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Self-Care is Knowing Your Default Reaction

May 21, 2022 Michael Dubin

Photo 245569824 © Akarawut Lohacharoenvanich | Dreamstime.com

Self-care became a “thing” during the COVID pandemic. It isn’t that nobody thought about it or did anything about before then. People have been working on developing “healthy habits” for decades. As mental health came to the forefront in a more infsistent way during the crisis, self-help strategies have been talked about with frequency and openness. A lot of it is very surface, whether talking about physical self-care or emotional self-care. “Take Vitamin D. Zinc is essential. Go to yoga class. Give up sugar. Become a vegetarian. Give up red meat.” And as you wade through the deluge of advice about physical healthy living – please don’t forget to use sunscreen – you find what feels right works for you and what doesn’t. All good.

On the emotional/mental/spiritual front, there is also a lot of advice out there about what constitutes self-care on those levels. It is usually delivered in short nostrums intended to fix the self-care problem quickly, without a lot of fuss.  Now, in fairness, as far as a lot of this advice goes, most of it is fine – as far as it goes. As example, “Rewarding yourself for even small achievements is self-care.” Absolutely. Learning to honor ourselves and our achievements and accomplishments is an important life/spiritual lesson. Why? Because we are recognizing what we accomplished though our diligence or discipline or perseverance. And we are acknowledging that we did it. The reward should be proportional to the success. You clean house all day and take yourself out to dinner. OK. You clean house all day and then go binge buying online, not so much.

Another self-care idea I came across is, “Playing dumb to protect your energy is self-care.”  Um, no. Playing dumb is many things, but it is not self-care. I understand that acting like you don’t know anything about anything seems a way to keep yourself from getting drawn in to gossip or drama and, in fact, there is truth to that. However, there are times in life when it is important to stand up and be counted and put your two cents in. First of all, when you refuse to speak the truth in a situation where someone could be negatively impacted if you don’t say something, the price you will pay is your self-esteem because of the lack of your forthright honesty. Secondly, it’ll piss you off to no end when someone else regards you as a complete numbnuts. The deeper truth here is that you are not so fragile that you must constantly protect your energy. Becoming spiritually tougher will serve you well as you are not a delicate flower and learning to stand in your own truth will help you develop self-confidence.

We could go on, and we will in future columns, about some of the ideas about self-care out there. But I want to take that idea to a deeper level. An important aspect of self-care is about knowing and learning to manage your default reaction setting. We all set a pattern fairly early in life in how we react to the unexpected, both good and bad unexpected. These patterns become default settings. The self-care aspect here is learning which of these settings is yours in order to manage and, hopefully, heal it as these are not things you would want to give into. Most of us fall into one of these seven categories: anger, hurt, fear, loneliness, despair, hopelessness, or shame.

Keep in mind that feeling each of these can lead to one of the others. For example, your default reaction is fear but when you get fearful, you also get angry in response to the fear, or you get aggressive as a way to quickly dispel the fear. Or when you feel lonely you can fall into despair about being lonely. You get the idea. But let’s start with what is your first reaction, your knee-jerk reaction, if you will.

Mine was always fear. Something unexpected happened, didn’t even have to be necessarily very negative, and I would go into fear. What would happen as a result of this occurrence? Had I done something wrong? Was this a sign that my life was about to fall apart? What did this portend for me? Now, I had to learn to put things in context. If Kroger was out of broccoli cole slaw for a couple of weeks, did that mean that I was being deprived and would need to alter my diet? Probably not. If someone misunderstood something I said, did I need to be fearful of being either judged or completely misunderstood and in that, somehow being subject to punishment? You see how silly and extreme It can get.

If your default is fear, how likely is it that what you fear will happen? How significant is this fear? Should this fear be realized, is it something that can easily be corrected or is it something that puts your well-being at risk? How rational is the fear or is your ego having a field day with you as it knows where to push your buttons? If, for example, you make a mistake at work, will you really be fired for it or is it OK to admit the mistake and correct it? If you are inconsiderate with your significant other but didn’t really mean to be, you just had other things on your mind, will they really leave you for someone more understanding – remember love’s greatest fear is loss - or can you apologize and ask them for the chance to make it right now that you are no longer distracted?

How big is the fear really? How likely is it to occur? Is the potential outcome really that devastating? In what context is this happening? How significant is it and how much does it matter? Start with these kinds of questions if your default setting is fear. And there is a lot of fear and uncertainty in the world right now and it can be very easy, when we automatically go into fear, to use that fear as proof positive that everything is going to hell in a handbasket and no good will come of anything, so the fear builds and compounds, instead of being addressed. Finally, in looking at some of your worst-case scenarios, design a Plan B. If whatever I fear does happen, what is my plan? What will I do about it?

