Lissa Carter Lissa Carter

5 ways to press "pause" on a bad mood

Posted by Lissa Carter, LPCA

As a counselor, I am constantly urging my clients to express their feelings. Anger, hurt, sorrow; difficult as they are to feel, they are all there for a reason. They are messengers, and they have wisdom for us.

As a human being, I know that there are times when we simply can't express our feelings. There are situations when expressing our emotions might mean losing a job or an important friendship. On these occasions, it can better serve our long-term goals to press "pause" on our feelings and get through the moment. Then, later, when we are in a safe place, we can let the emotions out.

The danger here, of course, is that we often forget to do part two! We press "pause", but never "play". We would rather stay numb than bear the inconvenience and discomfort of emotional expression. Over time, as our unexpressed emotions pile up, it can seem as though to let ourselves feel would be dangerous; that the rage or grief or loneliness would swallow us whole if we gave it even the smallest opening.

Over the long term, repressing our emotions has terrible consequences for our mental and physical health. So how can we balance these two truths: one, that we must express our emotions, and two, that there are situations in which it is not safe to do so?

Over the years I have learned a few small exercises that allow me to press the "pause" button on my emotions so that I can continue to function. I share them here with this caveat:

DON'T FORGET TO EXPRESS YOUR EMOTIONS LATER! When you are in a safe place, make sure that you give yourself the time to feel your feelings and listen to the messages they have for you about your work, your relationships, and your well-being.

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5 WAYS TO PRESS PAUSE ON A BAD MOOD

1. Get your feet on the ground.

Excuse yourself for a restroom break; then find the nearest patch of grass or bare ground and make some skin-to-earth contact. Breathe deeply; visualize your stress, sadness, or anger flowing out from the soles of your feet into the earth. Breathe in strength and feel yourself cradled by gravity. Three deep breaths, then back into the breach! (In a pinch, when I am in a situation in which it doesn't feel acceptable to take off my shoes, I pretend I am tying them and place the palms of my hands on the ground instead. Any port in a storm!)

2. The 5-minute shake.

I may or may not have done this exercise in a bathroom stall in the middle of my GRE exams.

Make yourself a foolproof playlist, all of the songs that you simply cannot help but move to. When the moment comes and you are shaking with anger or sadness or frustration, find a corner where you can be alone, pop the headphones in, and start shaking. Shake your feet from the ankles, your hands from the wrist. Shake your hips, your shoulders, shake your head 'no' and 'yes'. Lay down on your back and shake your legs vigorously overhead like a dying bug. Just shake. Let all of the tremors of your muscles work off those stress hormones and move them through your body. When the song ends, stand still for a moment and take a few deep breaths, noticing any shifts in your state of mind.

3. Square Breathing.

This is a good one for those times when you cannot get a moment alone; this can be done without anyone knowing even in the midst of a conversation.

Inhale for a count of four, hold the breath for a count of 4, exhale for a count of four, hold the breath out for a count of four.  Nod and smile as though you are listening and not seething with emotion. Repeat. Inhale, hold, exhale, hold. If the 4-count doesn't work for you, find the count that does. Finish with a few breaths in which your exhale is twice as long as your inhale.

Taking the time to focus on your breathing forces the mind to concentrate on something besides the overwhelming feelings.

4. Shift the focus.

Practice this one ahead of time. Wherever you are, take a moment and extend your arms out to the side, parallel with your shoulders, so you look like that Leonardo da Vinci sketch. Wiggle the tips of your fingers and see if you can unfocus your gaze enough to see the fingers of both hands wiggling simultaneously in your peripheral vision.

This soft-focus gaze is the opposite of the gaze we use to focus on our computers, on the written word, on any detail work required of us. This is a gaze that was taught to me when I was studying wilderness survival skills and again when I was studying kung fu, and recently it turned up in my yoga practice! Any technique that has made the rounds of that many cultures has my vote!

