Showing posts with label meaning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meaning. Show all posts

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Principles of Resilience

My daughter said to me the other day "Mom, how many therapists does it take to change a light bulb?"  I smiled and said "how many?"  She responded "one, but the light bulb has to really want to change."
My chosen profession is therapy.  I am a therapist.  I specialize in working with addictions...specifically with sex addiction.  On a daily basis, I hear stories of pain, agony and loss.  My job is to help individuals transform their pain, agony and loss into something meaningful.  This is the essence of resiliency.
A couple of years ago I decided to become certified as a sex addiction therapist (CSAT).  It took me a year to complete this certification and was one of the best decisions I have made in my career thus far. Becoming a CSAT changed me as a person and therefore as a therapist.  I trained under Dr. Patrick Carnes, who is a pioneer in the field of sexual addiction recovery, as well as other remarkable professionals who I feel blessed to count as colleagues.  There are so many things I learned in my year of certification.  One that I want to focus on today are the principles of resilience.
Our society often teaches that when bad things happen it's best to grit your teeth and push through.  Some might add just don't talk about it or don't think about it.  It turns out, however, it doesn't work like that.  And there is much more to recovery and resilience than just getting through.  When something bad happens, people fall apart.  Not just weak people, but strong people too.  Our initial response is to despair.  That despair can lead us into addictions or numbing behaviors as a means of escape.  It can lead us to denial as a way to protect ourselves from seeing the pain of reality.  (There's a reason it's called the "sweet voice of denial").  Or after our initial despair, we can pick ourselves up off the floor and start down the road of resiliency.
The first principle of resilience is Acceptance.  Putting off dealing with adversity and sorrow actually delays healing and recovery.  M. Scott Peck made an interesting statement, he said "mental health is the pursuit of reality at all costs." Sometimes the most difficult thing to do is to acknowledge what is real.  However, when we acknowledge reality, only then are we able to do something about it.
The second principle is Predictability. There is a large body of research stating that adverse stress is less likely when a challenging event is predictable.  Life is hard....and that is predictable.  We will always have stressors and challenges.  One of the things that I learned from Dr. Carnes is that recovery or resilience is much like training for athletes.  Olympic competitors or professional athletes know that to succeed, they will experience great stress.  Therefore, what they do is train for it.  They work every day to prepare for the stressful event, be it a game or tournament.  Each day, they build their strength, push themselves to improve their skills and practice strategies for winning.  Athletes also "cross train" so that the demands on one muscle set doesn't become too much.  They also find regular patterns of rest.  They take care of themselves. Training every day for the stressors or challenges that will come to us helps us cultivate resilience.
The third principle of resilience is Controllability.  Nobody can control every aspect of a challenging event.  However, we also know that having a sense of control generally leads to more positive results.  This is where knowing and respecting what our limits are as well as knowing what choices we do have becomes important.  The serenity prayer that is recited so often in recovery God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, The courage to change the things I can, And wisdom to know the difference helps us in our ability to adapt and be resilient. When we recognize what it is that we can change and act on a plan the result is a life of our own creating.   Otherwise, our life would be based on the expectations of others or the result of a life lived with blinders on. Integrity often comes down to taking responsibility for what we can do and having an awareness of our impact on others.
The fourth principle of resilience is Trust. Trust plays a critical role in withstanding adversity.  Trust provides a positive expectation from the people, systems or organizations in which we interact with and includes integrity, dependability, responsibility and competency. Trust is built through experience and includes certain expectations like families will be faithful, the parachute will open, I will make it through etc. Trust also includes allowing others to meet our needs and accepting more than what is needed in order to build reserves.
The fifth principle of resilience is Relationship. Relationships are critical for cultivating resilience.  With strong, healthy relationships individuals and groups can thrive despite profound challenges.  I have three daughters that play on competitive soccer teams.  The coach of my 15yo has worked for years on teaching them to play as a team.  He has talked to them over and over about the importance of talking to each other while they are out on the field and of letting the team member with the ball know what it is that they see.  The team member with the ball is focused on the task at hand and therefore may not see the larger picture of what is happening on the field.  If nobody on the team tells her "man on" or "you've got time" he would often ask the team "Why don't you like her?  Why aren't you helping her? Why are you expecting her to do this on her own?"  Resilient people surround themselves with people who believe in them.  They also surround themselves with people who are often more competent than they are and they give those individuals credit for their accomplishments.  This allows for growth and creates an atmosphere where success is encouraged and supported.
The last principle of resilience is Meaning.  People fare better when they know why they are doing what they are doing. The ability to take anything and pull purpose, meaning and growth from it is a critical skill in resilience.  There is a saying in the big book from 12 steps that says "nothing is wasted". I love this concept. I love the idea that whatever I go through, whatever comes my way, whatever amount of time is spent on the journey through, it need not be wasted.  If it adds to my life experience, if I learn  a lesson from it, if I grow stronger as a result, if I am wiser moving forward, if I become softer and more compassionate then it holds valuable meaning for me.  In this way, every challenge encountered holds untold potential and that is exciting!

