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Archive for the ‘personal growth’ Category

Orange sky from Pointe Rouge

 

In the A to Z of Becoming, P is for Pause.

A pause is a break, a temporary stopping. I first encountered the concept of the “bardo” in the Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, where it was helpfully described as a space where enlightenment could emerge. The meditation teaching in that book is to become aware of the space between two thoughts, and gradually to practice increasing that space. In daily life the suggestion is to become aware of the space (or bardo) which occurs before an emotion arises eg anger or fear.

So, let’s look at two types of pausing.

The “pause of now” and “the long pause”.

The “pause of now”. One way to consider what goes on in our minds is to think of two default brain states – “reactive mode” and “responsive mode”. In reactive mode our minds work almost like reflexes. Someone or something “touches our buttons” and off we go, into a real state of anger, anxiety, fear or some other learned pattern of thought, feeling and behaviour. In this reactive mode we can feel entirely the victim of other people and of circumstances. It can feel as if we have no choices, that our happiness is entirely at the mercy of others. We are on automatic. We are in “zombie” mode. The responsive mode arises as we become aware of the early changes, recognise them, understand what is happening, and then make a choice about how we want to respond. So if we frequently find ourselves becoming angry or anxious when a certain person speaks to us, then if we can become aware of the reaction starting to happen, we can pause, then choose how to respond – sometimes we will choose to respond angrily, or anxiously, but sometimes we won’t. We will be doing the choosing as we open up this “necessary gap” and in the “pause of now” we gain flexibility, confidence, tolerance, autonomy, and move away from a victim or zombie way of living.

One of the easiest practices I know to begin to develop the skill of creating this pause to shift from reactive mode to responsive mode is Heartmath (see a simple introduction here). The first two steps of “quick coherence” in Heartmath are known as “getting neutral”. It’s a variant of “count to ten”, and it works. The more you practice it, the more quickly and powerfully it works.

There’s another kind of pause though, and it’s not the kind of pause which happens just over a few seconds, or at best few minutes. I got this idea from reading about the concept of “the long now“. We hear a lot about “living in the moment”. Maybe you’ve read “The Power of Now” by Eckhart Tolle? If not, then maybe you’ve read elsewhere about the idea of being present, instead of spending your time on the past or the future (which might focus your thoughts on grief or anxiety). But when you stop to think about it, “now” hardly exists. This present moment has become the past by the time you’ve said “this present moment”. Henri Bergson, the French philosopher introduced the concept of “duration” to allow us to think differently about time (instead of splitting it up into moments, like frames of a movie), but his work can be quite hard to understand. Here’s a short summary of his duration idea –

Instead, let us imagine an infinitely small piece of elastic, contracted, if that were possible, to a mathematical point. Let us draw it out gradually in such a way as to bring out of the point a line which will grow progressively longer. Let us fix our attention not on the line as line, but on the action which traces it. Let us consider that this action, in spite of its duration, is indivisible if one supposes that it goes on without stopping; that, if we intercalate a stop in it, we make two actions of it instead of one and that each of these actions will then be the indivisible of which we speak; that it is not the moving act itself which is never indivisible, but the motionless line it lays down beneath it like a track in space. Let us take our mind off the space subtending the movement and concentrate solely on the movement itself, on the act of tension or extension, in short, on pure mobility. This time we shall have a more exact image of our development in duration.

One other concept I found easier to grasp was the idea of the “long now” – which, I suppose, in even simpler terms could be thought of as “now-ish” (reminds me of how Italian friends would often use the term “15 minutes” which if you used your watch to measure would produce huge frustration because they didn’t mean a number of minutes, they just meant a “piece of time” (of around 15 minutes in size!).

Drawing on these ideas of time, I think we can usefully propose “the long pause”

The long pause is a space, a few minutes, hours, days, or even weeks. I think a holiday often is a kind of a pause. It lets you step off the treadmill, get some distance between your working life and the rest of your life and provide a vantage point from which to see things more clearly, or a place from which to allow a new pattern of thinking, a new set of decisions, some new habits, or, yes, even enlightenment, to emerge.

So, here’s your verb for this week – pause.

Practice pausing in the moment to move from reactive mode to responsive mode, and build into your life some long pauses, some “time out” – daily, weekly, monthly, annually.

 

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Feather

Burrrrr

 

When you look at these two photos, do you think, like I do, that the first one looks “soft” and the second one looks “spiky” or “sharp”?

I don’t mean in terms of photographic quality, I mean, in terms of sensations.

When I look at that feather, I think it looks soft. When I look at the burr, I think it looks prickly.

But isn’t that odd?

These are photos. I’m using my eyesight to perceive them, not much touch sensory organs. I cannot feel their softness or their sharpness. But that’s the first thing that comes to my mind when I look at them.

This is what we do all the time.

We are constantly bathed in information, some of which we detect with our sensory systems of vision, hearing, smell, taste or touch. We use our brains somehow to direct attention towards some of those inputs and away from others. So sometimes what we notice is a sound, and at other times, a colour, or a light.