Others get angry when the unexpected occurs. For some, getting angry helps them to feel powerful enough to cope. We all know people, often men, who walk around with an underlying anger that is just under the surface. A good friend, who has been an air traffic controller, had worked for years in his spiritual development, to release his habit of being the “last angry man.” At heart he was a kind and loving and generous human, but his default was anger. Most people don’t know how to process and release anger in a constructive way, so they stuff it in their shirt pocket and walk around with it. When he had a stroke, which he survived pretty much intact, he was furious with his body and with God because as a spiritual person, that wasn’t supposed to happen to him. He felt shocked and betrayed and angry as hell. Rather than deal with his anger and living out a nice long life, he turned that anger on himself and did not follow his doctor’s advice and was dead in two years.

Others react aggressively in the face of anger. You just pissed me off or weren’t listening or whatever and I immediately go into anger rather than trying to figure out what just happened and why. And in my aggression spurred on by my anger, I can ruin relationships or jobs, by doing and saying something destructive or hurtful. Anger can be a very healthy emotion, but part of self-care is learning how to deal with it – recognize it, process it, and release it appropriately. And not everything that makes you angry rises to the level of importance that it is worth going to Defcon 3. If I forget to stop and by milk on the way home, is it worth a huge angry blowup? Just knowing you are headed into anger can help you walk yourself back from the immediate reaction edge, calm down, and make an informed decision as to how you would like to respond.

Hurt hurts. Right? When someone or something hurts us, it can tear at our self-esteem as well. And hurt takes time to heal. More than any other emotion, you have to give hurt time to heal. And you have to do the healing work. No one can do it for you. With that in mind, not everything that surprises us or that we don’t like or is unexpected is really hurtful. Yet for some of us, we have become habituated in our thinking and in our expectations that we are going to get hurt. Once those paths of least resistance get laid out in our brain structure, that is where we go. So the first question one would ask oneself is, “Is this really hurtful?” Or is it disappointing or challenging or unwelcome or whatever? If you still feel it is, then you want to look at why. Why is this hurtful? Or are you flirting with feeling like a victim? Meaning, whatever is happening, is it being done to you deliberately with the intent of causing emotional harm or are you feeling like a victim and powerless?

This is not the column to delve into the process of healing hurt but to make you aware, if it is your default setting, make you conscious of this pattern and begin breaking it up and lightening your load. The world is not out to hurt you. Life will still have its challenges. But you can heal and make your life easier. One more thing. If this is your default reaction, then either prepare yourself to take in stride answers you may not like to questions like – “Do these jeans make me look fat? “Did you like the peanut butter and sardine pannini?” – or don’t ask questions you may not want the honest answer to until you are ready for an honest answer. Just sayin’.

Loneliness. A big subject and one I will deal with, in more depth, in a future blog and podcast. That feeling of, “Here I am again, out here on a limb or floating on a life raft in the middle of the ocean, all alone. No one to help me. No one to care about me. No one to help lift the burden once again.” You want to be careful here not to let this slide into self-pity, feeling sorry for yourself. Yet that howl of loneliness, out in the cold and dark, alone, can be crazy making.

Anger, hurt, fear and loneliness, if left unexpressed, can become destructive. As with the first four, loneliness and can dealt with and healed. That doesn’t mean you will never ever feel those emotions again. There will always be things that, potentially, make you angry or that hurt you or something that makes you afraid. But you are not consigned to a life of loneliness. There are a lot of layers to loneliness. Where to start is to begin to source where that loneliness came from. Many of us were motivated, as kids in school, to learn and keep up, or we would be left behind, alone, while everybody else moved on in life. Adolescence, a time when we are beginning to discover who we are separate from our families. Our bodies are rushing us into adulthood, and we want to find out where we belong and fit in. We want to be cool and accepted. But, if we’re not, we will be alone – so goes the emotional blackmail. For example, if you don’t know the entire Marvel Universe movies series, in order and know all the plot lines, you are toast. Right?

Where did the threat of being left all alone begin for you? What happened? Even those of us in development can be threatened. I worked for a while with the Ramtha material when I first started my spiritual path. Then one day Ramtha said in a seminar, that all gay men would be thrown out into the void. Anyone who is a supposed spiritual leader who peddles fear in order to make you conform is no spiritual leader. Period.  But that fear of loneliness – you are gay and you are doomed in the eyes of God – is a very familiar threat to many of us.

A way to begin to break that cycle? First, let yourself feel it. Maybe I am feeling lonely at the moment for no particular reason. Perhaps an event occurred that left me feeling humiliated and alone.  You can learn, as with any emotion, to sit with it for a few minutes – without telling yourself any stories about why you feel it or justifying to yourself why you feel it – and then release it. It is a feeling, not a life sentence. Then look at – did an expectation suddenly change? A trip you were planning suddenly got cancelled for whatever reason. Your date for a party bails on you last second. The future you envisioned for yourself or the job you wanted suddenly changes or is gone. Your significant other relationship suddenly goes sour. Sudden changes in expectation can leave you feeling lonely. It isn’t just what you were expecting changed. It is the suddenness of that shift in your expectation that produces the feeling of loneliness. “I’ve been suddenly, abruptly, abandoned and am left to deal with this all on my own.”