In the moment when you are feeling overwhelmed by emotion, shift your focus into this soft gaze and breathe that way for a few moments. There is a rather amazing metaphorical shift in perspective that happens with the literal shift in perspective.

5. Take a mental step back.

Whatever you are feeling, take a step back and witness it. Notice yourself, the thoughts you are thinking, the emotions you are feeling. Thinking about it in the third person can be useful too: "Lissa is having a hard time talking because she is feeling a very intense sorrow." "Lissa is so angry that I can hear her voice shaking and she has squeezed her hands into fists." You can also take a mental step back by reframing your thoughts from "I am going to explode if she keeps talking!" to "I am having the thought that I am going to explode if she keeps talking".  

Taking this mental step back reminds us that we are larger than our emotions and thoughts, and gives us a sense of perspective when those emotions and thoughts feel overwhelming.

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                                                                                        ~~~

I hope these techniques are useful to you, and please remember (all together now!):

DON'T FORGET TO EXPRESS YOUR EMOTIONS LATER! Put on a dramatic playlist and dance and shriek. Write down all of your worries and then rip them up. Hit pillows with a baseball bat. Curl up in fetal position and cry. Whatever you need to feel, let it work its way through you until it is finished. And if the emotions feel bottomless or stuck, please don't be afraid to ask for help.  That's what we're here for!

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Key #6: Leveraging Pleasure

Posted by Lissa Carter, LPCA

Is there one habit you can’t seem to break, one lesson that you just can’t seem to learn? Is there a theme to your suffering?

Chances are, your problems started out as solutions. Something happened in your life that did not feel good, and you developed coping strategies to survive. These strategies served you for a while, but life changed and the strategies didn’t!

If you have fought hard without success to break your habits and change your behaviors, you are not alone. These behaviors and habits brought us pleasure once upon a time, and I have learned in my years as an addictions counselor that our brain’s pleasure center is an extremely powerful enemy!

But here’s the good news: it’s an even more powerful friend.

You can use pleasure to burn through your old habits and self-sabotaging behaviors, and to teach your brain that it no longer needs those old strategies to access joy.

Key #6, leveraging pleasure, may seem counterintuitive. Doesn’t change take hard work?

We tend to fight our bad habits and sabotaging behaviors with discipline, self-control, and stress. We mean well, but these conditions of self-denial just prime the brain to reach out for a source of pleasure in order to cope, and the nearest source of familiar pleasure is probably the very bad habit we were trying to change!

What if, instead of trying to change yourself through self-deprivation, you were to approach change from a sense of pleasure and delight? What if you showed your body, mind, and spirit that change can be deeply satisfying and pleasurable?

When you get your brain on your side and start building new pathways of pleasure, old habits are easily discarded because they are NO LONGER NECESSARY.

We will be learning how to do this one step at a time in our upcoming group, Sweet Relief. This series of six Monday evening gatherings will be a guided deep dive into uncovering how your old habits served you, creating a map forward to the life you want, and building new pleasure pathways to ensure that your brain is onboard with your transformation.  If you know it’s time, and you are committed to ending the self-sabotage, you can sign up here. 

I believe in this work, because I have watched it change my life and the lives of so many of my clients and friends.

If you are feeling called to do this work, and something is stopping you--financial considerations, fear, self-doubt, scheduling problems--please reach out to me at innerlightasheville@gmail.com.

In the meantime, here is one of my favorite exercises for tapping into the power of pleasure.  

Get out a journal and a pen, light a candle, and give yourself 10 minutes alone.

TRANSFORMING COMPLAINTS TO DESIRES

  1. Activate your awareness. What have you been complaining about? What or who is bothering you? Take a few minutes, eyes closed, breathing deeply, to notice any stressful thoughts or emotions. Breathe deeply into any parts of your body that feel tight, clenched, or painful, and notice with a sense of curiosity what thoughts and feelings come up when you allow yourself to pay attention to these sensations. Open your eyes and take a few moments to write down what you’ve noticed. What are your complaints? What’s not working?

