Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→How can a person stay centered and return to neutral at will?
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April 29, 2016 at 6:51 am #103101Gary R. SmithParticipant
Do you use any particular means to stay centered in the midst of emotional triggers? Can you return at will to the inner neutral zone after reacting?
I have tested E.F.T. (Emotional Freedom Technique), HeartMath for coherence, meditation and several other modalities, and found none fully effective. A litany I wrote has been the most powerful tool so far, towards creating myself as I choose and has brought peace and a sense of timeless stability. It has helped me act in the flow, reduce resistance, open my heart. Still, I am hindered by triggered reactions and over-thinking.
The labels and metaphors applied to emotional and self mastery are many. Are we asleep and need to be awakened? Fragmented and need to be synthesized? Undefined and need to be individuated?
I see humanity as being in an incomplete stage. In general, from my interpretation, we are in partial development, controlled and frozen by lower emotions, and with under-nourished inner landscapes. Thawing the frozen soul and gaining emotional mastery is a step. Acting from higher feelings is another and embodying the eternal qualities is a third, for partial humans to emerge whole.
Your shared experiences with gaining centeredness and being more in command of thoughts and emotions can help me bring this further from theory to practice in my own life, and to publish freely what works.
Thank you.
Gary
April 29, 2016 at 7:54 am #103107JoeParticipantFor me, emotional mastery equates to not being the master of my emotions, if that makes any sense. Emotional mastery for me seems like some near-impossible feat (in my view, at least – maybe other people are adept at mastering their emotions but I don’t think I am at all!) I no longer try to fight certain emotional responses, try to deny them or trying desperately to return to the state of equilibrium from before that particular emotional response to such-and-such. I just allow myself to be and feel whatever it is I’m feeling at that particular time. I allow them to just be.
Journalling is my preferred method of processing these things – writing is my preferred method of meditation. I just write whatever is on my mind, a stream of consciousness if you will and certain words trigger certain associations, memories and emotions which triggers more words.
But I think I can kind of agree with your view that humanity isn’t developed emotionally – the people I see around me in my day-to-day life, I see grown adults who are angry and easily upset at the tiniest things, or prone to denial. An idea I discussed with Anita in a previous post – the quest for the holy grail, the quest for Shangri La, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. That which supposedly brings everlasting fulfilment, happiness or some form of salvation. Always seeking things, always waiting for the big break in life, always wanting to be anywhere but in the now, always wanting something else…We think we’ve found it or acquired it but there’s no lasting fulfilment, there is always something more that we want…The pot of gold is elusive, the pot of gold is an illusion…
I do hope you post more here, I find your topic prompts really fascinating!
Joe
April 29, 2016 at 8:45 am #103114AnonymousGuestDear Gary:
It seems to me, and clarify this point to me, if you’d like, simply so that I can understand; it seems to me that dividing emotions or feelings (I use them here interchangeably, and I mean fear, anger, hurt, shame, joy and the many variances of these) is not a useful division or categorizing. I think this categorizing of feelings is counter productive to the goal of emotional mastery.
Every single feeling we have has a valid message that we need to attend to. And so every single feeling is neither lower, inferior, unimportant OR higher, superior, important. When you label a feeling as a “lower feeling” regardless of the whole of what you mean by this term, the word in itself “lower” indicates inferiority.
As you respond to this very post here, please pay attention to my request: try to have a “beginner’s mind” when processing my point and instead of repeating what you already processed before my reply, think of it as if you never considered it before. Give new thinking an opportunity to be formed, from scratch.
anita
April 29, 2016 at 6:33 pm #103153MimiParticipantGary, if you wouldn’t mind, could you share your litany? If it’s too personal, maybe just share the type of things it’s composed of? I’m in desperate need of something to help me right now. I’ve tried many things, like meditation, too. Their help for me has been limited.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts above, whether or not you share any more.
Christine
April 29, 2016 at 10:09 pm #103158Gary R. SmithParticipantDear Christine,
You wrote, “Gary, if you wouldn’t mind, could you share your litany? If it’s too personal, maybe just share the type of things it’s composed of? I’m in desperate need of something to help me right now. I’ve tried many things, like meditation, too. Their help for me has been limited.”
Your post was in response to my writing, “A litany I wrote has been the most powerful tool so far, towards creating myself as I choose and has brought peace and a sense of timeless stability. It has helped me act in the flow, reduce resistance, open my heart.”