The crazy thing is that even when something wonderful happens – you get that job or relationship or car you have been wanting – you can still feel lonely at first, singled out, set apart because of the sudden shift in what you were expecting. And, no, the answer is not to go through life expecting nothing. That is harmful, limiting, and impossible. And if your knee-jerk or default reaction is loneliness, remember this. You can depend upon yourself, even if that negative ego voice in your head says you can’t. You do deserve. You are worth loving. And, yes, ultimately, you can cope with what life throws at you on a daily basis. Start here with all the times you have been able to depend on yourself and go from there. Also, please reference our blog post and podcast on Authenticity. The more you are authentic, that sense of being in touch with your authentic self can help you build the confidence you need here.

Despair. Despair is the worst form of loneliness. That hopelessness. That feeling of helplessness. “Nothing ever works out for me. What’s the point? It/life/relationships are just hopeless.” Then start doing things for other people. It can be as simple as asking someone how their day was and then being present and actively listening to their response. Or invite someone for a cup of coffee or offer to help someone complete chore they don’t really want to do. Get involved. I did volunteer work for many years. It will help begin to move you back into a more balanced place. But whatever you choose to do, do it from a place of honestly wanting to do it.

As with loneliness, what expectation suddenly shifted? Feel the despair and then begin to do something for someone else. There are people in your life who you do honestly and genuinely care about and love. Love and caring – not self-sacrifice – are tremendously powerful gifts that you have at your disposal. Despair has nothing to do with whether or not you are worth loving. Be careful to not let yourself slip into feeling sorry for yourself. And look at what expectation suddenly shifted and work on releasing it.

Hopelessness.  Hope is tremendously powerful. It is not the emotion of last resort nor is it an emotion of desperation – “Well, when all else fails, at least there is hope.” No. Hope is a gift from the Divine. That said it can wax and wane. Some days you have more and some less, but it is always available to you. That said, if hopelessness is your default reaction, take a moment examine if what is happening is really an issue of hope. As example, something you are trying to learn just isn’t making sense to you. Is it that it is really hopeless for you to learn it or are you trying to make yourself understand and use something that has no interest for you at all?

Another place to examine hope is in your anticipations and expectations. Anticipation is what you expect will happen before it actually happens. The job you want, the relationship you are working toward, even relatively simple things like the movie you are going to see or the dinner out that you are looking forward to, you have anticipations attached to those about what you think they will be like. You anticipate/hope the relationship or dinner or movie or job, etc., will be like this or that. Then the event of whatever nature happens. What did you expect would come of it? Regarding the movie you are highly anticipating, you also expect will lead to a fun evening as a whole. But what happens, where do you go when the movie turns out to be a dud? The job you anticipated getting and finally have, you expected would bring you a greater sense of accomplishment or achievement. What happens when it doesn’t? You get the idea but when life throws you curve balls like a lousy dinner out, maybe you put too much weight on what you anticipated and expected the dinner to do for you and your life. Look at your anticipations and expectations.

Secondly, when something does not turn out the way you expected or happen in the way you anticipated, look around your life at the people, activities and things that inspire you and that you love. That which helps you get in touch with where your passions in life truly are. A lousy dinner or a meh date may suck but it won’t damage your passion for meeting new people or having fun. You get my point.

Thirdly, where can and do you trust yourself? We posted a blog and podcast about trust that you have access to. Where do you trust your own instincts, your own wisdom, your own abilities, and your own processes? If your ego jumps in here and tells you that you can’t trust a thing about yourself, that is usually a good indicator you are headed in the right direction because if you can get back in touch with where and how and why you can trust yourself, your negative ego loses its ability to tell you life is hopeless and that you stink.

Hope is an enormous subject that we can’t possibly cover here but those are few good places to start.

Shame. Shame is when you feel flawed and defective, that there is something wrong with you. Counseling is often required to help you lift it. It gets started in our lives when we are asked to be responsible for things we can’t be responsible for. A silly example. When I was young, I had a piano teacher who gave me a piece of music that was way too hard for me. Instead of helping me learn where my obstacles were in developing the ability to play the piece, he made me feel less than, accused me of not trying, and offered no help. But it was his decision where we started my lessons, rather than building a relationship between us and allowing me to work my way up to increasingly more difficult pieces. I felt defective, that I could and never would learn to play difficult pieces, and that was the end of my musical instruction in this life.

Another example. You have a business whose product line is either every limited or is of mediocre quality or is overpriced. Business is down. You hold your staff responsible for the lack of sales, but the issue is with your product line. How can they be responsible, but you nevertheless hold them responsible? That shames them. When you are asked to be responsible for something – “If you loved me, you’d know what I need.” – that you can’t possibly be responsible for, that produces shame. So, if shame is your default setting, start with the question – “Am I being asked to be responsible for something I can’t possibly be responsible for?” If you can’t be responsible for the issue being presented, then refuse to take on that mantle of something that could not have been your responsibility. Refuse to wrap yourself up in something you had no control over. If it is something you were or could be responsible for, then take your power back by taking action to correct or ameliorate the situation.

