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All BS until we are tested again

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Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 17 total)
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  • #89896
    jock
    Participant

    I think what I feel and think now is arbitrary, of no consequence, forgettable, unprofound. So much of what we think, say and write is just fill-in, marking time, until, until.
    Until the next event. By the next event I mean the next stressful event. For me it will probably be starting a new job. As well it could be a sickness, a relationship breakdown or a financial disaster. A major discomfort shift. Physical pain, psychological and emotional turmoil. Fight or flight.
    It doesn’t matter how much meditation you’ve done. When our survival is on the line, our whole way of looking at ourselves and the world is under threat, we more often than not go into meltdown.
    Better start praying, is what I say to myself. Better to be ready to expect the worst because it might even be worse than worse. The worsest worse ever !! 🙂 Will I be up to the challenge? Can I handle it? Dig deep sir. Show some grit. True grit like John Wayne. John who?
    So here’s to an anxious worried mind. Can you relate or are you one of those cool zucchinis who never stress about anything! 🙂

    #89897
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Uncool Zucchini:

    Believe it or not, Jack, but you are way more likely to handle effectively a major stressful event if you handle well a minor stressful event today and the day after, one at a time, even here.

    On this very website, you were attacked, called names, remember? You had a minor meltdown on the website. You wanted to give up and go away but you came back and strong. Not only did you come back, you stood up for me, again and again. And you stood up for yourself. And the people who attacked you- and me- have disappeared into Anonymity, haven’t they? They went away and they didn’t come back. Your poem about me: “You can’t beat her”- well, so far, you can’t beat Jack either!

    I have no doubt, that unless you try very, very hard to not be effected by these minor victories here, you are more equipped for the bigger challenges.

    One day, for sure, some challenge will beat me (I will die, I have nooo doubt) and some challenge will beat you as well (same thing, the RIP destiny). This is why we cannot eliminate fear. Danger is real and it will beat us one day or night. Until then, why not beat this little fear and that little fear. Why not flex the courage muscle one more time?

    No, these words I wrote here are not arbitrary, not for me. Profound, memorable… why not? YOUR words have already been memorable and profound for me. Make more of your words matter. Make them profound, memorable.

    As to your question: I can relate and I am not a cool zucchini. But guess what, someone said something memorable and profound to me. He said: “You can’t beat her!

    anita

    #89900
    jock
    Participant

    Thanks avocado anita, you are a female version of Rocky. (or is that sexist?)Which reminds me that I have to see the new Rocky movie. Stallone is supposed to be at his best. Rocky 1 was such a motivator. When it came out, I remember going for a run the next day, scurrying up a long flight of stairs and flexing my muscles victoriously on the top. Not quite the same these days as I huff and puff up the stairs just walking. I realise now, that running was an excellent outlet for stress and rebuilding confidence.
    A friend of mine, after watching “Chariots of Fire”, went for a 10 km run, straight after. And he became a born again Christian, refusing to play Rugby on Sunday, the Sabbath. Now that’s what I call a life-changing movie. I loved that movie too.

    #89901
    jock
    Participant

    Jack is strong now! (to the tune of the Rocky movie soundtrack)

    or (Eye of the Tiger)

    It’s the eye of the pussy cat
    it’s the eye of the wimp
    rising up to the challenge of his rivals

    #89903
    jock
    Participant

    That’s what I forgot to say.
    We don’t know what we’re truly made of or who we are, until we are tested.
    We can learn a lot about ourselves, when out of our comfort zone. Trouble is, instead of treating it as a learning experience, we tend to go into survival mode, shaking like a nervous nanny-goat.
    Examples:
    public speaking
    workplace task such as dealing with a customer
    standing up to harassment and the harasser

    I try to escape the monstrous moment, the maddening minute
    “get me out of here, I’m not up to this!”
    Appease the intimidator
    No time to be a gladiator
    It’s my turn to say something
    But I’ve forgotten my lines
    I lose my perspective
    and just want out
    Flight over fight
    every time.