The litany *is* personal, and a joy to share — especially when asked. It is simple, yet its meaning is complex to convey as it comes from a world-view that is uncommon. This feels like the subject of a new discussion start, and I can give examples of how I use it in everyday situations. Thank you for asking!
That will take awhile to write. In the meantime, if it is not too personal, and you like to share, would you say something about your need of something to help you right now?
If it applies, what are your triggers and reactions and your greatest challenges? For example,
When things don’t go the way I expect, plan or want I become disappointed, frustrated, withdrawn, angry….
When I am overlooked, ridiculed, judged by others, I become defensive, hurt, resentful….
When I cannot control circumstances or the behavior of others, I become anxious, nervous, dramatic….
:
The poem “All is Everything” is from my world view of 3 years ago. It arose just before my partner and I became house parents to at-risk teen-aged boys. It helped me and some of the counselors to keep balance during that turbulent year and I feel to share it with you.
The All embraces Everything,
the Everything is All,and in the Everything,
there is no rise or fall –as the up is in the down
and the down is in the up,and taken all together,
the content fills the cup.:::
There is no good or evil,
there is no loss or gain.Expanded into Everything,
there is not really pain.Neither is there special
nor important as you see,the All embraces Everything
with equanimity.:::
There is no left or right,
there is no right or wrong,for the pieces of the Everything
together make a Song.Only when I separate
the pieces from the Wholedo the pieces separate
from body, mind and soul.:::
For me to live in harmony,
there is a simple way –in every thought and action,
in all I do and say,to let go of the past
and be present in the Now,to be with what I do
and also with the how.:::
To let go of my thoughts
and merge into the flow,to be with what I am,
with what I feel and know,to step back into nature
and from the world to wean,for what a human being can be,
the world has never seen.:::
In order for potential
to be reality,I only need to ground myself
on what is really me,and bring back my attention
to the constant inner call –the All embraces Everything,
the Everything is All.April 29, 2016 at 10:42 pm #103159Gary R. SmithParticipantDear Anita,
{{It seems to me, and clarify this point to me, if you’d like, simply so that I can understand; it seems to me that dividing emotions or feelings (I use them here interchangeably, and I mean fear, anger, hurt, shame, joy and the many variances of these) is not a useful division or categorizing. I think this categorizing of feelings is counter productive to the goal of emotional mastery.}}
I appreciate that you share this with me, and am always ready to re-examine how I see things. I agree in general and especially in this field that labeling, analyzing, categorizing or dividing is not the ultimate and usually is counter-productive. The blog post “WHAT ARE EMOTIONS, FEELINGS AND E-QUALITIES?” ends with “These delineations are useful for practice, but ultimately un-needed. There is one consciousness — one being — and life is a mystery unfolding. All that is needed is to listen deeply and act in the flow.”
By practice, I mean as a place to start. It has been helpful for me, and when my practice is well rooted I will be glad to let go of the categorizing. It may not be the way for others. I am sharing what works for me, as it evolves.
{{Every single feeling we have has a valid message that we need to attend to. And so every single feeling is neither lower, inferior, unimportant OR higher, superior, important. When you label a feeling as a “lower feeling” regardless of the whole of what you mean by this term, the word in itself “lower” indicates inferiority.}}
Yes, this agrees with what I wrote, “To clarify, since the words ’emotions’ and ‘feelings’ are commonly used inter-changeably, I distinguish them by ‘lower’ and ‘higher.’ They are not lower and higher in value, quality or morality, but in frequency. I don’t refer to emotions as negative and positive, as that does not feel accurate. Emotions are energies in motion which serve the purpose of bridging to the higher feelings. Left unattended, emotions can stagnate and solidify in the body/mind. When having a dialogue with people who agree, I simply write emotions, feelings and eternal qualities.”
The last sentence may not have been in my response, because I copied it from the blog document rather than from the updated online version. It is saying that I only use lower and higher to communicate, since common usage inter-changes emotions and feelings as though they are the same. Quotes below as examples.
{{As you respond to this very post here, please pay attention to my request: try to have a “beginner’s mind” when processing my point and instead of repeating what you already processed before my reply, think of it as if you never considered it before. Give new thinking an opportunity to be formed, from scratch.}}
Anita, lately I have been continually giving new thinking a chance to form, from scratch. If I were to revise my writing as frequently as new thinking forms, it would seem I’d be forever editing my words. For example, today I drove into Yosemite National Park with my partner and we talked the entire way about my discussion with Joe. New insights and realizations were coming faster to both of us than I could write them down.