  2. Figure out the feelings behind your complaints. For example, if I’ve noticed that the stressful thought “I’m overscheduled, there’s just never enough time” emerges when I pay attention, then my complaint is “I don’t have enough time”. Notice what feelings emerge in your body when you speak your complaint aloud. Then write down what those feelings are. Complaint: I don’t have enough time. Feelings: Tightness, stress, a sense of harriedness or rush.

  3. Find the opposite feeling. Take a moment and notice these feelings in your body. Allow yourself to wonder what the opposite of these feelings would be. How would it feel if I believed I have enough time? Speak out the opposite of your complaint and notice the feelings that emerge. When I do this exercise, I notice that I have feelings of calm, spaciousness, and ease. Opposite feeling: calm, spaciousness, and ease.

  4. State your opposite feeling as a desire. (I desire to feel spacious and calm.)

  5. Find ways to meet your desire. Read your desire or speak it aloud. Settle into your body again and allow yourself to become curious. Where is this desire already met in your life? What are some healthy actions you could take in your life that would meet or nourish this desire?

  6. Savor the good feelings. Any time throughout the day when you notice you are having the desired feelings or meeting your desire in any way, consciously notice this. Press pause for a moment and breathe in the good feelings, alerting your brain to the pleasure that you are feeling. Taking 15 to 20 seconds to savor pleasurable feelings increases our brain’s dopamine response, ensuring that it will take note of this source of pleasure next time.

You can repeat this process as necessary, for as many complaints as you wish. Every time you notice a new complaint surfacing into consciousness, jot it down!

Our complaints are fuel for transformation, once we learn and practice this process.

Feel free to read over the past blogs and learn about the other 5 keys to transforming suffering. In review, the six keys are:

1) Make portals to the sacred

2) Upsource

3) Define your desires

4) Engage in creative digestion

5) Find your sweet spot

6) Leverage pleasure

Don't be afraid to reach out if you would like support and guidance in this process.

The counselors of this collective, and many other counselors around the world, offer free consultation so that you can see if counseling is a good fit for you.

I always love to hear from you! If you have any questions about this exercise, or want to share your results, feel free to comment below or email me at innerlightasheville@gmail.com.

 

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Lissa Carter Lissa Carter

6 KEYS FOR TRANSFORMING SUFFERING, #5: THE SWEET SPOT

Posted by Lissa Carter, LPCA

I am SO EXCITED about this week's topic. It's very close to my heart because, as with most of us, the work I do emerged from my past suffering. This is the key that got me through some of the darkest times of my life.

Tonight, my dear friend Briana and I are offering a free workshop over at Homegrown Babies to honor the personhood of mothers. (If you read this in time, come on over and join us!)

The workshop will last one-and-a-half hours, and for many mamas, that will be the most time they have spent dedicated to their own pleasure in YEARS.

Because honestly, who has the time for delicately nibbling a strawberry; who has the luxury of a full hour and a half to focus on herself, to be supported as she discerns her way forward?

It is my sincere and heartfelt desire that every single soul reading this can say "of course I have the time!" But it is my belief that most of us are nodding our heads in agreement.

That's where this key comes in. The circumstances of our lives have conspired to put many of us in a place of overwhelm, scrambling every day just to meet basic obligations, feeling stretched thin and overcommitted. Let me tell you a story.

Seven years ago, I was a single mother with a 5-year-old and a 1-year-old. I biked 14 miles to work every day after spending close to 3 hours on the bus system getting my children to school and to daycare. The money I made at my job paid for the roof over our head and the daycare program, but in order to put food on the table and take care of all the other expenses of life I took on two other side-jobs. I fell into bed every night exhausted, covered in whatever we'd had for dinner, and woke three hours later to start the same cycle over again. 

I decided to go back to school for an advanced degree because even I, obstinate and thick-skulled as I can be at times, could see that this was just not a sustainable life.  The problem was, I had NO IDEA how to proceed. I had so many interests, so many ways branching out in front of me. And I had NO TIME and NO ENERGY for decision making.