Journey On!

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Creating a Meaningful Life

If you haven't noticed lately, the world we live in is draining!  We rush through our days with barely a moment of sanity.  In a conversation I had with a colleague the other day, I found myself saying--"just send a text...it's so much quicker than email."  As I walked away from this conversation I thought about what I'd said and thought "really?  When did our world become so fast paced that email is now too slow?"
Even if you hate the pace of the world, you get caught up in it.  You feel like you're not doing enough unless every moment is filled with activity.  And not just one activity, we multitask!  We read email while on the phone or in meetings.  We make lists while sitting in class.  We text and talk on the phone while driving (even though we know we shouldn't).  We think of what we still need to do while talking to others.  We wear our busyness like a badge of honor and good manners have gone out the window!
The effect of all of this is draining...body, soul and spirit. And when we are drained we are vulnerable!  Vulnerable first to temptation.  Isn't it somewhere in the mid-afternoon slump when you most easily turn to crud you normally don't eat?  For me, it's when I'm fried at the end of a frantic day when I loose my patience with my kids and snap at my spouse.  I find that when my soul is empty, I'm open to any kind of relief.  And that is always the moment my "gremlins" step forward offering momentary comfort.  I don't give way to despair when I'm having an awesome day, I fold when I'm at my ropes end.  I don't drop my guard right after a wonderful time of worship and meditation; I drop my guard when I am just too tired to care.  It is when I am drained that I get overwhelmed, worn down and turn on myself and others or simply retreat. 
But I don't want to live with life ahead of me and me just running to catch up.  I don't want to give my soul over to busyness.  I don't want to fold under discouragement or any other lie I fall prey to.  So how do we get out in front of our lives?  How do we mindfully create a life of meaning?  Here are some things I've been doing that I find make a difference.
1.  Get some measure of silence and solitude every day.  Even just 15 minutes makes a difference.  For me, this requires stopping and paying attention. 
2.  Take in truth.  We live in a world where things are not always as they seem.  It is refreshing to my soul and my spirit to hear and recognize truth.  Notice I didn't say this is easy.  It isn't always easy, but it is replenishing.
3.  Connecting with God/Higher Power.  Pray, meditate, talk out loud....whatever works for you.  Simply get connected with God asking to be filled with His love and strength throughout the day.
4.   Decrease the constant stimulus of media.  Whether that's driving without the radio or anything on, turning off email notifications, silencing the cell phone and not answering every text or call at the time it comes. 
5.  Look for God's love or His hand in my life everyday.  I don't believe in coincidence or luck.  I believe it's God's love.  God made the world for the delight of us--His children.  Take the time to see His goodness everywhere, His concern for us, His awareness of our needs.  As we open and connect with the world around us, we are also able to connect to a larger life purpose...one in which we have a role.  We may not understand that role, but we can begin to live it.  We begin to trust that good things will come to us as part of our relationship with a Higher Power and with others who have earned that place in our lives, and that trust brings comfort. 
6. Choose love.  One of the most spiritual things we can do is embrace our humanity--our struggles and imperfections--and allow others to do the same. 
7.  Find something to smile about, laugh about or be grateful for everyday.  As E.E. Cummings said:  The most wasted of all days is one without laughter.  There are plenty of things to be serious about, sad about, stressed about.  We need to make sure to make room for smiling, laughing and gratitude.
8.  Drink in beauty in some form everyday.  Get open to the beauty in the world around you, the sounds, the sights, the smells....the beauty.  When I do this, I'm not focused on the past or the future.  I'm not focused on work.  Anxiety begins to drop away.  I see and touch and smell and hear creation.  I might notice the light coming through the trees.  I might notice the breeze on my skin.  I might notice the sound of birds or the touch of human skin.  I might notice the smell of fresh cut grass.  I notice colors, the textures.  Take them in!  Allow them to penetrate to your soul. 
9.  Connect with people that are important.  Say I love you, I'm sorry, I'm proud of you, you're important to me, I appreciate you.  Whatever it is that you're feeling....embrace your truth and speak it!  Share it!
10.  Live in the now, the present, the moment.  Sometimes we get hung up on nostalgia.  We talk about the "good ole days".  We think that yesterday was better than today.  I don't think it was.  I would advise, from my own personal experience, not to wait 10 years before admitting today is great! 

Remember at the end of the day, it's all about love.  Hang in there.  Spread love!