    #89904
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Jack, back in 1995 I lived in California. Talked to my sister who lived in Israel on the phone. She, my sister, was a movie star looking person, incredible. Anyway, she lets me hear a voice on her answering machine (at the time those were used) and I hear a voice very familiar, the rocky voice, Stallone’s voice on her answering machine, saying her name: “Evi” how strange that felt. Turned out she dated him at the time, while he was dating at the time a Jennifer whom he later married, and still is. Evi, my (younger) sister met him in Israel, LA and Rome where he filmed a movie at the time. I was hoping she would get on her way to stardom as a result but when he suggested to introduce her to people she didn’t take him on that.

    Anyway, you, Jack and the reader are welcome to a piece of gossip from 1995 Stallone: she said he had this machine in his hotel room that massaged his head heavy duty, a big strange machine he sat under in his efforts to stimulate his scalp hair growth, to avoid being bald.

    Free of charge and may be, here, the only place such delicate piece of information on this movie star has ever been shared!

    anita

    #89905
    jock
    Participant

    brush with fame anita
    impressive

    #89906
    Anonymous
    Guest

    dear Jack:

    Double post again. You wrote:
    “Appease the intimidator
    No time to be a gladiator
    It’s my turn to say something
    But I’ve forgotten my lines
    I lose my perspective
    and just want out
    Flight over fight
    every time.”

    It is on record here on tiny buddha that you did not appease the intimidator, that you were the gladiator, that you did say what you had to say, again and again, that you fought over fleeing. There is record, you can look it up.

    anita

    #89907
    jock
    Participant

    I know what you’re saying and thanks for that anita. what an encourager!
    It is easier to be courageous online though. Not quite the same as face to face, when you have to say something immediately in response.

    #89908
    jock
    Participant

    you don’t have to respond. I’m starting to bore myself with excuses.

    #89911
    Anonymous
    Guest

    True (and I am responding) about face to face. this very evening on my walk the neighbor Betty stopped her car and complained to me that I didn’t answer her calls. I was frozen. Sure it was cold out but I couldn’t say or think of saying anything. Here I type and type but looking at her, I had no idea what to say. so, yes, easier online. But I will call her tomorrow to let her know why I didn’t call her (she is crazy!) and I will be authentic on the phone.
    anita

    #89914
    jock
    Participant

    Funny but we don’t have to say anything anyway in response. Our non-verbals give us away. We can give a “don’t mess with Gentleman Jack” look or just a mournful, lost puppy look because we can’t find the words.

    #89918
    Anonymous
    Guest

    I froze. I didn’t even remember what and why.. I thought about it for the rest of the walk. I am getting better overall with people face to face otherwise.

    Soon bed time, may disappear into another till tomorrow. I say it to myself every day or night, so I will say it here: anita, you only have tonight, and maybe tomorrow morning. This is all I ever had, and this is all I have now.

    anita

    #89928
    vizual
    Participant

    Stress is all about how you frame it in your mind.

    When you stand on the edge of a high building and the adrenaline and cortisol starts flowing in your bloodstream you can interpret that as a fear of death. Instead, another way to look at the response is it is your desire to live. Our desires make our life interesting and exciting, without desire we can not live.

    Without desire we would not care if we fell from that high ledge. Without desire we would not care to eat, drink, go after relationships or earn money. The feeling you experience as stress is your greatest blessing, it means there are still territories left unexplored in your life. A rich life isn’t a life without hardship, it’s experiencing the totality of reality – inner and outer. When you have experienced everything you want to experience, you can die in peace.

    When you have a negative attitude towards being out of your comfort zone you are simply not present enough when it happens. You are projecting negative images when it happens in stead of staying with them. When you are standing on that ledge you are probably visualizing yourself falling down in a horrible way, this will cripple us. In stead you should feel blessed for your body to give you extra glucose and oxygen to navigate you away from that ledge.

    #89929
    jock
    Participant

    visual
    thanks for your input. I do appreciate it even though I feel you haven’t let your guard down about your own insecurities. There’s no rule that says you have to though.

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 17 total)

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