Hello everyone, after completing the loving-kindness
exercise, I felt happy, almost like I had done a good thing, even though I wasn’t
actually helping anyone achieve health, happiness, and wholeness. It seemed
kind of cheesy to me after I thought about it, and I felt kind of silly, but
even then I was in a better mood than before. I think it was just a really
positive exercise and therefore made my attitude positive. Really, I feel like
when you do anything that is selfless or for the sake of someone else’s welfare,
you’re most likely going to feel good afterwards. When I did the self-assessment
I wasn’t sure what aspect of my life needed more healing than the others. I
wasn’t sure which aspect was the source of my suffering or difficulty. I had to
think about this for a while, I decided that I’m not really suffering anymore
and I am more in a healing stage, and have been for over a month now. Also, I
have been working on all the aspects of my life because I felt like they all
needed some work. The second part of the assessment was to decide what the
development or healing would entail or look like. I’ve been doing lots of
things to heal, mostly biological healing. My diet has changed considerably and
I can tell I have improved, I went back to the gym and that made me feel so
much better as well. I’ve also been very true to who I am in a positive way,
which I believe has more to do with the interpersonal/worldly/psychospiritual aspects
of my life. Pretending to be something that I am not is an awful idea and I think
it can really cut a person down. An exercise that I have done this past month
was not one that had been given during the course. When I have been in social
situations and someone says something to me, I take my time to answer; first of
all I think this in itself is true to who I am because I know I am not quick
witted and I know I am eager to please others, so taking time to reflect on
what someone has said and how it makes me feel is important part of responding
properly. Second of all it gives me time to remember to be true to who I am and
actually say how I really feel instead of how I think the other person wants me
to feel. For instance the other day at work a guy started talking about our
boss behind his back and began to say negative things about him. I reflected on
how it made me feel internally and I could feel myself slipping into a verbal
head lock. I very nicely said to the guy that I thought our boss was a very
caring boss who actually takes into consideration the troubles of his employees
and that I was thankful I had a boss like that rather than one who doesn’t care
about anything but money, and I even gave examples of how our boss had cared
for his employees. Afterwards I felt like I had finally done the right thing,
said the right thing, and had been honest about how I felt for once. It broke
down a kind of wall for me and I felt like I could more easily do it again.
Don't feel silly! As long as it made you happy, that's all that matters. Sometimes the smallest things make me giddy and happy and then I think about it and start to laugh because its the simple things that really get us through each day.
ReplyDeleteI think you have a very good approach to dealing with your issues. I also am working on my nutrition and fitness. I think they help us to feel right both mentally and physically and also improve our mental health. I like that you are choosing to take the time to think before you speak. I think its a very wise course of action and I wish more people would try it. I think a lot of people speak before they think at all. Always think before you act. I used to be a very negative person when I was younger and I was always unhappy because of it. I'm actually shocked by how easy life seems to me right now. Despite the fact that I have more than my share of responsibilities right now. This class taught me a different way of thinking and I've stopped feeling like I'm drowning, now I'm just dealing. It's a good feeling.
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