Thursday, November 20, 2014

A Gift & A Choice

Image courtesy of Stuart Miles/freedigitalphotos.net

We may find our switch flipped, our button pushed, our reaction triggered.  While the person or situation who served as the catalyst is not responsible for our reactions they provide the material from which our reaction or response grows.

As the button is pushed, the ire and angst begin to rise.  Before the top is blown off and the inevitable reaction occurs, what can we do? First, recognize that you are building to reaction. Second, acknowledge you have a choice to respond or react.  Engage your objector observer by stepping back into the silence of your quiet mind. In your quiet mind, notice

·      The cadence and tenor of your breath…don’t try to shift it. Just notice it.
·      How the angst is manifesting in your body (tightening of your chest, unsettled feeling in your stomach, pressure building in your head….).
·      The thoughts, beliefs, and judgments running amok in your mind.

Embrace your objector observer.  Instead of allowing the trigger to drive your next words and actions, just notice the catalyst.  As an objector observer does not cling to the evolving feelings, do not lash out violently, or try to defend your position.  When the feelings threaten to overwhelm, let them wash over you.  Consciously let go…do not cling to any aspect of the emotion.

The life cycle of an emotion is 90-seconds.  The emotion is triggered, peaks, and dissipates in this short span. For most of us, the duration of an emotion is much longer.  We feed our positive emotions like hope and love and they continue throughout our lifetime bringing us balance and joy.  The more angst-driven emotions like anger, fear, and despair, we feed as well.  They place detrimental stress on our body, mind, spirit, and heart.  When we consciously ride the 90-second wave of emotion and not feed it, the anger or fear will dissipate and the damage minimized.  Perhaps residue of the emotion remains, but its shadow is a faint blimp on our spirit’s radar. 

When the emotion threatens to morph into a reaction, practice being an objector observer for 90-seconds. Notice what happens. Practice using memories of reaction-producing situations when you are alone.  It is easier to engage in a group if you are prepared and comfortable with the process.

During the upcoming weeks (and beyond) use this 90-second break while:
·      Enjoying a family gathering
·      Waiting in a busy checkout line
·      Talking to a representative at a call center
·      Getting together with friends

Practice any time, any place emotions are running high and you need to decompress and re-align your body, mind, spirit, and heart.  In the practicing you learn what triggers you and how to shift reactions into responses.


Enjoy the gift of response!

Vanessa Hurst

www.intentandaction.com
www.healingwillow.com

No comments:

Post a Comment