The quotes below give examples of how the words emotions and feelings are used inter-changeably. I feel that to communicate clearly, understanding them as distinct from each other is more useful.
“Every day we have plenty of opportunities to get angry, stressed or offended. But what you’re doing when you indulge these negative emotions is giving something outside yourself power over your happiness. You can choose to not let little things upset you.” – Joel Osteen
“If you don’t think your anxiety, depression, sadness and stress impact your physical health, think again. All of these emotions trigger chemical reactions in your body, which can lead to inflammation and a weakened immune system. Learn how to cope, sweet friend. There will always be dark days.” – Kris Carr
“Negative emotions like loneliness, envy, and guilt have an important role to play in a happy life; they’re big, flashing signs that something needs to change.” – Gretchen Rubin
“One looks back with appreciation to the brilliant teachers, but with gratitude to those who touched our human feelings. The curriculum is so much necessary raw material, but warmth is the vital element for the growing plant and for the soul of the child.” – Carl Jung
“I don’t display emotions. I have every feeling that everyone else has, but I’ve developed ways to suppress them. Anger is one of my most comfortable feelings.” – Curtis Jackson
“I believe that curiosity, wonder and passion are defining qualities of imaginative minds and great teachers; that restlessness and discontent are vital things; and that intense experience and suffering instruct us in ways that less intense emotions can never do.” – Kay Redfield Jamison
“We fear violence less than our own feelings. Personal, private, solitary pain is more terrifying than what anyone else can inflict.” – Jim Morrison
“Do not give in too much to feelings. A overly sensitive heart is an unhappy possession on this shaky earth.” – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
(Brainy Quotes)
The last four quotes are included as examples of views differing from mine. Curtis Jackson uses the words ’emotions’ and ‘feelings’ inter-changeably, and Jim Morrison and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe equate feelings to emotions. Kay Redfield Jamison says intense suffering instructs us.
My sense is that humanity has an opportunity in its evolution and in the global shift of consciousness, to no longer need restlessness and discontent or intense suffering. There is another way. Instead of being driven by emotions, be powered by higher feelings.
April 29, 2016 at 10:57 pm #103160Gary R. SmithParticipant{{Always seeking things, always waiting for the big break in life, always wanting to be anywhere but in the now, always wanting something else…We think we’ve found it or acquired it but there’s no lasting fulfillment, there is always something more that we want…The pot of gold is elusive, the pot of gold is an illusion…}}
So true, Joe. When Kati and I drove into Yosemite National Park today, we talked the entire way about the dialogues between you and me. I will have to put some of the realizations that came into another post – they relate to your response. Another time, as I am typing in the dark, my keyboard lighted by a flashlight in our yurt. The night sounds of nature are calling me to close the laptop. Good night!
April 30, 2016 at 7:36 am #103166AnonymousGuestDear Gary:
Staying in a yurt in Yosemite Park? pretty cool.
I appreciate your attention to my post to you, evident in length and thoroughness. I also appreciate your attention and respect that you extend to other members. I value this, as well as the assertiveness you exhibited when needed.
My thoughts following reading your reply: there are so many, many people suffering so greatly (as I have most of my life) that choosing “higher feelings” over distressing emotions, or emotions stuck in knots, not flowing freely is a very attractive prospect, very desirable. Problem is when people are overly distressed, they can’t do this, not for long. When the Inner Critic (the Freudian Superego) torments the person with its cruel ongoing commentary (“You are a loser” is an example of such ongoing input), the person can’t take on the higher feelings for long. Especially since a good period of time is followed by challenges and the Inner Critic magnify its volume and frequency of input.
Your quest to end suffering, to promote a human mental evolution to stop suffering and focus on the “higher feelings” is admirable. Buddhism, as I understand it, is based on this very quest of stopping suffering (The Noble Truths).
Your quest, as I understand it, there is something to it that I feel but can’t verbalize now.
I wonder how it can apply to the millions and millions of people tormented by a part of themselves, that mental entity I referred to as the (abusive) Inner Critic.
anita
April 30, 2016 at 12:34 pm #103174Gary R. SmithParticipantDear Anita,
{{Staying in a yurt in Yosemite Park? pretty cool.}}
I am grateful, even for the ground squirrel which keeps raiding the yurt, knocking cups off the shelf and breaking them. It is rustling around now, trying to get into the bread container, and is persistent. Yosemite is magnificent grandeur, emanating the presence of Nature in a way I choose to emanate. I feel far from that ideal yet know it is close at hand.