Shame is a very tough emotion to handle all on your own. But if and when it rears its ugly head in your life, you need not be at sufferance of it. And, if it is your default, are you, in fact, being asked to take responsibility for something that is beyond what you could have been responsible for?

A long column and podcast about a very big subject. Knowing your knee-jerk reaction and being able to work with it – yes, you are able to work with it – can be an immensely important step toward authenticity and is a critical part of self-care. To be authentic you need to know who you are and to tell yourself the truth about all of who you are. As you can begin to work with and mitigate the damage that inappropriate but habitual reactions can cause, you set yourself on a path of being more powerful, more authentic, having more self-esteem, and discovering more of your self-value. Please let us know if we can be of help in any way.

© 2022   Living Skills, Inc. All rights reserved in all media

Living Skills offers positive psychology counseling, spiritual counseling, and life coaching services in Atlanta, and online. We are sensitive to the needs of the LGBT community. Sessions available by Skype. Please email us at livingskillsinc@gmail.com or visit www.livingskills.pro. Podcast: “The Problem with Humans” now available on Apple Podcasts, Buzzsprout, Google Podcast, Amazon Music, and Spotify, Overcast, Castro, Castbox, and Podfriend, as well as on my site. Follow us on Twitter - @livingskillsinc

In Self-Care, Spirituality, Spiritual Crisis, Relationships, Growth Tags Emotional IQ, Emotional patterns, Emotional reactions, Dealing with feelings, Dealing with anger, Dealing with hurt, Dealing with loneliness, Dealing with despair, Dealing with hopelessness, Dealing with shame, Self-esteem, Self-confidence, Self-care
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Living with Uncertainty

January 7, 2022 Michael Dubin

Illustration 238034548 © Brillianceeye | Dreamstime.com

The most common complaint I hear from friends, family, colleagues, is that everybody is exhausted and worn down, to some extent or another, by living for so long in a constant state of uncertainty – about everything. In all aspects of our individual and collective lives, the ground under our feet won’t stop shifting.

What’s next? What’s coming now? What else? I walked into a Trader Joe’s on a recent Sunday night, a time I never usually shop for groceries, and was floored. All of the fresh fruit and veggies, all the bagged salad, bagged veggies, all of it was gone. Not an onion or banana to be had. I asked one of the employees if this is what the store usually looked like at 7P on Sundays. I was assured that it was not. They didn’t get in a truck. All I could think of were the stories I read in high school about the bare shelves in Soviet state stores and I wondered, “Is that where we are headed?”

Last September when we wrote about “The Hydra Head Of COVID,” we talked about the various kinds of impact that COVID has had on people, on their lives, on relationships, on who we knew ourselves to be. We talked about old structures and old ways of doing things, especially on a societal level, are crumbling and there aren’t many new ones being erected yet as states literally burn, the pandemic rages on, people are leaving their jobs in droves (the Great Resignation), and the truck with whatever essential goods didn’t come or isn’t coming.

One of my teachers on my path began talking of a “New Paradigm of Uncertainty,” back in 2018. Now, I usually try to make the concepts and ideas I write about practical and applicable. However, here we are going to have to venture into the slightly abstract for a bit to begin to unpack these ideas and make them more practical.

The New Paradigm of Uncertainty:

·       The Freedom of Uncertainty

·       The Wonder of Possibility

·       The Wisdom of Working Together in Harmony

·       The Courage to Keep Exploring

We are all apprehensive of uncertainty. We all like the certainty of, “This is the way the world works. Period. I like knowing what to expect is coming tomorrow.” Now we are all used to dealing with anxiety on a personal level. Will I make this meeting on time? Is this person “the one?” Will they like me? What will my new job be like? Who will my kids turn out to be? We all know that there are no guarantees and no certain outcomes but we have all developed certain strategies in different parts of life that we have come to rely on to keep the chaos at bay and usually ensure that things turn out pretty much the way we want and expect.

But what can we do when the trepidation of apprehension sets in? We can become anxious and fearful, even dreading what might happen and then we tend to lock down and man the barricades. Instead, keep in mind apprehension is not necessarily a bad thing. What is the immediate apprehension here? I may not immediately have an answer but part of the freedom that uncertainty gives us is that we get to make different choices as to how we respond to our apprehensions and forebodings. Does a decision have to me made right now or is it possible to take a step back and wait and see what other information or new ideas might come our way?

Several things to watch out for here. One is impatience. “I want answers right now.” And, if we don’t get those immediate answers, off we go into frustration and, sometimes, anger. Also, some decide to try to control all of the variables and force the desired outcome. Better to deal with the fear underneath the desire to control than to white-knuckle our way through life. For others, instead of outright impatience they decide, “I want to understand why something is happening before I do anything about it.” That is my fave.

When an outcome or future outcome is uncertain, use the freedom you have to choose and work toward – not control – the end result you want. I have the freedom to stop and look at and pull apart my fears and apprehensions. I have the freedom to make new and different choices. I have the freedom not to go into impatience or control or frustration or anger. I can work with those emotions to release them. And I have the freedom to keep amassing data and information as it emerges before I make decisions about an uncertain future.

