A Window is Where the Wall is Absent
The life impulse to express and to connect arises in me and in all of us. This blog is a celebration of these life impulses. Please feel free to join in the conversation or to just visit. There is a Family Photo Album beneath the posts so you can "meet" my family and I. Welcome!
Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thinking. Show all posts
Monday, July 5, 2010
Feeling feelings
Both personally and in my work in mental health, I have come to see that the value of feeling our feelings (rather than avoiding or indulging them) cannot be overstated. The "emotion phobic" tendency that seems to be inbuilt in us drives all kinds of addiction, over-consumption, violence, etc. Therefore I love this video (which applies equally to men and women) that invites us to experience our feelings nonverbally. Thinking about feelings is the opposite of feeling them; thinking is a defense and barrier against unpleasant feelings, it is a distancing mechanism which walls us off from our own life energy. When we block out the "bad" stuff (unpleasant feelings), the "good" stuff is equally blocked out. A kinked hose blocks the flow of any fluid equally.
The body and psyche are overstuffed suitcases full of repressed emotional material. I feel this is true to some extent for every human being. How do we "unpack" the suitcase of stuffed feelings? We don't. It unpacks itself. Whatever feelings are present in this moment are all that need to be met. We don't have to worry about whatever accumulation of grief and fear is lodged in the tissues, it will surface of its own accord at exactly the right time and pace. This makes it simple: we need only meet what is here now with openness and silence. I find that the "taste" of even unpleasant feelings can be surprisingly enjoyable when they are experienced on an energetic level without labels or judgments.
Flooding feelings with the energy of consciousness is inherently beneficial.
This is very different than ruminating over feelings or trying to work out a bad mood with the thinking process- this usually backfires and embeds the feelings somewhere in the "suitcase" of body and psyche.
Thought is used as a kind of protective shield to fend off unwanted feelings through analysis, rationalization, explanation, blame, guilt, etc. In whatever way the mind can label, package, shelve, project or otherwise "get rid" of unpleasant feelings, it will do so. This is how we get tied up in knots and drive the brain-engine to an ever increasing and chaotic velocity.
From an evolutionary, biological perspective, the capacity of thought to fend off unwanted feelings through judgment, analysis, repression, etc., may have been useful. But this once helpful survival mechanism has "gone overboard" and hypertrophied to the point where thinking has become a mental disease. We don't need to "throw out the baby with the bathwater"- thinking can still be beautiful and beneficial- but when thinking is used to alienate us from our feelings, it is harmful rather than helpful. The mind and thought processes have swollen to such an extent that they cause much personal and planetary suffering.
Enjoy this wonderful video that invites us to enter the energy of present feelings.
~
Gratitude to Chameli Ardagh. You can read about Chameli in the outstanding book Ordinary Women, Extraordinary Wisdom, by Rita Marie Robinson.
Labels:
blame,
Chameli Ardagh,
feelings,
guilt,
planet,
projection,
repression,
suffering,
thinking
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Labels
'Sailor' Bob Adamson
(2)
"character"
(1)
"me"
(1)
A.H. Almass
(1)
abandonment
(1)
abundance
(1)
addictions
(1)
Adyashanti
(1)
Ajahn Sumedho
(1)
Alan Watts
(2)
Albert Einstein
(1)
alchemy
(1)
alienation
(3)
alignment
(2)
aliveness
(1)
allowing
(1)
anatta
(1)
anger
(1)
Annette Nibley
(1)
Anthony de Mello
(1)
anxiety
(1)
apathy
(1)
apology
(1)
arguing
(1)
argument
(1)
Aristotle
