The Endless Path of Hacks

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There has never been a time in the history of this world, when so many humans have had so much information, literally, at their fingertips. The internet. A mixed and nearly endless bag of research, marketplace, and entertainment; from the worst to the best and everything in between. It's a web for sure, and figuring out whether or not the latest trends in anything are true or a good idea can be...perilous. Tide pods aside, we are adults talking about health and wellness questions that are sometimes researched or promoted in tricky and juicy ways. These promos offer relief or pleasure, of some type. I'd like to share some strategies I use to negotiate said Endless Path of Hacks.

Let's go:

Let's breathe together first, please!

In one two three four five six

Hold one two three four five six

Out slowly sighing one two three four five six seven eight

One more time

And once again

Ahhhhhhhhh brain better now. Seriously,  I can actually hear the birds chirping outside instead of the low noise chatter that can run in my brain. If you know, at all, what I'm talking about you may have already been 'diagnosed' with ADD, anxiety, overthinking, or some similar label. While we aren't going to dispute any of that today; we will...wait a minute, spoiler alert! See hack #1 below. 

WARNING TO ALL WHO ENTER

Proceed with caution

Possible cliches ahead

Any further and you may rethink things that you've done your whole life!

1.      “Let him who would move the world first move himself.”
― Socrates

You get to say who you are. Choose your own ID labels wisely. What you say and think about yourself can give you freedom to act, or make you feel like a victim. Here's my own example from earlier: Instead of ADD, or over-thinker, I use 'high mental energies'. Does that mean I deny symptoms? Not at all. My label reminds me that I've got a race car brain, and am 'highly kinesthetic', and if I get too much caffeine, refined sugar, or even a lick of Red Dye 40, I'll go off the rails. I know I won't be able to accomplish the things I want to, unless my choices help me. Feel the difference as you say these statements out loud: I have 'high mental energies' and 'I have ADD'. 'I feel anxious right now' and 'I have social anxiety'.

Action: Pick your top three labels. Restate them accurately in a way that allows your choices and actions to make a difference in your outcomes.

2.      Check yourself before you wreck yourself.

What we call ourselves, or listen to others call us, matters. Truly, when you've been told something for 20 years, it's in there. Deep-seated in the darkest dankest recesses of our subconscious psyche, right? Way too far and way too hard to find and change. Well, pressure seems to bring it out pretty easily! Squeezes right on out, sometimes before we know it and without our permission. We sit there just as shocked as anyone else, wishing we could take it all back, but nope. Or clueless that we are even expressing symptoms so hard until some cringey later time. Here's the thing, we get to hold self and others accountable. Catching ourselves even a few times will produce dramatic and fast results.

Action: Catch yourself using an old label. STOP. Breathe. Get to you. Plant your flag and use the new label you've created.

3.      It's an inside job

You are your own job. We know that what each of us has experienced in life affects how we behave on a daily basis. While we can't go back and change anything, we can affect the effect it has on our daily minutes. NOTE: This part can get really serious quickly. Many have heard of the ACE's scale, or Adverse Childhood Experiences model and have a fairly clear idea of where they are. If you don't know, can't remember, or know you have unresolved trauma, this part is best done with professional assistance. Psychologists, social workers, pastoral counselors or lay counselors can be a great resource to help uncover and address underlying trauma.

If you are comfortable and feel that solo work in this area is safe for you, take the next action.

Action: Pick the top three behaviors you do, that you want to be different. Examples: I eat when I'm bored, I yell when I'm frustrated, I drive fast when I'm mad. Schedule time with yourself on a calendar, to pick the first one to press on. Now, reverse engineer how this came to be what you do. Hints: Think of what the issue is that provokes this behavior, the first time you behaved this way, how does your heart you feel when you behave this way, how you feel when you can't behave this way, how others feel about this behavior, how other people handle the issue this addresses, other ways you can behave that will feel better to you and still address the issue.

4.      All we have is the now

After all of these hacks, it sounds silly to say all we have is now. YOLO and such. However, self care hacks and the now are not mutually exclusive. What we say to ourselves and how we treat ourselves in the minutes matters. Life is epic. The highest highs and lowest lows. Teeth kicked out to best day so far. Our resilience to withstand and even ride the next wave may come directly from the minutes just prior to the event. And when our soul is fed we are more vibrant and resilient. It’d be great if we could have a balance of duty and pleasure, sacrifice and rest, work and fun every day but that isn't always doable. I have a technique I call micro-slices of pleasure. Take 30 seconds to appreciate the way the curtains reflect the sunlight and make the trees look like fairy tale creatures. Make the call to mom when you're just beat, remember the day your child was born and how that felt.

Action: For one solid day, take a minute or so each hour to feed/nourish/pet yourself.