And I have the freedom to change or alter my perspective. I have the freedom to try to see things differently. A silly example I’ve used before – A co-worker, with whom you are friendly, one morning is very curt with you. Do you decide that you should have known all along that they were rotten and no good or do you think that since this is someone you know, they may just be having a bad morning? Which perspective is correct? Who gets to choose? Perspective - What am I after? What am I trying to accomplish here? What do I hope for? How do I usually see things? What apprehensions need I deal with that might cloud my vision and my understanding? How might I see this differently? And when you find yourself absolutely sure about something, it never hurts to check – Are you certain?

Finally for those with anxiety, please reference our post and podcast entitled, “Running Anxiety.”

Wonder. Wonder gets a dirty name. “The wide-eyed wonder of children.” As adults, we don’t have time for that childish nonsense. Actually, we wonder all the time, only we do it in the negative sense of worry. What if we wondered about what new opportunities we’d like? Or what new chances would we like to begin again? What new hopes and dreams? Is any of this possible? Why not?

Too many of us, the idea of possibility is like walking into the paint store, hoping to find just the right color, and we get overwhelmed by too many options/too many choices. Some of us have reached a point of cynicism where our response to new possibilities is, “Yeah, the other shoe will fall.” However, we can gather our courage and be curious about positive new ideas, hopes, goals. We can sharpen our discernment of possibility with the wisdom we’ve accumulated from past experience. Thus, some possibilities might, upon further examination prove interesting and worth pursuing, while other possibilities won’t feel right, at least not right now.

In fairness, opening to the possible, the positive possible, in our times can be challenging. Thus, take it as something to practice doing over time, not something to do once and cross off your list.

Possibility leads to hope. And you cannot hope without being open to the possibility that it will happen. Finally, don’t be afraid to challenge your imagination to show and do more. What more could I imagine here? What is beyond what I can imagine? Not fantasy. Imagine.

The wisdom of working together in harmony. People fight the idea, that we are all in this together, kicking and screaming. Seems sort of self-evident that however the chaos of the world came to be, we all had a hand in it somewhere and, thus, we are all going to have to fix the world. COVID has and continues to make reaching out in person potentially problematic. But as it clears, turn from the uncertainty and reach out, in whatever capacity, to others involved in something that matters to you. This way you get to put your two cents in as to what will emerge from the chaos and come into being.

Yes, this is all rather esoteric, in a sense. It makes more sense once experienced. Uncertainty, admitting “I don’t know,” can open doors to knowledge. We also get driven inward to find an anchor and a refuge from the stuff outside that is uncertain. And in that process we can find stability. As external and internal security grows, we become more and more open to going with the flow of our life and letting it evolve rather than trying to control.

And, yes, it will take courage to keep exploring. Courage here does not mean absence of fear. It means knowing the kind of person you want to be and the kind of life you want to live and in that determination to keep exploring yourself and the world as the new normal emerges.

There is not nor will there be a quick fix for living with uncertainty, even as it will eventually subside as a new normal emerges. But take bits and pieces of the above as so suits you to work with. You just might come away less uncertain and more confident about the future.

© 2022   Living Skills, Inc. All rights reserved in all media

Living Skills offers positive psychology counseling, spiritual counseling, and life coaching services in Atlanta, and online. We are sensitive to the needs of the LGBT community. Sessions available by Skype. Please email us at livingskillsinc@gmail.com or visit www.livingskills.pro. Podcast: “The Problem with Humans” now available on Apple Podcasts, Buzzsprout, Google Podcast, Amazon Music, and Spotify, Overcast, Castro, Castbox, and Podfriend, as well as on my site. Follow us on Twitter - @livingskillsinc

In Spirituality, Spiritual Crisis, Growth, Change, Healing, LGBTQ, Self-Care, Self-Help, Metaphysics, Relationships, Self-Value, Handling Emotions Tags Living with uncertainty, uncertainty, Dealing with apprehension, Anxiety, Freedom to make new choices, Fear, Impatience, Control, Wonder, possibility, Hope, Wisdom, Spiritual practice
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The Hydra Head of COVID

September 16, 2021 Michael Dubin
Illustration 217921389 © Daniel Eskridge | Dreamstime.com

Illustration 217921389 © Daniel Eskridge | Dreamstime.com

According to Greek mythology, the Hydra is a nine-headed gigantic water-snake-like monster.  Like the Hydra, there have been many faces to the impact COVID has had on people. For some it has been as traumatic as losing a loved one. For others, outside of being a major inconvenience, it really hasn’t that bad. During these troubling and challenging times, Hercules has not been available to come and rescue us from this monster. We’ve been thrown back onto our own resources to save ourselves.

For people who are more introverted like me, in many ways, it has been an unexpected gift of time. The exile imposed by COVID allowed me time to read, think, meditate, reflect and enjoy the peace that came with the slowing down of the outside world. That said, I was not immune to the fact that life as we all knew it had come to a screeching halt and that all of our heartfelt desires for life to return to return to normal as soon as possible were not going to be answered. And in the course of the last 20 months, my life has changed, and I have changed profoundly in ways that I could neither have foreseen nor imagined.