So many things have changed in seven years. Counseling is exactly the right fit for me. I have found the job I was meant for, that makes my heart sing, that allows me to make a difference in the lives of people who want to be their best selves. But one thing hasn't changed: I still feel as though there is never enough time to pursue all of my interests, to dive deeply into the many ways that branch out in front of me.

So I use the same tool now that I discovered all those years ago, the tool that got me here:

Key #5, the sweet spot.

 I'll keep this one short and sweet.

You have close to infinite potential. You have extraordinarily nuanced dreams and desires. And you have limited time.

Finding your sweet spot is a tool that allows you to make the most of your limited time and energy, investing it in exactly what comes most effortlessly to you.

When you figure out your sweet spot, you are putting the full force of your talent, skill, and passion into alignment. This exponentially increases the impact of the time and energy you invest.

So how do you find your sweet spot?

Below is an elegant diagram that was distilled from the Japanese concept of Ikigai, or life purpose. This is a wonderful way to get started.

    Make four lists. Stream of consciousness, don't overthink it.

    List one: all the things you can do that you know you can get paid for.

    List two: all the things you are really good at.

    List three: all the things you love to do.

    List four: all of the things that you believe this world needs.

    Slot these lists into their corresponding circles, and start to notice the overlap. For example, if I love to garden, and the world needs food for the hungry, there's an overlap between those circles of growing food for the hungry.

    If I am really good at listening to people, and I can get paid for counseling, person-centered counseling goes in the overlap between those two circles.

    Now take a look at the very center of your diagram. That's the sweet spot. That's the small space where your passion, your skill, your training, and the world's needs intersect.

    There may be only one thing here in the center---it can be hard to find the overlap of all four circles.

    But there is something, and when you find it, you will know where to invest the 5 minutes or 5 dollars available to you.

    Write out the center of your diagram---your ikigai---into a 10-second pitch. Put it somewhere you can see it. Practice saying it out loud when a new friend asks you what you're all about.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    And if you ARE one of the magical people who has set aside time to explore and develop your own talents in a deep and nourishing way, SWEET RELIEF starts Monday, May 15th. If it's alignment with your sweet spot, I hope you will join us!

    Let me know any questions you have about this process in the comments below...and if you're feeling brave, post your Ikigai!

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    Lissa Carter Lissa Carter

    6 Key Practices for Transforming Suffering, #4: Creative Digestion

    Posted by Lissa Carter, LPCA

    We all have that one block, the lie we continue to tell ourselves, the bad habit we can't break, the life lesson that keeps throwing us to our knees.

    Over time, we learn that this block leads to suffering. So we avoid it, we push it down, we deny it, and when it inevitably confronts us, we face it from a place of anger, defeat, and despair.

    Not surprisingly, considering that we are not at our best when we are in anger, defeat, and despair, nothing changes!

    So we suffer. That's bad, right?

    This week’s key takes that assumption and turns it on its head.

    Suffering, despite the pain we feel when we are going through it, is an incredibly potent and powerful fuel. Suffering drives much of our creativity. Necessity is the mother of invention because when something hurts, we are motivated to stop it!

    But we have to consciously choose to engage with our suffering this way, or instead of motivating us, it will paralyze us.

    How do we turn suffering into fuel?

    Think about eating a tremendous feast. The table is groaning under the weight of fresh fruit, an array of roasted vegetables and salads, aromatic breads and sweets. There comes a point, despite all of the delicious offerings, at which you have to stop eating because your stomach is full. There is no more room; to eat more would cause pain rather than pleasure.

    Life works on a similar principle. When we have experienced an overload, even if it is an overload of pleasure, we need time to pause and digest.

    When you have experienced suffering that has overwhelmed your capacity to cope, that’s called trauma. Trauma can keep us in a state of frozenness, an inability to take anything further in—even pleasurable experiences.