But we are not unidirectional. We don’t process only one type of information at a time. We use all our ways of knowing and we put the results together to create a unified, whole perception. So I can look at this feather, and think “soft”, or at the burr and think “spiky”, even though my eyes cannot experience those qualities.

The one way of knowing cannot be reduced to another. There are always multiple ways of knowing. What we are really great at is synthesising those ways to gain a greater understanding of what we perceive than we could ever achieve by using only one way.

On a different level, this is what Iain McGilchrist has highlighted in the different ways our two cerebral hemispheres approach the world. Our two hemispheres allow us different ways of knowing. How much more fruitful, however, to synthesise their activity, and to use our whole brains?!

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Links

 

Connections are important – whether we think if links, bonds, or relationships – we can understand nothing if we ignore the connections.

Christakis describes the importance of social connections in “Connected

Barabasi describes this beautifully in “Linked” where he shows the usefulness of thinking about “nodes” and “links”.

Bloom describes the essential “social” nature of the universe by focusing on connections in “The God Problem“.

McTaggart comprehensively focuses on connections in “The Bond

But, you know, there is a special kind of link, bond or connection which lies at the heart of all healthy, flourishing, growing organisms, all forms of Life, and all aspects of Nature – its the kind we see when we look at “integration”

Here’s a definition of “integration” – the creation of mutually beneficial bonds between well-differentiated parts.

There’s the key – “mutually beneficial bonds” (or links, or relationships)

I’m thinking this might be THE touchstone value – if you want something to grow, create mutually beneficial links between whatever it is and the rest of the world. If you want a relationship to thrive, create mutually beneficial links. If you want to know how to choose between different possible actions, ask yourself, do these actions create, or enhance, mutually beneficial links?

 

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Poppy petals

In the A to Z of Becoming, O is for “open”.

One of the most beautiful sights in Nature is the opening up of a flower (just like these poppies I photographed yesterday). So, in what ways can we “open” this week?

Open your mind. Many, many years ago I noticed graffiti on a wall in San Francisco, which said “Minds are like parachutes, they work best when they are open”. The General Semanticists say that “judgement stops thought”. When we “make up our minds” we often close them. I’m not saying you shouldn’t decide anything but it might be a good experiment now and again to keep an open mind, instead of coming down with certainty one way or another. We can also open our minds by opening ourselves up to new opportunities, new sights, new music, new tastes….in other words why not try something different this week, and see what it opens up for you?

Open your hands. Don’t grasp. Don’t cling. Can you let go? Accept? Just try this little experiment – make a fist with your hand, scrunch it up tightly. What feelings come with that gesture? Now, relax your fingers, and turn your hand palm upwards. What feelings arise now?

Open your heart. Approach people this week with an open heart, prepared to be kind, to be loving and accepting. What flows when you open your heart? (Another take on opening your heart to someone is to express your true feelings to them)

Let me tell you a strange story. I’m having a short holiday in Pézenas in the South of France. As the weekend approached I started to think about my Sunday blog post, the one about the A to Z of Becoming. This week it was to be “O for open” so I got to wondering about opening minds, opening hands and opening hearts. I wandered into the bookshop in Pézenas and browsed. The bookshop here is mainly a newsagent and stationers. They don’t have a lot of books, but there was a pile on a table. One caught my eye “L’Âme du monde” by Frédéric Lenoir. I’d never seen or heard of this book before but the “soul of the world” title caught my fancy. I picked it up and flicked it open to a random place, which turned out to be the start of a chapter. The chapter title? “Ouvre ton coeur” – “open your heart”.

I don’t know. You explain it!

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Door restore

This restored door in Pézenas reminded me of the story the ship whose planks were gradually replaced one by one until none of the original planks were left. Was it still the same ship?
And what about our ever changing bodies with new cells replacing old ones every day so that very few cells remain after a few years…..yet we are still ourselves. Aren’t we?

This miracle of perpetual change which allows a sense of continuity and consistency.

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Pézenas

Relaxing in Pézenas for a few days. Tell me, look at this environment, don’t you think our physical environment, natural and built, influences the way we feel, the way we think, the way we are?

If you still aren’t sure, look at St-Guilhem-le-désert (one of the most beautiful villages in France).

St Guilhem-le-désert

Today I walked around these old streets, had lunch under the 150 year “King of the Platânes” in the main square, and felt, this is a sacred place, a place of beauty, of spirit, of wholeness.

I love the experience of “sacred places” – those places where you feel something extraordinary. Which places are sacred places for you?

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Nourish.

Franschhoek

What about making this your verb of the week? What about asking yourself about your choices and your actions every day…..is this nourishing me? What, or who am I nourishing?

