These days, we’re open to expressing our burnout feelings. And that’s a healthy restoring move. But the cure to anxious situations and moods is in your mindfulness.
We all know what mindfulness means… being present in this moment.
But do we practice often?…
Usually not, unless we’re in an engaging activity we’re all into.
Mindfulness isn’t the natural path. Our minds tend to naturally wander to dreaming about the future and drift back to worries from the past even if that was earlier the same day.
Mindfulness is an open-door opportunity in every moment. It’s less exciting and also less dramatic.
It’s where your peace is at, in any moment.
If you’re solving a problem, you’re finding a way to have peace of mind, and that’s what satisfies your mind, your loudest critic.
In mindful peaceful moments, you can be the heroine in your life, and the solution to rising above your situations…
So below, I share some tips and lessons learned on how to connect the dots to this valuable life skill of getting mind freedom.
If you already know how to stay in constant mindfulness, kudos to you because you’re far and ahead of the pack. It takes work in a noisy world, but it gets easier when you know what to do and look for…
And if you can break through the noise and find your mindfulness, that can help unleash bottled-up inside thoughts and emotions that cause unhealthy stress.
That describes me in my early 20’s when I suffered a panic attack at work.
…That was the symptom. But, the deeper message was I had a lot to learn and process with emotional trauma buildup from those earlier adult years and childhood.
All that kept me playing small, stuck in life, and stunted my growth in fulfilling my identity potential, even though everything looked fine on paper.
And that kept thoughts and feelings pushed down so they couldn’t ripen (and I couldn’t bloom) sooner. When those thought-feelings re-surfaced, they disappeared when ignored in life’s busyness.
But then would rear its ugly head again later on down the road in the unconscious mind that caused inner strife, and was the lens I looked out from to make small decisions.
The better way all along would have been to process and purge the emotional thoughts at the moment in time it happened (or asap), so that healthy information was recorded as plain as black-and-white, and not left in the dangerous gray zone.
That sounds obvious when pointed out, but we don’t usually process difficult and subtle situations right away. Delaying is a missed opportunity.
Instead, we process and make choices that are easy and light for us, like what to eat and what to do later in the day.
But in life’s design, we don’t get to choose everything, good or bad, that happens to us in our day.
We do get to choose how we react. And if we healed the damage done by some situations better and quicker, our lives would be better off and we wouldn’t carry around invisible baggage that shows up later.
…Like, if we brush off feeling anxious energy as a natural body reaction, that can interrupt the entire day. That’s a message we shouldn’t ignore.
With anxiety, the body is alerting you that the mind has detected a threat based on a harmful situation or one that is deemed as “dangerous” based on context and past experiences you’ve had.
Your mind sends panic signals to your body that are very similar whether you’re being chased by a bear or in a non-life threatening verbal attack made by a person. Attack is attack.
And another person’s attack can be even worse to a mind if it’s personal. Because then the receiver has to deal with all the emotional thought drama that the ego loves to spin. At least with a bear you know it’s innocent. 🧸
And either way, if anxiety is something you feel often, then this might help get your body calm and relaxed quicker…
When the body alarm bells have gone off, a list of restoring drills can be performed, like drinking a lot of water.
…And 4-7-8 breathing to reset a calm mind and heart. And while calming the body, changing negative and fearful thoughts (where the anxiety started) helps restore the mind-body fastest.
And this is where most people stop… once they’ve gotten out of the woods and the bear out of the picture, they forget to practice changing their thought process as part of the drills so that next time they can shorten the anxiety episodes and restore in minutes (vs. not easily recovering).
You can do yourself a favor with a reminder prompt like: “I don’t have time for that!”
And that gets you to do better the next time. Quoting the late Maya Angelou, “when you know better, you do better.” But if I take a page from my young history book, I didn’t know better…
I stayed inside my mind drama for so long, like most do until they learn a better way. Then I woke up one day from years of unaware less-than thinking that I didn’t recognize as misery being a prisoner in the mind at the time. …Not knowing there’s a much better way than misery existence! 😉
…And that’s the higher way of living and thriving. It’s not choosing fruit from fallen apples on the ground. It’s growing orchards that you and others enjoy for years to come.
Until you know and experience a higher way, you can stay in a fuzzy caterpillar existence. And then when you’re ready, you can be a uniquely patterned butterfly fluttering around in the air tasting honey… and being useful to the world by visiting all the colorful flowers.
With new higher perspectives comes a new mind-body and a new identity.
So with a new thought life, you can have a much better life.
But how you will stay that way is in maintenance, practice, and creating habits that help you to refer back to mindfulness.
Why Mindfulness Works As a Better Way:
Mindfulness bypasses fears.
Because in mindfulness, you let go of fears that are rooted in the future (aka worry), and you stop losing time thinking of sad memories from the past.
Hanging on is ego’s trick. And in design, will keep playing with you until you disengage or can snap out quicker in mindfulness.
In lessons learned, dodging daily ego-mind tricks is like passing a grade and earning a butterfly wing.
And, using daily mindfulness skills is like graduating with both wings intact because then you have the practical mindful way to dodge the ego.
I think it’s sad we learn all these useless things in our school years that 99% of our life will never use, and the daily life-giving skills we need, are never taught! …Or work we don’t enjoy and will never do again as part of our life’s process of moving us along.
Thankfully with mindfulness, you don’t have to revisit any of those places again, or even feel pain.
Because in this moment, you’re fine… you’re breathing… and well, you’re more than fine. You’re growing, and feeling neutral at worst and joyful at best.
That’s something to be happy and satisfied about.
And when you focus on what this moment has to offer, and not the future that hasn’t happened or the past where ego lives, life is pretty darn good.
Numbing pain is the opposite and only delays pain. Time doesn’t heal, but changes can heal over time.
In delaying hurts, the thoughts resurface like described in my example above. And you want them to, so you can change and re-write them, and practice the new script that helps you evolve.
…And maybe can even laugh now at how far you’ve come. That’s a joy worth recording.
…Or maybe you help others who have the same struggles you once did. In mindfulness, your attention changes as you can be present and focused on what others are going through and what they’re saying to you.
That’s what getting on the other side can do.
And finally, your mindfulness breeds productivity since you have freed up headspace from noisy thoughts.
So if that’s something of interest, here’s how to build up your mindfulness skills…
Building Up Your Mindfulness Skill
Imagine stepping out of your body and observing the entering thoughts from an outsider’s perspective. The person you see in the mirror is someone different than what’s coming out of the mind.
And while that can sound complicated (an outer body experience?), awareness produces great results… and dare I add role models too!
Mindfulness is hyper-focus and can be the cure to any A.D.D. labels.
Like most skills, it can be learned with regular practice and habit.
If it’s one you want to build, you can proactively think of a weaker area you want to improve today that you can apply mindfulness to.
By choosing a weaker area, you’ll see a larger difference in your progress vs. marginally improving a skill you already know.
This can be for work or personal areas where unpredictable situations arise weekly. You could write down right now a few practical areas where you can apply this so you don’t forget. Then start practicing mindfulness in that area.
And in making progress, you get to pat yourself on the back and you never know, you could turn your weakness into a new interest.
…and that could be a byproduct game-changer for you this season (in addition to mindfulness mind freedom)!
That’s the high note I wanted to leave you at… and hopefully, this helps you or someone you know (and wasn’t too much like heavy pillow talk 😊). Brain health talk gets my wheels turning.
Next time I’ll bring my energy to a lighter body health diet topic, as it’s hot on many minds.
Talk to you again soon! 🧡