The
interpretation we ascribe to situations directly contributes to how much or
little stress we’ll consequently feel. We can ask ourselves: “are my interpretations
of occurrences in my life beneficial or harmful to me? Do they ease or burden my life?
All of us had to, at some point, learn to
walk, drive, interview for a job, cross the street, answer a research question
– we weren’t born knowing these. In the
same way, we also have to acquire and practise skills for many other common
occurrences.
For example, do we understand the crucial
difference between taking offense versus being harmed? An incident, from many years ago, made this
clear to me, and it also awoke my inner critic “how could you have not known
this before?” One day, a friend said to
me: “you take things too personally.” I immediately
defended my position, but later on I pondered her odd remark. Even though, I
reacted by righteously defending my interpretation of the situation, I will
always be grateful to her for that comment.
Her remark showed me -- another interpretation or response was possible.
I hadn’t known this.
Reactivity
by nature doesn’t allow room for any other perspective to emerge – the unconscious instantaneous birth of
reactivity automatically swallows up the gap of space to breathe, be present
and reflect on what’s occurring. Reactivity
shuts down possibilities.
So let’s return to the difference between
being offended and being harmed. According to Lou Marinoff in his book, “Plato,
Not Prozac,” the difference is essentially one of interpretation. He explains it this way. If someone slaps you in the face, then this
is being harmed. There’s only one
interpretation possible. If, however,
someone said you were lazy and useless, here there is more than one possible
interpretation. You will have to do some
self reflection and then determine how close to true the remark is or
isn’t. In this instance, you CHOOSE
whether to be offended or to shrug off the remark. The latter is largely dependent on your interpretation
of the accuracy of the remark, whereas the former is determined by the physical
pain you experience, which isn’t subject to interpretation.
While this lesson may have been self evident
to many of you, it wasn’t for me. When
we approach situations with the attitude we should know how to deal with
whatever is going on, then we are setting ourselves up for high stress.
The
disadvantages of applying the “should know” interpretation is that we –
·
fail to
appreciate and tap into the essential experience of the moment,
· expect
perfection from ourselves,
·
become
combative with and judgmental of ourselves
·
don’t learn
from the situation or about our coping ability,
·
don’t allow
all possibilities to come to bear in the situation.
My friend’s comment helped me see an option
existed to respond in ways that would benefit me and possibly others. Reactivity is so primal that it functions at
a binary level of survive or die.
Because it occurs in an environment where we coexist with others, it can
cause us to become competitive rather than cooperative. And competition doesn’t allow for compassion
and consideration of self or others.
With mindfulness, we use ourselves as the
ground to practise kindness to self first; we begin with learning to accept
ourselves, as we are. The training is to
remain aware and open and not to react.
Over time, this grows our ability to be more mindful and less reactive
in life. When we are able to acknowledge
and accept all aspects of ourselves, we enter the path of compassion. And self-compassion
is a stepping stone to being a happy human being in the world. And happy people make a happy world.
May you, too, benefit from this
reminder.
If you'd like to learn techniques for being mindful in
your work, relationships and life, I have a workshop coming up this
weekend (20-21 April) and another one on (18-19 May). These are
weekend intensive workshops on "Mindfulness:Strategies for Daily Living
to Reduce Stress". Please email Casey at acceptancehealing@gmail.com for
more info. Or check out the link (top
right) on Upcoming Workshops.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your feedback. Casey