I imagine when you think of nourishing, first of all you think of food and feeding…..which makes me instantly think about two stories – the one from Native American tradition of the hungry wolves –

One evening an old Cherokee warrior told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside all people. He said, ‘My son, the battle is between two ‘wolves’ inside us all. One is Evil. It is anger, envy, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego. The other is Good. It is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith.’ The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather: ‘Which wolf wins?’ The old Cherokee simply replied. The one you feed.’

and the one from Thich Nhat Hahn about watering seeds –

Your mind is like a piece of land planted with many different kinds of seeds: seeds of joy, peace, mindfulness, understanding, and love; seeds of craving, anger, fear, hate, and forgetfulness. These wholesome and unwholesome seeds are always there, sleeping in the soil of your mind. The quality of your life depends on the seeds you water. If you plant tomato seeds in your gardens, tomatoes will grow. Just so, if you water a seed of peace in your mind, peace will grow. When the seeds of happiness in you are watered, you will become happy. When the seed of anger in you is watered, you will become angry. The seeds that are watered frequently are those that will grow strong.

So, let’s think about nourishing the body, the mind and the spirit.

Main course

I’ve often been asked about dietary advice and my response is to say we are all different and what is good for one person at one time, might not be so good for another or at another time. I like Michael Pollan’s Food Rules – especially….”eat food”, “mainly plants”, “not too much”! But have a think when you eat this week, “is this nourishing for me?”

meditation

When if comes to the mind, are you aware of certain thoughts or feelings being more nourishing than others? When you worry, does that feeling nourishing? When you ruminate, does that feel nourishing? When you make goals, think positively, focus on the present, does that nourish you?

flourish

And when it comes to the spirit, I’d take a little while to explore what nourishes your soul – your soul as Thomas Moore describes it – think how we use the word “soul” – soul food, soul music, soul mate – what are those for you? What is your soul food, which music stirs your soul, who are your soul mates? Are there special places you can go to nourish your soul? How might you nourish your soul?

So, why not take a focus on nourishing this week? Nourish your body, nourish your mind, nourish your spirit, nourish those others who you encounter this week, nourish your world……

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In the wonderful “The Republic of Tea” Mel says

The whole problem with Western civilisation is that ever since the Greeks we’ve been trying to squeeze the mind into the brain and it won’t fit.

Wonderful!

My first thought was Alva Nöe’s point in “Out of our Heads” – “Brains don’t have minds, people do

Then I recalled Dan Seigel’s definition of mind as being an “embodied inter-relational process of regulation of energy and information flow” – which certainly doesn’t fit the mind into the brain!

Andy Clark talks about the “extended mind” in his “Supersizing the Mind” –

According to BRAINBOUND, the (nonneural) body is just the sensor and effector system of the brain, and the rest of the world is just the arena in which adaptive problems get posed and in which the brain-body system must sense and act.
Maximally opposed to BRAINBOUND is a view according to which thinking and cognizing may (at times) depend directly and noninstrumentally upon the ongoing work of the body and/or the extraorganismic environment. Call this model EXTENDED. According to EXTENDED, the actual local operations that realise certain forms of human cognizing include inextricable tangles of feedback, feed-forward, and feed-around loops; loops that promiscuously criss-cross the boundaries of brain, body and world. The local mechanisms of mind, if this is correct, are not all in the head. Cognition leaks out into body and world.

And then there was that recent map of body emotions which showed where we locate different emotions (certainly not just in our brains!)

But the mention of the brain-based focus of Western civilisation since the time of the Greeks producing such limits to our understanding, I couldn’t help thinking again of Iain McGilchrist and how I’m sure he’d say it’s not just that we’ve been trying to squeeze the mind into the brain, but that we’ve been tried to squeeze it into the left hemisphere!

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DSCN0914

This is cherry blossom time and in Japan the coming of the cherry blossom is a cause for celebration and of great interest.

Follow through this link here and you’ll see a map showing when the blossom comes out in different parts of Japan (over March and April – we’re a bit later with our blossom here in Scotland)

Why is it such a celebration? Well, not just because it is beautiful (which it is) but because it makes us so much more aware of transience. The blossom comes, the blossom goes. It’s not here for long. Everything is like that. Our lives are like that. We are here with these bodies for a while, and then we are gone.

This is a transition time for me in my life. I’ll be retiring from medical practice this summer, which is a huge life change. So I’m acutely aware of the beauty and the power of transience right now. There is celebration of the life lived so far, of how much it has changed, and an intensity to the everyday experience which comes with the awareness of change.

This is a good month to notice the daffodils coming out, or the cherry blossom briefly flourishing on the trees. Nature is showing off the wonderful beauty of transience.

I know we have a human tendency to cling, to want to keep the status quo, holding onto not just what is good but what is familiar. But we also have this deep human capacity to know that we are mortal, to know that change is the inescapable reality of Life, and somehow, that makes today even more precious, even more important, even more beautiful.

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DSCN0872

Over the years patients and colleagues have given me little gifts which I’ve collected in this box which sits next to my chair in my consulting room. In some ways I’ve thought of it as my little “cabinet of curiosities“.

It’s often a talking point, but the recently one five year old girl came into my room, made a bee line for the box and squealed “Ooh! Treasure!”

I hadn’t thought of it as a treasure box until then, but that’s what it is.

Have you a treasure box? If not, why not start one? What would you put in it?

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