For the more extroverted among us who thrive on social interaction and get energized by being around others and engaging in out-of-the-house activities, it has been a tough time. Unable to safely and freely move about and be on the go, separated from the touch of friends and loved ones, missing favorite activities, having to find new ways to have fun and connect, has been more difficult. Some have slipped into depression. Others have felt hopeless or helpless or even a sense of despair. Some have gotten very angry. That anger has shown itself in a variety of ways. Angry at politicians. Angry at those who sought to protect themselves by wearing masks. Angry about getting or not getting the vaccines. Angry about others getting or not getting the vaccines. Angry about businesses shutting down. Angry that life as we had known it has gone away.

Life has changed. Many of us would like to say that it was all the result of COVID but many of the changes in our world have been brewing for a long time. In our world, old structures - whether that be media, healthcare, politics, education, international relations, supply chains, alliances, etc. – have and are breaking down and we don’t yet have the new structures to replace the old. In some cases these changes are coming slowly and in other cases coming more rapidly. Some changes are more subtle than others but the old ways, the old traditions of how we thought our world worked or was supposed to work, are breaking down. Order will eventually emerge from the chaos but right now we don’t know what that world will look like and that is bringing up a lot of fear and anxiety and stress in people. COVID added to all that.

Many people felt that they and/or their world was in crisis. The demands made on them - to help stop the spread, to stay home, to give up many of life’s pleasures - were coming too quickly; changes too fast to process; their normal routine, their daily routine had been disrupted and things just weren’t working the way they were supposed to. But we did what we needed to do – we established new routines; processed the changes one step at a time; and we handled the new demands coming from every facet of life as best we could. And this was easier for some than for others. Humans don’t really like change.

Many of us ran into the fact that just because something had worked in the past – job, relationship, hobby, perspectives, goals – did not mean that it would continue to work. Things that we had taken for granted could no longer be taken for granted. Our health, our safety, our survival, our relationships, the things that brought us joy, even our ability to purchase paper towels could no longer be counted on in quite the same way. Spouses and or families having to spend real time together. For some, the increased contact only strengthened the already existing closeness and bonds. Other found themselves looking at loved ones and wondering, “Who are you?”

Many people discovered a desire to not constantly be tied into work and wanting more of a work/life balance. Wanting more flexibility in work schedules. Tired of missing their kids grow up. Quality of life becoming more important than living by arbitrary rules imposed by the workplace. This Hydra-head occasioned the re-prioritizing of life.

Some people found new or alternative or additional ways to make money and survive. Some moved to new places – whether out of choice or by necessity. Many are currently seeking new jobs. That may be for better working conditions, better money, better living conditions or just something new to do as they have become bored and restless.

Having been locked down in our houses for so long, it has been interesting to see people emerge with the drive to be seen and heard. When I was younger, sequins, flashy, sparkly dress was something that was reserved for a very dressy or formal occasion. Now everything glitters, including bedroom shoes – which have moved from the bedroom to everyday footwear. Bling has become de rigueur. Informality in dress and appearance has also become more commonplace. So, in some senses, COVID has changed the way we present ourselves to others as we re-emerge.

COVID also forced people to deal with themselves and then those close to them in ways that they could have avoided before. In the busyness of life, I can keep myself distracted from dealing with me. When I am stuck at home with not a lot to do, eventually binging my fave TV shows, eating, playing with the dog, etc., only will go so far. And then the things like that vague unease you have been feeling starts knocking at the inside of your head. Some people began to rethink what really matters and what is important to them. Others began running into the aspects of themselves that didn’t work for them anymore. Some began to realize how stale their lives had become.

Some began to look at the relationships in their lives and whether they were still important or past their expiration date. The people we cherished and longed for. The touches, the hugs, the warmth of their presence that we so desperately missed but had previously taken for granted. In other cases, people began to get on our nerves – like our spouse or friends who disrupt our equanimity or relatives who we kept in touch with out of a sense of duty and obligation. Nothing was immune from review. In certain cases, we clearly saw what and who we treasured and why, and in other cases, we saw what we had outgrown – people, habits, ways of living our lives.

Others began to dream new dreams and have different hopes and goals. Some went back to school or learned new things from a variety of available resources. Others took on new projects that they had not had the time for before like finally repainting the kitchen or remodeling a room.

We can’t begin to cover all the changes COVID has wrought in the world. COVID, in many senses, made us all realize that we’ve been going with what we know or knew to be good and true and right for us in life, at least up until the pandemic. Nevertheless, for so many of us, it forced us to come face-to-face with – Is this all there is? What now? What’s next? Do I want something more or new or different? Do I deserve more or new or different? Do I dare ask for that? The answer is always, “Yes.”

