YOU CAN’T FOOL YOUR BODY.
We all do it.
I’m a coach who teaches people about mindfulness every day and I still need to catch myself – stop myself from tamping down stress in an effort to sally-forth and keep on going.
I used to describe myself as a head who dragged her body along for the ride. I lived in that head for years along with a million swirling thoughts and the emotional chaos that they created.
It takes a lot to rattle me now, and the emotional upheaval – when it does come – never lasts as long or feels as intense as it did back then.
In fact, I’ve become pretty damn Zen over the years.
For this, I thank my body.
Now I know that my body is the key to my mind. It tells me when I’m ignoring something and then it helps me set things right.
If you’re anything like I was, you muscle through a lot. Keep smiling and keep going is the way I’d lived for most of my life.
I thought it was working.
It wasn’t – I was in a constant state of underlying stress and, for years, it held me back.
Here’s what I know now.
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Stress (and feeling it) is 100% normal.
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Staying in a state of stress (especially if you’re ignoring it) effects your health, your relationships, and your ability to get what you really want.
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It’s easy to shift out of stress.
The first thing you need to do is to notice when your body is in a state of stress. If you’ve been living this way for awhile, you’re probably so used to it that it may be difficult at first.
This Week: NOTICE and
b r e a t h e
NOTICE
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Do a quick body scan. Where in your body are you experiencing strain, tightness or tension?
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While you are breathing normally, notice where the air goes.
The answers to these two questions will be your tells.
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Strain, tightness or tension is a cue that you’re holding more stress than you may be aware of.
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Breath that stops at the throat or the top of the lungs is a cue that you’re holding more stress than you may be aware of.
b r e a t h e
When you notice any of your somatic cues for stress:
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Take a 3-6 second INHALE followed by a 4-8 second EXHALE. Repeat until you’re drawing air all the way into your belly.
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If you’re still feeling tightness and strain, continue and this time imagine your muscles softening and melting into place on each exhale.
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If you’re still feeling stressed or if you’re feeling overtly anxious, try a few rounds of BOX breathing (Inhale to a count of 4 – hold for 4 – exhale for a count of 4 – hold for 4 – repeat)
I love this! 🙂