    That’s where creative digestion comes in. Creative digestion allows you to metabolize your experience, to work through it. This then creates room for new information and new experience.

    In creative digestion, the focus isn’t on WHAT you create. Some tremendous works of art, music, and poetry have been alchemized through suffering, but that is a byproduct of the process. The focus in creative digestion is owning your suffering and actively working with it.

    This may mean writing everything out and then burning it. It may mean writing a song or a poem about what happened to you, or simply getting up to your elbows in paint or yarn or bread dough, using your emotions as a catalyst to create something that wasn’t there before.

    This can be a terrifying process. Suffering hurts, and for many of us, we cope with that pain by ignoring it or pushing it down. Coming into contact with our experience is the very last thing we feel like doing!

    Or you may not want to address your suffering because to do so would bring the unkind actions of another person into the light. Perhaps you feel that it is dangerous or unfair to make these stories tangible in any way.

    In her book Bird by Bird, Anne Lamott wrote:

    You own everything that happened to you. Tell your stories. If people wanted you to write warmly about them, they should have behaved better.

    Don’t let anything stop you from owning your stories or your suffering. Use your feelings and memories as creative fuel to metabolize all of the thoughts and fears that keep you frozen.

    Create wildly.

    If you do not feel safe enough to engage in creative digestion, please reach out to someone who can help. Whatever you are going through, chances are that someone else has gone through it-- and perhaps they have used their suffering as fuel to create beautiful resources that address the problem!

    Consultation with us, and with many counselors around the world, is always free for the first session, and counselors in your area will know of multiple other resources that can get your journey started. Transformation begins the moment you request help.

    Creativity is your birthright!

    Here are a few suggestions to get you started:

    1)     Settle into a quiet, comfortable position and begin to focus on your breath. Use your attention to scan your body, noticing any areas that feel tense, where you are gripping or experiencing pain. Breathe into this part of your body and simply notice it for a while. Notice any colors, words, images, or thoughts that come up. Notice the temperature, texture, and weight of the sensation in this part of your body. When you have spent several minutes breathing and noticing, take a paper and some colored pencils or oil pastels and begin to draw a portrait of the sensation. This is only for you, so turn off any inclination to judge your work and simply create. Use line, pattern, color, and symbol to get this feeling in your body down on paper. Then look at what you’ve created and simply observe it. What messages does it have for you? What does it tell you about where this feeling comes from?

    2)     First thing in the morning, find a place where you can be completely alone and make it as dark as possible---closing any blinds and doors, perhaps throwing a blanket over any mirrors or reflective surfaces. The object is to feel totally unobserved. Put on a song that has meaning for you, sit on the floor, and close your eyes. As you listen to the music, simply breathe and let your body lead in any movements that it wishes to make. Keep your eyes closed, and allow any thoughts that come up to simply drift through. Let your body lead, and continue to check in with the body to see how it wants to move next. Again, try and refrain from any judging thoughts that might arise. This movement is just for you and is not about technique or attractiveness. It’s about metabolizing your experience in a way that feels good to your body. When the song ends, take a moment in whatever posture you have created and simply breathe, noticing what you are feeling and thinking. Thank yourself for this time before you leave the space.

    Everything that happens to us offers us a choice: where will we go from here? I hope fervently that, wherever you are, whatever your story, you will be able to use your suffering as fuel to create something that is completely yours.

                                                       ~~~

    If you’d like to experience the magic of creative digestion firsthand, I invite you to join Sweet Relief.

    Sweet relief happens the moment you ask for the guidance and support you need to transform your life.

    This group is co-led by an Expressive Arts Therapist and a Pleasure Coach. Expect to be amazed by the power that art, movement, poetry, and pleasure create within you. You will learn new skills in each session, along with home practices to speed up your healing and transformation.  From this place of expansiveness and power, you will meet your blocks head-on. We will be with you every step of the way.

