Home→Forums→Emotional Mastery→Self Trust
- This topic has 1,633 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 6 months ago by Cali Chica.
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June 7, 2018 at 9:17 am #211417AnonymousGuest
Dear Cali Chica:
I like your Do Nothing response to the flaky friend. I like it very much.
anita
June 7, 2018 at 9:21 am #211419Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
thank you – it is something I have “achieved” with the help of finding the path – which is with the help of you.
June 8, 2018 at 1:20 am #211507AnnParticipantsending you all the love and positivity in this world <3
June 8, 2018 at 2:19 am #211593AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
You are welcome. The Path, you are definitely on the path.
anita
June 8, 2018 at 4:19 am #211609Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
What a joy it is to see your post first thing in the morning! What a pleasure. For that I am lucky to have someone like you to have deep incredible conversation with!
June 8, 2018 at 5:07 am #211623AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
The feeling is mutual (My first smile today was reading your previous post and the second smile is reading the most recent one).
anita
June 8, 2018 at 6:45 am #211643Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
i have many thoughts I would like to write to you this morning but not the time to sit down and write them out. I shall later. One thing I do want to say this morning is: the concept of surrendering to one self.
I had my first glimpse of what this means yesterday. To me it is defined as self acceptance to the next level. It is looking in the mirror and saying I accept you, and I surrender – self- to you. Tell me what you need – and I shall surrender.
Perhaps surrender is not the right word- but something along those lines.
June 8, 2018 at 7:20 am #211651AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
Surrender may very well be the right word. It will probably become clearer to you later, the exact nature of the surrendering. On the path, we see and then later, we see more of what we saw earlier.
anita
June 8, 2018 at 8:00 am #211659Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
yes, surrender is the word that came to mind yesterday – and thus it is the right word. Surrender: allow, accept, give in. Those terms don’t do it justice.
What I mean is in a way give up. To let go. Give up what? The fight. The struggle the fight to keep going and trying. Surrender. Let it be. Let it flow. Give up the active. Active effort in every breath no more – let go
Now an outsider may read this and find it disturbing or disheartening. As surrender may have the connotation of giving in to something, to even failing. This is not true.
I see myself holding on tightly and not letting go. Holding on to ideals, and shoulds. Holding on to concepts. Not allowing myself a chance to breathe, feeling that not trying equals failing. Equating constant effort to mean overcoming and succeeding. But overcoming what? Perhaps my feeling that I can not relax and I should keep trying is apart of my identity. Therefore if I do toherwise I am not being “myself” or living up to my “potential.”
However, yesterday I had a glimpse. A short glimpse of this feeling- this feeling to surrender! Let go of the self torture! Cali Chica you are fine the way you are, things are fine- stop seeking. Sink and savor and Surrender.
June 8, 2018 at 8:34 am #211663AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
No wonder surrender came to your mind yesterday, one day after you wrote the following: “(I) feel the need to do more and more and more to ‘conquer and find a solution.’ It is almost an obsession to not sit back and wait- but do the exact opposite go non stop and continue to try and do…I am hardwired to be a type A overachiever… Perhaps I don’t know how to STOP… take a breath, everything is fine.. I don’t know how to”
I think you are finding the how to. Surrendering, reads to me, is you being on your way to undo that base anxiety which motivated you so far to do and do and do, to overdo.
anita
June 8, 2018 at 9:02 am #211667Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
Surrendering, reads to me, is you being on your way to undo that base anxiety which motivated you so far to do and do and do, to overdo.
i will let this sink in today. Thank you for that thought.
June 8, 2018 at 2:20 pm #211703AnonymousGuestYou are welcome, Cali Chica.
anita
June 10, 2018 at 7:37 am #211917Cali ChicaParticipantDear Anita,
Happy Sunday!
I think you’re right – the seeping of the word surrender into my psyche, is the first glimpse of letting go of that need to overdo.. Perhaps the first glimpse of understanding that this baseline anxiety (although not a choice) is something that can be diminished. Moreover, the baseline anxiety does not have to be all invading and all pervasive. I can give it some respect, understanding that it does hold some real estate in my brain, but I do not have to bow down to it, or succumb to it always.
Understanding that we are not our anxiety is huge. It is something that many writers blog about, and many top authors have best selling novels centered on. I am not my thoughts, I am not my anxiety. I am not my fear based wired brain.
Easy to read about, difficult to grasp. Easy to think about momentarily, difficult to sink and savor.
I notice this anxiety can seep in during the summer. Given that in the northeast we do not have beautiful weather all year round, we often feel we have to make “the most of the summer.” Even during the summer, not every day is bright and sunny, and thus those that are, we often find that we want to make it a “maximal summer” experience. Whether this be the beach, a hike, some other water related activity, bbq, or plain sitting outdoors. I noticed that during the week I found myself having this anticipatory anxiety about forthcoming weekend plans. However, when this weekend rolled around, it was perfect.
We enjoyed some time at the dog park, had our neighbors over for some appetizers that evening, which spontaneously turned into a night of games and laughs. How often these spontaneous evenings turn out to be the best!
The point of me writing this is not to point out that fun can be unplanned and spontaneous, as this is far too basic of a concept! My point is this – I don’t have to fear that if I don’t “do” that I will not find. Doing does not always equal finding.
The contrast of:
Doing (aka planning an evening) does not mean that not doing means no fun plans
Doing (aka planning the next career move) does not mean that not doing means career stagnation.
Doing (aka reaching out to certain friends) does not mean that not doing means those friends will go further away
Therefore, NOT doing does NOT equal the OPPOSITE outcome.
In fact, NOT doing may (and many times does) lead to a wonderful and more positive outcome!
We do not have to always DO to control our future. No we do not.
Funny thing is, that friend (the flakey one) continued to reach out over the week, with text messages, and finally a phone call. Interesting, as she is someone who is not a reliable communicator and NEVER calls. It appears she is DOING, to control. She is DOING to assuage herself of guilt. She is DOING to avoid the reality of the outcome of being a bad person. Well, doing is not a cure, now is it?
Doing is not a cure, it is often only a way to disguise ourself from what we fear – uncertainty.
June 10, 2018 at 8:46 am #211931AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
I am looking forward to read your recent post and reply when I am back to the computer. I don’t know when that will be (within a few hours maybe).
anita
June 11, 2018 at 3:06 am #211983AnonymousGuestDear Cali Chica:
You wrote: “It is something that many writers.. top authors have best selling novels centered on. I am not my thoughts, I am not my anxiety. I am not my fear based wired brain.”-
But we are our thoughts, including this very thought: “I am not my thoughts”. More precise would be to say: I am not only that thought, I am also this thought. Also true would be to say: I am not only this fear based wired brain, I am also this peaceful brain, right here, this corner here.
The thoughts you expressed in your recent post, wonderful to read. These thoughts are new wiring added to that “fear based wired brain”. These new thoughts spread there like a spider web, slowly changing the mapping of the brain.
It is such a pleasure to witness your re-wiring process.
You wrote: “Doing is not a cure, it is often only a way to disguise ourselves from what we fear- uncertainty”, how profound, leads me to think about this sentence: uncertainty, meaning danger. This is what fear is about, perceived danger. If you do nothing then “it” (danger, whatever it may be) will find you, correct, a waiting target?
anita
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