eventually, it erodes our health too.  How about finding a few sources of news stories that make you feel good about your fellow humans and being alive in general?  Here's one, for instance, but there are many others.  There are also many people out there filling social media feeds with posts that will inspire and energize you.  Why not spend a few moments this week searching out a few sources of small joys that you can add to your every day?  This week's blog is short.  I suggest that you use the extra minutes you might normally have spent reading a longer one to go find some inspiration!

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Energy Psychology

We humans have lost the wisdom of genuinely resting and relaxing. We worry too much. We don’t allow our bodies to heal, and we don’t allow our minds and hearts to heal.
— Nhat Hanh

This week, I want to simply recommend an article that covers a history of "energy psychology," (which is a broad umbrella that includes Tapping as well as many other modalities) and how various types of such interventions have been shown effective in trials:  Fighting the Fire: Emotions, Evolution, and the Future of Psychology.  One of the most interesting takeaways for me is the link between emotional trauma and major diseases, but there are many interesting points made that I thought my readers would find interesting.  Take a look and let me know what was most interesting to you!

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Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado Basics, Being You, Creativity, Energy, Excellence Wendy Frado

Powering Up

Energy and persistence conquer all things.
— Benjamin Franklin

When you're working on goals that are important to you, no matter the area of your life under which they fall, you're always going to need as much energy as you can muster to keep moving through challenges that will inevitably arise throughout the process. If you can't keep up with the demands of your project physically (in which case your clarity of thinking, willpower, emotional stability, and ability to have faith that your daily actions will build to a final result will also suffer) then you won't have a chance of staying in the game long enough to win. Many of us have heard things like, "I'll sleep when I'm dead," or "I don't need food, just more coffee" uttered as a brag,  but imagine what those fueling their lives on bravado and nutritional vapor could do with the support of better choices, and how much happier, healthier, and more stable they could feel while doing it. Not to mention how much more pleasant things would be for those around them! Living out a constant cycle of mania and crash, or just one big crash created by years of imbalance, means that whatever your level of achievement, it's not sustainable. I don't know about you, but I'd rather be unstoppable for as long as I have left on this planet.

Some things we know about energy:

  • Sleep is incredibly important for the human body, including the brain. If you don't get enough, the body doesn't heal and recharge itself, and you won't be able to think straight or exercise logic or self-control, not to mention creativity
  • Move it or lose it. The more sedentary you are, the less energetic you will feel. You don't have to run marathons, but you need to move and stretch your body every day if you want it to feel good. Check out this article for some compelling information pulled from scientific studies about the incredible ways in which exercise helps you, and some tips on how to get the amount you need to achieve your health goals.
  • In order to power all the activity your life requires, your body needs fuel, and not all fuels are the same. Will you fill it with dirty, gunky fuel that will stop up the works (cheap fast food loaded with synthetic chemicals and bad fats) or clean, whole foods that it will recognize and utilize as highly beneficial nutrients? If you want more energy, you know what the answer is. Now, I know that nutrition is one of the most confusing subjects out there for people, because there's so much conflicting information out there. Some of that makes more sense if you follow the money. In any case, I am convinced that the future of nutrition is customization for each unique person, because my body and lifestyle is not yours. My best recommendation is to make a commitment to eating organic, whole foods no matter what, and to experiment from there until you find what works for you. A visit to a professional nutritionist who is familiar with any dietary restrictions you may be working with (allergies, illness, religious restrictions, or what have you) can be one of the best investments you'll ever make, because in the quest for energy, many factors may change, but you will always have to eat. 
  • The last of the most basic fuels for sustained energy is a sense of purpose. Quite simply, if you don't know what you're doing it all for, you'll give up when the going gets tough. A good life coach or other counselor can help you clarify this if you feel adrift, and help you stay focused on it over time. Any positive vision can provide this sense of purpose, whether it's focused on yourself, people you know, strangers in need, or the world. You decide what vision excites you, plus your level of commitment and the amount of effort you will dedicate, but you must be working toward something, or you'll feel blah and unmotivated.

Next week, we'll look at blocks to sustaining your energy that are less within your control, and how to deal with them and keep moving. Until then, pick an area mentioned above and take some action toward creating more energy!

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