Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→Emotional addiction
- This topic has 67 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 10 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
September 7, 2017 at 6:03 am #167680AnonymousGuest
Dear Ale:
Maybe a routine of taking a break from studying (when you study on your own) every two hours, a 10 minute break for some exercise, can help. And maybe you can make this routine: after four hours of studying on your own, take a thirty minute walk.
anita
September 21, 2017 at 1:54 pm #169707AleParticipantDear anita. Thanks for the answer.
I know that a break is useful to solve the stress of study….Maybe sometimes I’m like bloked, or scary, or maybe lazy to go out and speak with people…It is a situation that need adaptation to stay with other. Is like that I’m catapulted in another situation hurt me sometimes. But I know that this is the life, the beauty of life
September 22, 2017 at 7:51 am #169803AnonymousGuestDear Ale:
You are welcome.
The walking break I suggested does not include “speak(ing) to people”- just walk by yourself, fast walking perhaps, it will relieve stress, make you feel calmer so that you can study better after the break.
anita
September 22, 2017 at 9:39 am #169849PeterParticipantStudies have shown that we can indeed become addicted to the chemical released while experienced various emotions particularly anxiety.
There is a time for everything. A time when self help books, quotes… are helpful as they point to a different perspective we may not have noticed before, and a time when they don’t help…. and then we worry about why they don’t help anymore and feel anxiety about that. It seems we love to create issues that we can worry and agonize over, even the issue of self help not helping. If this is an addiction a 12-step program could help (not just for alcoholics.)
Having had similar problem, I feel the first step to take a step back and identify the main issue which it seems you have done. Persistent thinking and dwelling on the problem. The solution isn’t in fixing the problem your dwelling on, there will always be a new problem to dwell on, but on addressing the issue of persistent thinking.
I get it. I tend to over think everything and over analyzed on everything I was concerned about especially how I felt others saw me. This insured me a constant source to the chemicals released by anxiety. Eventually I realized that the number one issue I had that created the most anxiety for me we worrying about my persistent thinking… which I thought about all the time. It funny if you think about it, but not so much when your stuck in an infinite loop of your own creation.
Once I could step back from the situation I saw that my persistent overthinking about the problem was the problem I created the space to deal with that. I found that accepting my nature to overthinking help a lot. I’m always going to overthink things, its what I like to do, and accepting it I no longer felt the same level of anxiety when I did it. It took time but eventually when I felt my anxiety rise and understood its source I was able to accept it and move on. Simply noticing was enough to change. I still overthink problems but don’t experience the anxiety that that used to create.
September 27, 2017 at 12:20 am #170529AleParticipantDear users, thank you for the reply.
I don’t know. Sometimes is difficoult for me to understand where is the problem. I know that It is a problem of anxiety. However my terapyst underline that the problem is the way of my life, like an EXAM. He uses a lot of time this word. ANd the solution here is (again) to live with simplicity, see the good in the world (Glass half full), be spontaneous and tell to myself that I stay healthy. But the loop sometimes is more strong :/
September 27, 2017 at 11:26 am #170625AnonymousGuestDear Ale:
An exam will trigger the anxiety, so you are more likely to feel anxious facing an exam than you are when not facing an exam. Certain life events, such as an exam, or meeting new people bring the fear to the surface so you feel it more intensely.
I like the idea of living simply, or “to live with simplicity” like you wrote. To me, it means to organize your life in such a way that you face less of those events. For example: if an exam is not going to help you in your life, don’t take it. That is making life simpler. Or if a relationship with a particular person increases your anxiety- limit or end that relationship. That too, would make life simpler.
anita
September 27, 2017 at 11:27 am #170627AnonymousGuest* didn’t get submitted correctly..
September 28, 2017 at 1:39 am #170709AleParticipantDear Anita. You mean that if an exam don’t go good is not a problem? Or if is not necessary in my life? Unfortunately I don’t like some exams, like a lot of students. About the first sentence I’m agree. It is beautiful when we live in this state of mind and, in addiction, when we start to find the beauty in “bad exams” is a point in plus for our healt and open minding.
September 28, 2017 at 6:55 am #170745AnonymousGuestDear Ale:
I mean that if and when you have a choice, choose in such a way as to lessen your anxiety. Make thoughtful choices that fit a life of less stress, less anxiety.
anita
September 29, 2017 at 11:41 am #170965AleParticipantIt is normal that an exam bring you anxiety, maybe bacause there is a “superior” in front of you or the fail of the exam. There are a lot of reason I think. And it is a part of our live as when we will speak in an audiction with a manager.
Coming back to the main talk..when you are not able to live simply and you are not in the present how we can come back in?thanks
September 29, 2017 at 11:45 am #170967AleParticipantIn particoular is like my mind want that I want to change ever, so I’m not able to LIVE
September 30, 2017 at 4:09 am #171011AnonymousGuestDear Ale:
You asked: “when you are not able to live simply and you are not in the present how we can come back in?”-
the way every guided meditation and the way any meditation starts: by focusing on your breathing, inhaling, exhaling, breathing. Then paying attention to the sounds around you, focusing on nothing but he sounds you hear, paying attention.
Coming back to the present is about changing your focus from thinking to sensing, starting with your breathing, then sensing something else. That something else can be anything from what you perceive through one of the five senses: hearing, sight, touch, smell and taste to something you perceive through other sensors, such as heat, pressure, hunger, and more.
Going from abstract thinking (the head, so to speak) to physiological sensing (the body), I’d say.
Regarding your last post, I didn’t understand this: “I want to change ever”- can you explain what you mean by it?
anita
October 4, 2017 at 4:17 pm #171613AleParticipantAbout the last sentence: I mean that my mind is static right now. Not flexible.
About the first part. Yeah is the main part of mindfullness.. But there is this static mind in a kind of thoughts that don’t allow me to live simply. Is like if I have something on my shoulders and head.
October 5, 2017 at 12:03 pm #171753AnonymousGuestDear Ale:
Give your static mind a break, time to rest and get refreshed and become flexible again. Do it, if you will, by focusing on your body, in the ways I wrote about in my last post to you.
anita
October 10, 2017 at 8:43 am #172599AleParticipantDear anita:
Sometimes is really difficoult to get relax. For example is like my mind is lost. It seems that I stay in the present, but not focused. In tinybuddha you can read that anxiety is a gift, but how can I say that it is a gift if I don’t stay well? I learned to stay with my anxiety, but I don’t live with gratitudine. Like I wrote in past, is like I have a weight on my shoulders and in my stomach.
I want to live in the present, with consciousness, simplicity and gratitudine, but is difficoult. I know that the practises described before are really usefull for anxiety. I’ll start to stay without thought 5 minutes in a day.
-
AuthorPosts