(1)
Arjun Ardagh
(1)
Ashtavakra Gita
(1)
attention
(4)
Authentic Heart
(1)
authenticity
(1)
Awakening Joy
(1)
awareness
(13)
awareness aware of itself
(1)
Babies- the film
(1)
Background Field
(1)
being
(14)
belief
(1)
belonging
(1)
blame
(1)
blogosphere
(2)
boredom
(1)
breathing
(3)
Buddha
(2)
Buddhism
(1)
burdens
(1)
busy day
(1)
Byron Katie
(1)
Challenge Day for Teens
(1)
Chameli Ardagh
(2)
Chinese proverb
(1)
clarity
(1)
clutter
(1)
complaining
(2)
conflict
(2)
confusion
(2)
consciousness
(4)
consent
(1)
control
(1)
criticism
(1)
cup
(1)
current
(1)
Cynthia Bourgeault
(1)
David Carse
(1)
David Foster Wallace
(1)
David Lipsky
(1)
David Loy
(1)
death
(3)
deeper self
(1)
depression
(1)
discontent
(1)
documentary
(1)
doer
(1)
Dr. Patricia Gerbarg
(1)
Dr. Richard Brown
(1)
Dr. Vijai Shankar
(1)
drama
(1)
dream
(1)
e.e. cummings
(1)
ease
(1)
Echart Tolle
(1)
Eckhart Tolle
(22)
effortless
(1)
effortlessness
(2)
ego
(8)
emotions
(1)
emptiness
(3)
energy
(1)
equanimity
(1)
essence
(1)
eternity
(1)
Everyday Enlightenment by Sally Bongers
(1)
experiments
(1)
expression
(1)
Facebook
(1)
family
(1)
fear
(3)
feelings
(6)
female rapture
(1)
fire
(1)
form
(1)
Franklin Merrell-Wolff
(1)
freedom
(3)
Gabriel Rosenstock
(1)
good
(1)
gratitude
(1)
guilt
(2)
happiness
(3)
harmony
(1)
heart
(1)
Heart Sutra
(1)
hero
(1)
home
(1)
honesty
(2)
Huang Po
(1)
Hubert Benoit
(1)
Huffington Post
(1)
I am
(1)
identity
(1)
impermanence
(1)
inauthenticity
(1)
insanity
(1)
insignificance
(1)
integrity
(1)
internet
(1)
Jack Kornfield
(1)
Jack Loehr
(1)
James Baraz
(1)
Jan Frazier
(3)
Jane Hooper
(1)
Jean Klein
(1)
Jeff Foster
(2)
John Wheeler
(2)
Joseph Campbell
(1)
joy
(2)
judging
(1)
Karate Kid movie
(1)
kindness
(1)
koans
(1)
liberation
(1)
life
(10)
life flow
(1)
life situation
(1)
light
(2)
looking
(1)
love
(2)
lush & buggy
(1)
m.loehr
(1)
Magritte
(1)
Marcel Proust
(1)
Mark Matousek
(1)
marriage
(1)
Mary Loehr
(2)
Mary Oliver
(3)
meaning
(2)
meditation
(2)
Mick Jagger
(1)
mind
(9)
mirror
(1)
moods
(1)
Mooji
(1)
motivation
(1)
Mukti
(1)
music
(3)
my son Christopher
(2)
naming
(1)
Naomi Shihab Nye
(1)
narcissism
(1)
Nathan Gill
(1)
nature
(1)
Never Not Here
(1)
New York Times article
(1)
Nisargadatta
(3)
no-thing
(1)
no-thought
(1)
not knowing
(1)
noticing
(2)
obesity
(1)
oneness
(1)
openness
(1)
pain
(4)
paradox
(2)
paranoia
(1)
Paul Hedderman
(1)
Pavel Somov
(1)
peace
(2)
Pema Chodron
(1)
planet
(1)
play
(1)
poem
(1)
poetry
(3)
pointers
(1)
power
(1)
presence
(4)
present moment
(1)
pretending
(1)
problems
(4)
procrastination
(1)
projection
(1)
psychiatry
(2)
qigong
(1)
Queer Cabin
(3)
quietness
(1)
quotes
(1)
R.S. Thomas
(1)
Ralph Waldo Emerson
(3)
Ramana Maharshi
(2)
Raphael Stoneman
(1)
reading
(1)
reality
(5)
red & purple
(1)
relationships
(1)
relaxation
(1)
release
(1)
repression
(1)
resistance
(1)
respect
(1)
rest
(1)
ripples on the surface of Being
(1)
Robert Adams
(1)
rocks
(1)
Rodney Stevens
(1)
Roger Housden
(2)
Rumi
(1)
sadness
(1)
Sailor Bob Adamson
(1)
samsara
(1)
Sara Exley
(1)
Scott Kiloby
(1)
searching
(1)
seeing
(1)
seeking
(2)
self
(2)
self-compassion
(1)
self-indulgence
(1)
separation
(2)
Sharon Ebert
(1)
silence
(3)
song
(1)
sound
(1)
Source
(2)
space
(1)
specialness
(1)
spirituality
(1)
Stephan Bodian
(1)
Steve Carrell
(1)
story
(4)
straw-into-gold
(1)
Stuart Schwartz
(3)
suchness
(1)
suffering
(7)
suicide
(1)
surrender
(1)
Tao Te Ching
(1)
the two dimensions
(1)
Thich Nhat Hanh
(1)
thinking
(1)
Thomas Keating
(1)
Thomas Merton
(1)
thought
(5)
Tim Freke
(1)
time
(1)
Tony Parsons
(1)
transformation
(2)
trees
(2)
true nature
(5)
true self
(1)
Trungpa Rinpoche
(1)
trust
(1)
truth
(1)
trying
(1)
unconsciousness
(1)
Unmani
(1)
Vicki Woodyard
(1)
wealth
(1)
Weird Al Yankovic
(1)
well that never runs dry
(1)
well-being
(1)
William Blake
(1)
Wizard of Oz
(1)
work
(1)
writing
(1)
You Tube
(1)
Followers
Translate blog posts
About Me
My Kids

Mary (14), Chris (15), Jack (9)
Chris

Mary

Jack