    Together, we will create your plan for the life you want and teach you the skills you need to get there. And we will pamper you like crazy in the process with guest speakers, herbal delicacies, support, art, and laughter.

    For more details or to register, follow the link here:

    As always, I love to hear from you. Feel free to comment below or write to me directly at innerlightasheville@gmail.com.

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    Lissa Carter Lissa Carter

    6 KEY PRACTICES FOR TRANFORMING SUFFERING #3: DEFINING DESIRE

    We think that the point is to pass the test or overcome the problem, but the truth is that things don’t really get solved. They come together and they fall apart. Then they come together again and fall apart again. It’s just like that. The healing comes from letting there be room for all of this to happen: room for grief, for relief, for misery, for joy.
    — Pema Chodron

    When something painful throws us for a loop, there isn't a pause button to hit. Often we are  simultaneously picking up the pieces, healing from the physical and emotional pain, and hustling like crazy to take care of all of our daily responsibilities WHILE WE SUFFER.

    The world does not stop and allow us to heal.

    In these circumstances, we often only see 5 minutes in front of us, because to look any further ahead feels overwhelming. The depression, rage, or grief can feel all-consuming.

    But it is vital--even in these circumstances-- that we find a way to step back from the overwhelming grind and take perspective.

    Why?

    If you do not know where you want to go, there is absolutely zero chance that you will get there.

    Until you know what you want, you can’t take action to get it. That’s why, no matter how exhausted you are, it is vital that you make time to consider exactly what changes you want to make and how life will look on the other side.

    If you want to overcome suffering, it is key that you define your desires.

    I know how hard this first step is, so I'm sharing an audio of a guided visualization I like to do with my clients. This is a very relaxing way to start the process of envisioning what change might look like. 

    I recommend creating a ritual for yourself around this audio. Set up a comfortable place for yourself, perhaps drape yourself with a blanket and light a candle or some incense, and set up a journal and pen so that you can easily write about your experience afterward.  Allow yourself about 10 to 15 minutes for this experience. 

    Once you’ve decided to define your desires, there are so many ways to begin.

    Vision boards are popular, and they are a step in the right direction, but oftentimes a vision board is simply a collection of images and words without any plan mapped out for getting to the places they describe. When you are recovering from trauma or the pain of loss, simply looking at images of where you’d rather be can feel like a slap in the face if you don’t have a plan for getting there.

    I'm going to share two processes I like to use with my clients to help them define their desires.

    If the thought of engaging in either of these practices feels too overwhelming, take a moment to lie back and listen to the guided meditation above. That may be enough for today. Be gentle with yourself.

    DEFINING DESIRES EXERCISE #1: Merlin process

    I call this exercise the Merlin process because legend says that Merlin lived backward through time, which gave him the ability to apply the lessons of his future to his present moment. This exercise achieves a similar result.

     After listening to the guided meditation above, take a few deep breaths and then begin to write. Write IN THE PRESENT TENSE about what your life is like now that you have moved through your suffering and are living the life that you want to live, surrounded by the people you want to spend time with, feeling the way you want to feel, doing the things that nourish and feed you.                                                                                                                      

    Describe what your life looks and feels like---what happens when you wake up in the morning? How do you spend your time? What is your baseline emotion?                                   

     It is key that you write this in the present tense! This allows your brain to believe in the reality of these possibilities NOW rather than projecting them into an always-distant future.

     For example: “This morning I wake up when the first rays of sun hit my face. I feel so grateful and well-rested. It feels so good to wake when my body wants to and not having to set an alarm. I hug my kids and make myself a cup of tea which I drink slowly outside, feeling the sun on my face. Then I have a few hours to write….” And so on.

    Place this writing where you can see it and take a few moments each day to close your eyes and imagine yourself in the reality you described. This reminds your brain what your intentions are and helps you to prioritize the thoughts, emotions, and actions that will take you in the direction of your desires.