 

© 2021   Living Skills, Inc. All rights reserved in all media

Living Skills offers positive psychology counseling, spiritual counseling, and life coaching services in Atlanta, and online. We are sensitive to the needs of the LGBT community. Sessions available by Skype. Please email us at livingskillsinc@gmail.com or visit www.livingskills.pro. Podcast: “The Problem with Humans” now available on Apple Podcasts, Buzzsprout, Google Podcast, Amazon Music, and Spotify, Overcast, Castro, Castbox, and Podfriend, as well as on my site. Follow us on Twitter - @livingskillsinc

In Authenticity, Handling Emotions, Relationships, Self-Value, Metaphysics, Growth, Self-Help, Spirituality, Spiritual Crisis, LGBTQ, Healing, Self-Care Tags COVID, Change, Introverts, Extroverts, Relationships, Dreams, Goals, Fear, Anxiety, Developing new routines, Stress
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The Times They Are a Changin’ - Are You Surprised?

November 16, 2017 Michael Dubin
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The world is changing. That becomes more and more apparent with every passing day. Whether you embrace and welcome the changes that are afoot or are horrified by what you see in the news, there is no getting around the fact that nothing has been the same recently.

Have you stopped to take a minute to really assess and sit with how all of this is affecting you? The times maybe a changin’ but, if you aren’t yet aware of it, so are you. For many people, they are finding that the things, people, places, ways of doing and being that they have held onto tenaciously for years no longer work for them as they once did. It maybe something as seemingly silly as you have eaten Cheerios every morning of your life for the last however many years and you woke up one morning and one more bowl of Cheerios just wasn’t going to cut it. And you were surprised.

It may be something more substantial like you no longer find your job or your work fulfilling as they once were. You may find yourself moving away from friends or relatives with whom you have been close because the relationship no longer nurtures or comforts you. And you are surprised.

Technology has changed so much of the way in which we relate to one another. And you are suddenly surprised at the effects it is having on the way you feel about or relate to others. And you are surprised.

Finding a job used to be an easy thing but the world has changed and making sense of the “new rules” of job hunting may seem alien or unfair or incomprehensible. Healthcare has changed. The way we get our news has changed. The way politics works has changed. The feeling of being in charge or in control of our lives has changed. And we are surprised.

The problem is that most people don’t like surprises - even the positive surprises, much less the surprises that are unwelcome.

Many of us have constructed our lives based on our past and what has worked for us successfully in the past. Others of us have constructed our lives as a defense against that past, trying to ensure that our future is nothing like our past. We cling to the rituals of our life that we have composed, hoping to stay safe and happy and successful. If we just focus on our job or make sure we have date night once a week with the spousal unit or talk to friends every other day or take our vitamins or make sure we do our oil change on the car every 3000 miles without fail, things will be fine. But as 2017 draws to a close, many of us are beginning to realize that the things that used to work for us aren’t working anymore. And we are surprised.

What in your life is starting to feel confining to you? What no longer gives you the feeling of freedom or the feeling of safety or the feeling of hope that it used to? What no longer makes you happy that always used to do the trick? Where is your routine breaking down or no longer serving you? How are you coping with the “new normal” when you aren’t even sure what the new normal is? What are you doing with the feelings of unease that have started creeping in from under the floorboards? How are you answering the questions – Am I still OK? Is life still OK? Are the important relationships in my life still OK? Are my routines and rituals still OK? And what are you doing if the answer is, “No,”? As the world around you gives you less solid things to hold onto, as old ways of doing things no longer work, what can you hold onto? How are you dealing with the surprising fact that you find yourself surprised, in not downright astonished? WTF? Right?

The first step is to recognize that maybe somethings really don’t work for you anymore. “But I always . . .” Honestly recognize that maybe some of the beliefs you have held about this or that in your life no longer serve you. Maybe they never did. Maybe they are beliefs that were given to you by parents or friends or family, school, job, society, the media, whomever. What beliefs do you find being called into question by you? Sometimes just that recognition can be enough to free you from old and outmoded beliefs and let you look at life with fresh eyes. Beliefs affect attitudes. How have you found that suddenly some of your attitudes toward people, places, things, have shifted or changed or even done a 180 degree turn? An example of this might be that with all of the uncertainty in the world, with all of the confusion and doubt you find that your normally sunny disposition has become ever so slightly, or maybe not so slightly, cynical? How are you feeling about that? Surprised? Confused? Uncertain?

What we think and how we feel are directly impacted by our beliefs and the attitudes we carry and rely on. Maybe, given the craziness out there in the world, thinking and feeling is more than I can deal with right now. I’ve got too much to do to stop and worry about what I am thinking and feeling. I just need to get everything done and then maybe I will look at my feelings about whatever or what I think about this or that. The problem here would be that the thoughts and feelings are there anyway. That is a process hard-wired into us humans and so what we think and what we feel is always there, whether we pay conscious attention to it or not. Do you find you are having new or different ways of thinking about things? When you look at your life, when you look at the world, have your feelings about things changed from their usually reliable position?

