| Week
177: |
Cultivating Thoughts and
Attitudes that Support Well-Being |
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I’m back with Pema Chodron’s book, “The Places
that Scare You”, for this week’s exploration. There’s
a chapter in the book where she talks about the ways in which we make
a habit of our resentments and how we can choose to become “warriors” and
to cultivate lovingkindness, compassion, joy, and equanimity. One
of the important aspects of choosing to bring these kinds attitudes
into the foreground of our experience is that it takes practice, practice,
practice. We must actively choose, each moment, to release resentment
and look for connection.
I recall a client telling me about an AA
principle that goes something like this: “Resentment is like taking poison and waiting
for the other person to die.” I’ve probably shared
this before as I laughed so hard when I heard it. It’s
so true! How often do we become mired in thoughts about someone
that end up hurting no one but ourselves? It’s *our* adrenal
glands that have gotten activated into anger or upset, and it’s
*our* bodies that have to deal with that activation and stress – not
the other person’s. Equally powerful, the body-mind state
we generate when we connect with lovingkindness, compassion, joy,
and equanimity promote health and well-being in us, and that is
a great gift to ourselves.
For this week’s experiment, I invite you to become more consciously
aware of the places where you drop into resentment – or into
any of the constricting, grinding kinds of feelings that pull you
away from connection and into turmoil. Then, when you do become
aware of these moments, become aware of what happens if you decide
*not* to feed those feelings and, instead, turn to lovingkindness,
compassion, joy, or equanimity? (You can find a lovingkindness
meditation on the Meditations page.)
The point isn’t to artificially force yourself to feel something
you don’t feel. Rather, it’s to become conscious
of what’s happening spontaneously and noticing if you can or
want to shift the focus of your attention to something healthier and
better for you. Also, it’s crucial not to get into any
self-judgment around this experiment. We all have our places
of constriction, resentment, or any number of activating and uncomfortable
feelings – they are human responses – and what we’re
doing this week is giving ourselves an opportunity to notice these
places and remember that we have more choice than we realize about
whether or not to stay with these feelings. There’s nothing
wrong with having them – that’s pretty much inescapable. It’s
what we decide to *do* with them that creates an important and
healing opportunity.
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