Who Am I Exercise

Currently there is some serious cosmic movement in the area of identity. A lot of us are feeling it, and it may not be fully pleasant. This is a powerful time for this simple and profound technique to come to us! I did it and had to share it with you! Honestly, I do stuff like this everyday, and this one really moved me. Try it without reading through all of it first; I really enjoyed the surprise part. Let's do this together and then we'll talk.

You need:

15 minutes or so by yourself

Timer, I used the gong sound on my phone timer, it made it even more dramatic

A comfortable undisturbed spot

 You might want:

Meditation music, sound bath or white noise

Pen and paper

 Let's go:

Breathe in to the count of 7, feeling your lungs and belly expand, hold for the count of 4, then blow out to the count of 8 slowly through nose, or mouth as if you were blowing through a straw. Empty your lungs completely. Breathe like this 4 more times. Return to normal full relaxed breathing.

 Take about two minutes to consider, reflect and identify four core identities you find most meaningful in your life. These will be four identities that most clearly answer the question: who am I? This can be anything at all, like a basketball player or a daughter. Anything that you feel is most core about you.

Write them if you choose, if not say them in your mind or out loud.

Set the timer and start now.

Next:

Now that you have noted these four core identities, we are going to gradually, sequentially let go of each one. We'll imagine, and see what it feels like to let go of each identity that you hold so meaningful. We will start with the most peripheral, and progress to the most core.

Set the timer for one minute, and just release the least meaningful identity.

When the timer rings, set it for another minute and release the next least important identity.

When the timer rings, set it for another minute and release the next identity.

When the timer rings, set it for another minute and now release the most core part of who you are.

Sit with this:

What does it feel like to be in this space of nothing? 

Next:

We're going to do the same process in reverse. We'll re-integrate each of these pieces of who we are, starting with our most central identity.

Set the timer for 1 minute and bring back, take back, this piece. Fully embody it and feel grateful for the role it plays in your everyday life.

When the timer rings, set it for 1 minute and take back the next most central identity. Again fully embody it and feel grateful.

When the timer rings, set it for 1 minute and take back the next piece.

When the timer rings, set it for 1 minute and take back the final piece.

And now just feel yourself as a complete human being, full of all the energy and all of these important parts of who you are and what you offer.

Bazinga! This was mind bending to me. Sitting there with my nakey psyche and yet still being fully me without any of these parts that I invest every single heartbeat in, was so freeing! Peak lifetime experience for me.

It was quick and easy for me to identify the four identities, which I was concerned about when I first realized that's what was going down. Another stunner - each of these identities impacted specific parts of my body. So clearly! So now when I have pain or discomfort in an area, this may offer one more clue. I mean my toolbox is master level full, but I can always use one more.

I found this treasure on Insight Timer, which is a free app that is packed full of meditations, talks, music and even classes, (nope not sponsoring me). This wildly powerful tool was inspired by a meditation called Core Identity Exercise by Charles Freligh.

Challenge: Add a few minutes of meditation daily, there are over 100,000 free options on this app alone -everything from walking to the mailbox to binaural beats. Try it! Your brain will thank you later.

Tell Your Story

'What is your story' has been trending for a while now.

Everyone seemed to be asking at one point: counselors, coaches (Tony Robbins), employers, dates. There were even sermons about it! Honestly, it seemed like too big a question to answer for someone who was trying to actually live their story, me included. At the same time it seemed a little contrived, like a way for someone to sell something. Not to imply that I personally am not a buyer of many things, because I am, (shopping therapy can be useful within reason). But, I mean I've lived one heck of a story! And I'm just not comfortable regurgitating all of my memories, are you?

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So what about 'what is your story'? Why will it just not go away?

There's a saying: life is long and life is short. Too true. We all live a life, and it is our story; and that in and of itself, is priceless. All stories are priceless. The older I get and the more I've dealt with tragedy and death, the more poignant and clear this has become to me. Stories lost, never told, cut short, swept like water under the bridge of everyday life. Back in the old days some sent and received letters. These stories from the past have helped genealogists put together the puzzles of family histories. Do you write letters? I don't. Nor does anyone I know.

So what to do?

Well, step 1 seems easy, write your own story. Go ahead. Ok, for me it was NOT easy. Hopefully it will be for you. I did find some resources. There are books to help, such as Encyclopedia of Me: My life From A to Z, by Amy Rosenthal. This is a book of prompts that you write your answers in. There are countless guided journaling books and sites. There's a service called Storyworth.com that prints a book created from the guided responses sent over a year.

 Truly, the most important part of this whole 'tell your story' thing, is the space you make to sit with yourself and simply tell your story. Allow yourself to hear it. Start chronologically and write or record the things you remember. If that leads to side stories, great! Then return to your timeline and carry on. The cathartic power of putting our memories on paper is startling. Heck maybe you'll even discover an untapped author in you. Or maybe you'll find a piece of yourself you've missed all these years. I have uncovered a lot of true grit and blessings that I didn't take notice of before I started this quest.

Get started and don't stop. Let me know how it goes and I'll keep you in the loop too.