What about decisions and choices? Decisions precede the action of choice. I’ve made the decision to go on a diet. “Yep. I’m gonna do it. I’m gonna loose that ten pounds.” OK, but have you made the choice to stop buying ice cream every week at the store? Have you made the choice to try eating fruit when you want something sweet? A silly example but you get the point. How have your decisions and choices changed? I have several friends who several years ago would never ever ever have considered owning a gun. But in the world they currently find themselves in, not feeling safe in their homes, they’ve decided that they need a gun and made the choice to buy one, as example. I know people who have made the decision to start keeping people at arm’s length or have started avoiding people when they can. They just don’t want to be bothered anymore. What decisions and choices have you made recently that surprised you? That were “out of character” for you?

Recognition of what doesn’t work anymore. Recognition of how you find yourself changing in relationship to yourself, your life and the people and places and things in it – and these changes are not necessarily negative. You may have made some really good changes but you still feel more unmoored than you’d like to be.

Recognition of how you find yourself changing in a world that seems to be losing it mind. And with the recognition then comes the acknowledgment that, ‘Yeah, that’s where I am right now. For good or for ill, that’s where I am right now. Doesn’t mean I have to stay here but I need to acknowledge that this is where I am right now with this belief or this attitude or my thoughts and feelings or my decision and choices.” Maybe I just don’t feel I have the same amount to give to other people anymore. Maybe I don’t want to spend the time investing in this person or that hobby or that job anymore. Maybe I don’t want anymore Cheerios for breakfast. I need to acknowledge that this is where I am at the moment That acknowledgment doesn’t mean that I will stay frozen or stuck here. I can choose to move beyond where I am whenever I am ready.

Then I need to forgive the fact that I may or may not like the changes that I find are happening within me or within my life or within my world. I need to forgive the fact that through no apparent fault of my own I find myself where I am. Forgive the fact that somethings no longer serve you like they used to – be it in whatever area or arena of life you are finding these changes. And then, finally, decide what the next step is. If the changes are going to keep coming, what kind of changes would I like to see based on where I am now? How do I move forward? How do I incorporate the changes in myself and in my life? I don’t need to decide my entire future right now, just what is the next step – however big or small that step might be?

Give all of that time. Things are changing. I am changing. The world is changing. How do I begin to cope, to deal with all of that? All of the above is a good first step.

But beyond that, how do I deal with how surprised I am by all of this? "Well, I’m just too damned depressed by the whole thing to deal with it." Maybe you are. There are ways to deal with depression so that you don’t get buried under its weight. If you are dealing with depression, get help. None of us is supposed to be so self-reliant that we never need to ask for some help or guidance.

Maybe you find yourself just so shocked by it all that you have no idea where to turn. No, not the faux shock that we read about every day in the news or in social media. That kind of, “I’m shocked, I tell you, shocked that this or that is happening,” usually followed by hand-wringing and false piety about the way things “should” be. No. But we all have had a great deal to deal with – politics and the governance of our country has gone off the rails. There have been horrendously destructive fires and hurricanes and droughts. There have been mass shootings in places where people thought they would be safe like churches and schools. There has been a lot to be truly shocked at. OK. Where in your small corner of the world can you regroup and begin to handle your shock at the world or your shock at some of the changes you find happening? You can’t do it all at once. Do it the same way you’d eat an elephant – one bite at a time.

Suppose you find yourself slipping into being judgmental about everyone and everything? When judgment comes up, ask yourself is this really the way you want to be? What will being judgmental accomplish besides freezing you in place, unable to process or deal with anything because you have erected your judgment in front of you like a shield? What will judgment do except encourage you to want to punish those whom you have decided deserve to be harshly judged?

If you find yourself feeling alienated from the people in your life, from those who you love and care about or you find the surprises of what is going on in life making you fearful and wanting to shut down or you feel that you are alone against a world that no longer bears resemblance to the world you thought you knew, return to step one: Recognize that that is where you are and acknowledge that the thoughts and feelings and decisions and choices and beliefs and attitudes I am encountering are mine. I am angry. I am shocked. I am fearful. I feel alienated and alone. I am feeling judgmental. I can’t cope with any more surprises. Then forgive the fact that that is where I am right now and acknowledge that in that recognition, I can do something about it. And then go out beginning to deal with the fallout from the surprises life has been bringing you.

These are tough times but they can be successfully navigated. Ask for help when you need it from friends, family, business associates, professionals, whomever. Go within and take care of yourself. Nurture yourself. Look for answers within yourself. Life will always bring surprises and sometimes they will be welcome and sometimes they won’t. And it won’t always be easy. But there are places to start and remember, you are not alone.

© 2017 Living Skills, Inc.

Living Skills offers positive psychology counseling, spiritual counseling and life coaching services in Atlanta for the LGBT community. Also available by Skype. If you have questions, comments or want to find out about our services, please email us at livingskillsinc@gmail.com

In Spiritual Crisis, Change Tags Change, Surprise, Feeling safe, The past, The future, Processing, Beliefs, Choices, Judgment, Feeling alienated, Handling fear

Atlanta, GA 30329 Michael C. Dubin, MA livingskillsinc@gmail.com

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