{{I appreciate your attention to my post to you, evident in length and thoroughness. I also appreciate your attention and respect that you extend to other members. I value this, as well as the assertiveness you exhibited when needed.}}
Anita, my own writing often sounds strange and stiff to me shortly after I post. I feel today to un-publish much of the Whole Human site for that reason and also to allow the new to emerge. Words quickly ‘solidify’ and real life is a flow. I appreciate your kind comment.
{{My thoughts following reading your reply: there are so many, many people suffering so greatly (as I have most of my life) that choosing “higher feelings” over distressing emotions, or emotions stuck in knots, not flowing freely is a very attractive prospect, very desirable. Problem is when people are overly distressed, they can’t do this, not for long. When the Inner Critic (the Freudian Superego) torments the person with its cruel ongoing commentary (“You are a loser” is an example of such ongoing input), the person can’t take on the higher feelings for long. Especially since a good period of time is followed by challenges and the Inner Critic magnify its volume and frequency of input.}}
I know exactly what you are saying! Thank you for sharing this “realness.” The squirrel is distracting me some, it is harder to find words. But I hear the energy and intent of your writing and have considered this over the years. People who are struggling to survive, or to maintain their own internal balance, are not often ready to hear about higher feelings. I have in mind to share some more of my challenges with triggers and reactions in a new discussion, and over time would enjoy to get to know more about your life, whenever you choose to share naturally.
{{Your quest to end suffering, to promote a human mental evolution to stop suffering and focus on the “higher feelings” is admirable. Buddhism, as I understand it, is based on this very quest of stopping suffering (The Noble Truths).}}
Yes, and Buddhism was founded about 2500 years ago. What impact has it had on the whole of humanity? Still, I feel changes are already underway and humankind has a window of opportunity to make a leap of evolution. Perhaps the greatest contribution I can make is to work on myself and live my own words in daily action.
{{Your quest, as I understand it, there is something to it that I feel but can’t verbalize now.}}
All through my teens into my forties I identified myself as a spiritual seeker and seeker of the highest truth, whatever that may be. I have revised that and copy some from the Whole Human About page to say more:
“Like the Wizard of Earthsea at the end of his adventures, I am done with doing. I have no agenda, goals or ambitions. Being done with doing does not mean that practical actions end. It changes the way of doing. In the practice of being a whole human, there is no doing — there is only acting in the flow.
“For me, the goal-setting, ‘To Do’ lists and measuring a day by a sense of productivity and accomplishment have ended. I am far more interested in the quality of attention I give to the moment. My days are full and rewarding. Living a meditative (mindful, present) life is the whole human way. It is applied to every moment, every breath, every action. My primary focus and passion are to experience being a whole human.
“In this, I am a living laboratory, making myself more self-aware each day and experimenting with ways to consciously bring my body/mind to balance and embody the eternal qualities.
“There is no greater gift I could give to myself or the world, and my enthusiasm and joy towards conscious evolution is unbounded.
“I practice what I write, and revise the writing from what I learn.”
{{I wonder how it can apply to the millions and millions of people tormented by a part of themselves, that mental entity I referred to as the (abusive) Inner Critic.}}
We will see how the mystery unfolds. All I know is that the squirrel found the popcorn.
Warmly,
Gary
April 30, 2016 at 2:32 pm #103180AnonymousGuestDear Gary:
Your message is then, that a whole human, evolved is being a Human Being, not a Human Doing. Attending to the moment, being mindful, not reacting to “lower feelings” or “negative feelings”- anger from irritation to rage, I suppose; hurt, sadness, I suppose. And instead adopting the “higher/Positive/ evolved feelings like humility, curiosity, peace and such.
Gaining emotional mastery then, is switching from the lower to the higher.
Am I correct so far, in a nut shell?
Talking about nuts, the ground squirrel, he/she going after the popcorn in the yurt, that is a lower feeling? The hunger and motivation to get to the popcorn?
anita
May 1, 2016 at 7:04 am #103235Gary R. SmithParticipantDear Christine,
While walking Aura, I reflected that asking you to identify triggers is old thinking and not so useful. It even contradicts what I wrote on the Whole Human site, excerpted below. The second paragraph applies. Some new thinking is coming in, I will write more as I get the words. Best to you.