    DEFINING DESIRES EXERCISE #2: Finding the Slogs

    If the Merlin process does not come easily to you, or you find yourself muttering a bitter “yeah right” when you review your writing, this is the exercise to start with!

    Break your average day into one-hour increments, starting when you wake and ending when you go to sleep. On each line, write the thing you hate most about that hour and what feeling is associated with it. For example:

    TIME       SLOG                                                                  EMOTION

      5 am                I hate waking up this early.                                                                                        exhaustion

      6 am               I hate fighting with the kids to get up.                                                                       resentment

       7 am               I hate leaving the house right when it is so peaceful.                                               sadness

        8 am              I hate wading through the pile of work emails.                                                         overwhelm

    And so on. Now take the emotions you’ve listed and, on another sheet of paper, write down their opposites. For example, my emotions listed above were:

    Exhaustion, resentment, sadness, overwhelm

    Finding the opposites to some of your emotions may be challenging. Take some time with it. Close your eyes, imagine the negative emotion flooding through your body, and notice what your body feels like when you experience that emotion. Then try to consciously feel the opposite. For example, when I imagine resentment I can feel my jaw clench and my stomach grip; so I try to consciously relax my jaw and breathe into my belly. Then I notice what emotion comes up. Sometimes getting into the body in this way can yield surprising insights.

    So now I have my list of opposite emotions:

    Vitality, gratitude, joy, spaciousness

    Your opposites may be very different than mine, and that’s totally fine. We all experience emotions in slightly different ways.

    Take your list of opposite emotions and think about places in your life where you experience them. For example, there is a moment in my day when I am walking home from work and I pass a mock orange tree that’s in bloom. The scent fills the air and suddenly I remember that I have finished work for the day and I am heading back to people I love. Instantly my heart fills with vitality, gratitude, joy, and spaciousness.

    Find some point in your day when you feel at least one of your positive opposite emotions, and take a little while to examine it. What is it about that moment that gives you the positive feeling? What are the circumstances surrounding it? What scents, sights, textures, sounds, and tastes are involved?

    Now use what you’ve learned to try to extend this moment of positive emotion. In the case of my example above, I might consider bringing a few branches of mock orange in a vase to my workplace and smelling them deeply throughout the day to remind myself of the moment that’s coming in the afternoon.  Or I might take a walk on my lunch break and call up that feeling of freedom and motion that I feel when I am walking toward my home.

    Any opportunity you get, let yourself experience and savor those positive emotions. That’s enough for now. When you’re ready, you can move on to the Merlin Process exercise.


    We don’t have control over our life circumstances, but we do have control over our thoughts and actions.

    When we choose to expand the experiences that feel good to us, we are already overcoming the forces that hold us in suffering.

    Defining your desires has the same effect as when you hear someone mention an obscure artist and suddenly you see her paintings everywhere. Or when you need to buy a used car and suddenly you are noticing cars for sale on every corner.

    This isn’t magic—it’s simply that you’ve gotten your brain onboard.

    You’ve told your brain that this information it’s been filtering out is suddenly relevant, so it begins to notice for you. “Oh, cars are important now? Okay, check.  Look, there’s a car for sale!” When we take the time to define carefully where we want to go, we use this to our advantage. We get our brains onboard.

    Defining your desires programs your destination into your mental GPS. This allows your brain to recognize and act upon any opportunity to take you there.

    If you’d like help overcoming your own suffering, I invite you to join Sweet Relief, a skills group I will be leading with the talented and inspiring pleasure coach Briana Anderson.

    The group starts in May and will be centered on the techniques and processes for overcoming trauma described here. You will get personal attention and help in developing your plan and daily exercises and support to speed up your healing process. You will work with accountability partners to ensure that you are putting all of the information you are learning into practice.

    It will be a chance to participate in a community of transformation as you consciously and powerfully learn these skills and move into the life of freedom and joy that you have envisioned. For more details or to register, follow the link here:

    I am always interested in hearing how these techniques work for you. Please feel free to share any feedback or questions in the comments below!  

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