Sometimes when we have a negative or traumatic experience, we are unable to process it, for one of many reasons. When this happens, the emotions get supressed and therefore trapped in the body. However, the body doesn’t want them trapped and the emotions don’t want to be there, so they lie in waiting for an opportunity to be released. When we then have an experience that triggers similar emotions, these old emotions decide to try their luck at being released. So instead of having a response that’s in proportion to the experience you’ve just had, you have that and also the backlog of emotions from similar experiences and rolled into one. Not a good look, hey?!
How to Notice Opportunities When they Arise
Have you ever considered what the world is like for your family pet? Take your dog for example, whose sense of smell is much more developed than his eyesight. His world is dominated by smell. Can you imagine what that might be like? Or take a bat for instance, who is so close to being blind, it navigates by sound. When people become blind the amount of area of the brain responsible for vision is reduced and other senses take over the same space, changing the way that person interprets the world.
How to Let go of Negative Emotions in 4 simple Steps
The first time I did any therapy training I was 22. I did the course to become a Lifeline Telephone Counsellor. Although most of my learnings from that time are hazy or now unconscious, one has always stuck with me, very brightly. I recall learning that it’s rarely someone’s emotions that cause them the distress, rather, it’s the way they feel about having those emotions. For example, your mother for whom you have cared for, for a number of years through her terminal illness, finally passes. Not only do you feel grief, which is to be expected, you also feel relief. And then you notice that you feel guilty about feeling relieved. It’s not the relief that’s the issue here, until you make it an issue by feeling guilty.
Top 4 Tips for a Successful Long-Term Relationship
This week I celebrated 8 years of marriage. I’m proud of what we’ve achieved and the relationship we’ve created. We’ve faced many challenges (such as 3 kids and 7 moves in 8 years) and undergone quite a bit of stress (such as isolation and not having family nearby for support). We’re both extremely independent and stubborn, which doesn’t always work well for a relationship. I’m certain that without the knowledge I have, and the will to never give up, I wouldn’t feel the security I do about the foundation we’ve created for our future together.
How to prevent being an Empty Nester
In the middle of the night the other night, I woke up to my own existential crisis. My kids are just 3, 5 and 7 and there I was in the wee theta hours, catapulted to the year 2038, waving my baby goodbye as she re-locates to New York or some such place. And I found myself looking at my husband, feeling sorrow for the destruction, the trauma, the abuse, that our once so pure relationship had been victim to. There it lay shrivelled before us, exhausted, having barely survived the raising of three spirited, energetic, independent humans. Having endured so much, I really wondered whether it had anything left. Would it be best to just put it down like an injured dog? Both so drained, so damaged by the deluge, would we have the energy to nurse it back to health, to vitality even?
4 Tips for Managing Family Relationships this Christmas
Christmas is a wonderful time of year! We get to rest guilt-free, eat whatever we want, get new shinny things and spend quality time with our loved ones. Or do we?
For so many of us, Christmas is actually a really stressful time because of the tension within our families. For some it’s directly with family members, or it could be with the in-laws. And for others they’re just the turkey in the Boxing Day sandwich, hoping that their love will be big enough to make those around them just put their issues aside for the day.
So, with the insight drawn from the experiences of many clients, I’ve formulated the following cyclone kit to avoid Christmas dinner exploding like a faulty bon-bon.
The main reason for tension at Christmas can be summarised with one word – Ego.
The main job of the ego is to ensure the survival of your identity as an individual. And the best way the ego knows how to do this is to avoid change. It doesn’t want your ideas, your beliefs, your opinions to change because this threatens its sense of who you are. The ego’s mantra is “better the devil you know”. And what’s the one thing that threatens individuality more than anything? Togetherness and connection. (By the way, the ego is familiar with the connection you have with your immediate family so it can deal with that, just how is a story for another day).
One way in which we have healthy relationships is to relate to one another, to understand and be compassionate, to be open to new ideas. The ego doesn’t like this, so it freaks out. And it’s a cheeky little critter, disguising itself in many different masks.
It could express itself by being an outspoken show-off, the classic loud-mouthed gloat. But then there’s the martyr who refuses to take a compliment and puts everyone else’s needs first. These people play the victim and although they’re putting the focus on others by helping them, they take their power away and are controlling in an unobtrusive almost sneaky way. There’s the anxious or passive aggressive ego who always fears what could go wrong, using it to resist change and just withdrawing from the festivities. Then there’s the intellectual ego who thinks very rationally and can always find a logical reason to resist change. They use their intellect to put the opinions of others down, always taking the higher ground.
So how is it that families are one of the strongest triggers to kick the ego into action? Think about it. Your parents had more influence on you as a child than probably anyone. Despite having grown up and decided who you want to be for yourself, the ego still sees parents as a threat to change or influence. So, it puts its hackles up in order to protect your identity. I mean, we don’t want to become our parents, do we?! So, our ego fights for our individuality.
As for siblings, if we’ve ended up different to them, our competitive habits from childhood kick in and our ego sets about proving we’re the worthiest of praise, or worst still, love.
And when it comes to the in-laws, well they have a chance to influence and change our partner and even our kids, which has the potential to rock the steady familiar connection we have within our immediate family.
So how do we manage our egos? Here’s a few tips and tricks as we move deeper into the silly season:
1. Learn to recognise when the ego is fighting for your identity and the different disguises it wears. When you feel triggered, ask yourself “Is this my ego being resistant to change or do I genuinely need to fight for this?”
2. Choose connection over identity protection (this becomes easier the better you know yourself, your beliefs and values because they can’t be shaken as easily).
3. Have a chat with your ego. Tell it “Thank you for protecting my identity, you’re doing a great job, but right now, I’ve got this” And promptly put it back in its box.
4. Acknowledge that the ego might be at work in some of your family members and forgive them for this, knowing that it’s just because they’re trying desperately to connect with you too.
3 Ways to Make your Child Feel Understood
I’m a mum of three. I can multi-task really well. I can cook dinner, talk on the phone, unpack school bags, follow a three-way-under-6 argument in the next room and drink wine, all at the same time. But just because I know what’s going on doesn’t mean they know I know.
So how do you listen in a way they feel heard?
Mudita: The Buddhist Practice of Sympathetic Joy
I was introduced to a German word “schadenfreude” years ago by Oprah which is the satisfaction you feel when something bad happens to someone. Well, Mudita is the opposite. It’s about delighting in the joy that others feel.
When we practise Mudita regularly it enables us to dissolve our ego, thereby feeling connection to others, a deeper understanding and compassion for others which leads to greater levels of wisdom.
5 Beautiful Ways to Make Your Child Feel Loved
Do any of your children seem to have a more special bond with your spouse or perhaps a grandparent that leaves you wondering what you’re doing wrong? It could be a neighbour or teacher or someone else in your community that your child seems to be particularly fond of. This may be due to the fact that this person, unintentionally, is speaking your child’s love language.
4 Keys to Effective Communication
The majority of relationship breakdowns are the result of ineffective communication. So many relationships could have be saved if the couples prioritised their communication skills. Developing good communication makes people feel understood and respected in their relationship. It enables the couple to find positive solutions to any challenges, without being emotionally triggered.