“Numerous techniques have been developed to address human thoughts and emotions, including clinical therapies, meditation, bio-feedback, psycho-tropics, past life regression, shamanism, hypnotism, isolation tanks and other methods of sensory deprivation, sound and scent healing, emotional intelligence and emotional freedom techniques and a plethora of mind control methods. I have tested all of these and found that while most have helpful elements, none are complete or self-empowering.
“Some psychologist authors suggest identifying your triggers, which sounds good. However, I have found that analyzing and over-thinking it are not needed and only block or delay an experiential change. All that is really needed is to know when I am out of balance or not in peace, and to make choices that bring me back to my highest order. Distracting the trigger-happy aspect of myself with ‘higher vibes’ such as burning incense, playing suitable music, chanting or just being silly, can settle the trigger-reaction. If my body chemistry becomes engaged with the trigger, I am lost. When I catch the trigger as it occurs, breathe it through, don’t engage with it or identify with it, and make conscious choices, I am free.
“An emotional trigger is a vulnerability in a person to any stimulus which ‘initiates or precipitates a reaction or series of reactions’ while a trigger point is a tight area within muscle tissue that causes pain in other parts of the body. In various sessions with practitioners, at times I experienced release of emotions stored in tense muscles. However, the issues returned without resolution. The self work I do now goes to the root of the issues in a self-empowered and self-responsible way and makes real, lasting, and evolutionary changes.
“Merge with the moment, whatever it is, and no stimuli has power to trigger you and freeze your soul.”
May 1, 2016 at 7:14 am #103236Gary R. SmithParticipant{{Your message is then, that a whole human, evolved is being a Human Being, not a Human Doing. Attending to the moment, being mindful, not reacting to “lower feelings” or “negative feelings”- anger from irritation to rage, I suppose; hurt, sadness, I suppose. And instead adopting the “higher/Positive/ evolved feelings like humility, curiosity, peace and such.}}
Anita, I have no message as such but like ‘a whole human, evolved is being a Human Being, not a Human Doing.’ and have used the same phrase in communication.
{{Gaining emotional mastery then, is switching from the lower to the higher. Am I correct so far, in a nut shell?}}
Well, there we go again with lower and higher. I avoid those terms, using them only when it feels necessary to be clear in meaning since emotions and feelings are commonly equated.
{{Talking about nuts, the ground squirrel, he/she going after the popcorn in the yurt, that is a lower feeling? The hunger and motivation to get to the popcorn?}}
The squirrel is self-actualized as a squirrel. He/she is acting upon the instincts that are part of its natural design. I have not facilitated a circle of squirrels to learn more, but sense that squirrel-kind has no need or potential to evolve consciously.
May 1, 2016 at 8:39 am #103245AnonymousGuestDear Gary:
I am having a difficulty communicating with you because, as I see it, your are defending a theory you have that is not open to discussion. I asked you to think from scratch, but you are not. So at this point, I am blocked. It is not effective for me to argue with you and I don’t desire to attempt to prove you wrong. So you are set with your beliefs and I don’t share those beliefs.
To be specific: you believe that in some instances, it is correct to refer to feelings as higher and lower. I believe it is never the case, never true. I believe that fear, for example can save your life if you are in true danger, motivate you to react quickly and effectively to real danger, and so, it is as high or valid an emotion as can be! No other emotion can possibly be higher when confronting real danger. Feeling humility, when confronted with real danger, is going to get you dead, so what is the high value of humility then.
When you feel fear and there is no real danger, fear is a leftover from past experiences of perceived real danger, commonly from childhood. It is a fear that keeps circulating in the brain causing problems and it needs to be processed on one hand, while the skill of not identifying with it, and instead observing it, needs to be learned and practiced.
Regarding the squirrel, it doesn’t act from instinct alone. It does have emotions, and all its emotions, like our emotions, are valid, and none is superior to any other.
anita
May 1, 2016 at 8:51 pm #103322Gary R. SmithParticipantDear Gary:
{{I am having a difficulty communicating with you because, as I see it, your are defending a theory you have that is not open to discussion. I asked you to think from scratch, but you are not. So at this point, I am blocked.}}
Anita, help me understand what you mean by thinking from scratch, and how I am defending a theory.
{{To be specific: you believe that in some instances, it is correct to refer to feelings as higher and lower. }}
Something is blocked, I agree. I have repeatedly written that the only reason I used ‘higher’ and ‘lower’ is to clarify, since the words ’emotions’ and ‘feelings’ are commonly used inter-changeably. Nothing I write is meant to be taken rigidly.
{{ It is not effective for me to argue with you and I don’t desire to attempt to prove you wrong. So you are set with your beliefs and I don’t share those beliefs.}}
Anita, if that is how you see it, that is okay.
{{I believe it is never the case, never true. I believe that fear, for example can save your life if you are in true danger, motivate you to react quickly and effectively to real danger, and so, it is as high or valid an emotion as can be! No other emotion can possibly be higher when confronting real danger. Feeling humility, when confronted with real danger, is going to get you dead, so what is the high value of humility then.}}
As I wrote earlier, if I were talking with people who had a common understanding of the meanings of such words as fear, emotions and feelings, I would communicate differently. For example, one of the therapists in the organization where I was house parent referred to ‘good anger.’ I did not feel that his use of what seemed like rage in the closed circle the boys were forced to sit in was ‘good.’ I told him I did not buy it and would rather use ‘resolute will’ than anger. I do not buy it that fear, as it is commonly understood, can be good. I would say instead ‘heightened awareness’ or ‘alertness.’
{{When you feel fear and there is no real danger, fear is a leftover from past experiences of perceived real danger, commonly from childhood. It is a fear that keeps circulating in the brain causing problems and it needs to be processed on one hand, while the skill of not identifying with it, and instead observing it, needs to be learned and practiced.}}
Like you, I do not want to try to prove anyone wrong. I have no need to be right. I am simply expressing my experiences, observations, evolving conclusions. And I am always open to integrating the portions of participant responses which feel ‘right’ to me.
{{Regarding the squirrel, it doesn’t act from instinct alone. It does have emotions, and all its emotions, like our emotions, are valid, and none is superior to any other. }}
That all emotions are ‘valid’ is the common view, I know. I have been proposing new ways of seeing to provoke new thought, thinking from scratch and not from historical beliefs. My writing is not based on any education, tradition, or systematized way of thinking. I do not defend it, as it is continually being revised. I do not expect or want anyone to ‘buy into’ it. It can be taken or left. As I wrote above, I am always open to integrating what others have to say, when it feels right, into my way of seeing. That is another reason for starting a discussion.
Interesting about the squirrel. My response was to shoo it out of the yurt, which was not effective because it kept returning. The squirrel had no fear. My partner put food outside the yurt and it ate voraciously. Popcorn, cereal, two slices of bread. She then noticed the squirrel is lactating and we understood the pregnant squirrel’s hunger. And yes, she probably was emotional in her drive to get food. I am not sure how that benefited her, but certainly do not judge her for it. My partner pointed out some of the fallacy of my thinking, such as the squirrel has no need or potential to consciously evolve. We had a good exchange talking about the group soul of squirrels and the oneness of consciousness.
Kindly,
Gary
May 2, 2016 at 2:56 pm #103393ShayParticipantHello again!
I have been going through a changing time this last year; divorce, my father’s stroke and care giving. Custody battle of my children and meeting someone who has totally amazed and delighted me has challenged me on a whole new level.
On so many levels the extreme of a lot of emotions has confronted me on all sides and I will say I look for centering and rely on practicing the centering more and more with heightened awareness.Today as I felt nagging grief over the changing of my relationships and anxiety over my meager finances. My daughter has some chronic health needs and I am responsible for half of the cost.
It dawned on me once again to be thankful for the challenge, the loss, the changing of all things I have known and loved these last twenty years.
That thankfulness brings me to be grateful for the rain, the flowers on my desk, then I plan to do something I delight in such as a new poem or painting.
Ahhhh. What a sigh of relief to know that this challenge will grow me, grow my girls, parents, and maybe my ex, or others in the process. It will give me new tools, and new colors to place on the canvas.
I think feeling this grief and concern is not over. I will revisit it again and pursue it until its story is all told. If not in the garden, then in a warm bath or an empty canvas or page. As I do, I will be thakful for the most intense of the emotions and name them, honor them, acknowledge what they have to say right down to the source of pain and then be thankful for that pain.
Thank you for listening and for spurring me on to learn.
I looked at the diagram of the emotional color wheel and have been contemplating my ideas and understanding of them.
I personally would put all the intense emotions on the outside, and the inward leave in with acceptance and serenity.
I think seeing it as a hurricane with a calm eye and disruptive violent edge is what I can identify with best.
Thank you for opening this door for me. I have enjoyed it. -
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