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@patrickmbali |
By patrick mbali
“Health is not just about what you’re eating. It’s also about
what you’re thinking and saying.”
A virus
is spreading across the globe. Schools are shut down. People are out of work.
Grocery stores are empty.
Weddings,
graduations, vacations, a day in court—canceled.
This is
the ultimate test in emotional resilience.
Uncertainty
is one of the main reasons we stress, along with a lack of control, and right
now we’ve got it in truckloads. I’ve spent the last decade building my mental
and emotional resilience to stress and adversity, and yet fighting off the
anxiety is still a challenge.
I’m
putting all the tools in my toolbox to good use.
And they
are working. So I want to share these tools with you.
1. Talk to someone, but limit the
bitching.
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@patrickmbali |
It can be
cathartic to share with others the fear, panic, and challenges we’re experiencing. It makes us feel not alone.
It validates our feelings and makes us feel connected. So talk to someone about
what is stressing you out right now.
But set a
time limit to focus on the negative. Maybe ten or twenty minutes each to share.
Then it’s time to change the conversation.
Here are
some cues:
·
What is going right?
·
What are you proud of yourself for?
·
What are you grateful for?
·
What are you looking forward to?
·
Despite the hardships, how are you
coping?
·
How can you encourage and praise your
friend?
When we
only focus on the negative, we forget what is going well and then all we can
see is the bad.
I also
find it incredibly helpful to notice how differently my body feels when I’m
complaining, angry, and blaming than it does when I’m grateful and optimistic.
One feels tight, hot, and heavy. The other feels lighter, looser, and freer.
And as I
listen to my husband, mother, or friends share their pain with me, I always
make it a point when they are done to change the conversation and ask them
what’s going good. I can hear the tone in their voice change as they bring
their thoughts to the positive.
2. Be generous.
This
doesn’t need to be a gift of money!
It can be
a roll of toilet paper. It can be an hour Facetiming your grandmother who is
held up in her nursing home with no visitors right now. It can be offering to
pick up and drop off groceries for a neighbor or making them a plate of
enchiladas.
I have a
three-month-old and am blessed with an ample supply of breastmilk, so donating
some of my freezer stash costs me nothing, but can mean so much for a needy
mother and child right now.
Generosity
can even come in the form of well wishes or prayers for others dealing with
difficult times.
Giving is
scientifically proven to be good for your emotional health.
It
activates regions of the brain “associated with pleasure, social connection,
and trust, creating a ‘warm glow’ effect. It releases endorphins in the brain,
producing the positive feeling known as the ‘helper’s
high.’”
Giving
has been linked to the release of oxytocin, a hormone that induces feelings of
warmth, euphoria, and connection to others.
It’s been
shown to decrease stress, which not only feels better, but lowers your blood
pressure and other health problems caused by stress.
What can
you give right now?
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@patrickmbali |
3. Take a mental break.
It’s so
easy to get stuck in mental go-mode all our waking hours. Especially since our brains
crave being busy or entertained.
Even when
we rest, we flip through Facebook, watch TV, or daydream.
These
past few weeks I haven’t been making the time to take my mental breaks. I
usually meditate daily, but with a baby who doesn’t yet have an eating and
sleeping schedule, plus with all the extra stresses right now, I’ve not given
my mind a break!
So I could
feel the anxiety creeping in. It started in the body. I felt the tension in my
muscles. My jaw was tight. Breathing was shallow. And I was irritable!
I know
it’s time for a mental break when something as simple as my husband leaving
another towel on the banister makes me want to file for divorce. (Or end up on
an episode of Dateline!)
So I put
my husband on baby duty, ran on the treadmill trying to focus on my breath and
not my to-do list, took a shower, and brought my attention to the warm water
instead of worry over how I will get clients. Then I meditated for fifteen
minutes zoning in on my breath every time my thoughts turned to worry over
daycare and the coronavirus.
I felt
like I’d washed my brain. The tension was gone, my mind was clear, and I no
longer wanted to strangle my husband.
From our
anxious place, we catastrophize as we spin out in our negativity bias. All we
can see is the negative.
We need
these mental breaks to create space from these ruminating thoughts. We need to
hit the reset button.
A mental break is
taking anywhere from thirty seconds to thirty minutes to consciously turn our
attention inward, away from outside influence, as well as our flow of thoughts.
We can’t
stop the flow of thoughts, but we can notice when they’ve taken our attention,
and purposefully redirect that attention to something in the present moment
like the breath, a mantra or sound, or a visualization.
Here are
a few ways to take that mental break:
·
Breathwork
·
Meditation
·
Time in nature
·
Walking, exercise, or dancing
·
Practicing mindfulness
·
Listening to music
Simple mental break breathing:
·
Start with a re-calibrating big, big
inhale, hold it, and breathe out all the way.
·
Now breathe in slowly to the count of
four, then hold for a second.
·
When
you hold, hear the silence between the breaths.
·
Then breathe out to the count of four
and hold for a second at the bottom.
·
When
you hold, feel your mind clearing as you listen for the space between inhale
and exhale.
·
Repeat until you feel relaxed.
4. Allow all the feels.
This
stress and anxiety feel terrible. And it can be hard to muster up the strength
and will to try out some of the items on this list to make yourself feel
better.
That’s
okay.
But what
tends to happen is we want to run from the discomfort, try to suppress it with
distraction like TV or social media, or numb
it with wine, food, or drugs.
It’s
normal to want to avoid pain. We’re naturally geared to avoid it. However, when
we block this pain from flowing, when we don’t allow ourselves to feel our
emotions, they get stuck.
Emotions
are energy in motion. If you stop they, they just bottle up. They don’t
disappear.
Try this
exercise to allow your emotions to flow:
·
Take a moment to close your eyes and
sit in a quiet space or block out distraction as best you can.
·
Take a deep breath in and slowly
breathe out.
·
Notice the physical feelings of
stress. Where are you holding it in your body? What does it feel like?
·
On your next exhale, release as much
tension as you can.
·
Repeat:
o “I
am allowing these feelings to be present.”
o “I
let these feelings flow through me.”
o “These
feelings are causing me no harm.”
·
Now scan your body starting from your
head, jaw and neck. Shoulders and hips. Down your legs and feet. Release any
tension you find along the way.
Once
you’ve allowed these feelings to exist and flow, the following tool is a
fantastic next step toward emotional health.
5. Express gratitude.
We humans
have a natural negativity bias. It’s a mechanism in place designed with the
intention of keeping us safe.
Being on
the lookout for danger, in theory, might be a better tactic to keep us alive
than ignoring any signs of danger for the sake of focusing on pleasantries.
Like being on alert for a mountain lion instead of enjoying a bed of flowers.
But 99
percent of the time, or more, our lives are not in imminent danger. Yet the
negativity bias remains.
As it
turns out, much like generosity, gratitude is also scientifically proven to be
good for our emotional health.
It’s
shown that people who express gratitude are more optimistic and feel better about their lives.
Surprisingly, they also exercise more and have fewer visits to physicians than
those who focus on sources of aggravation.
In some
studies, it’s also shown people immediately exhibiting a huge increase in
happiness scores, as well as improved relationships.
Here are
some ways to express gratitude:
·
Write a thank-you note or email
·
Thank someone mentally
·
Try a gratitude journal
·
Pray or meditate on something you are
grateful for
6. Ask for help if you need it.
I am so
proud of our communities coming together, staying home, helping each other out.
If there is something you need, there are whole groups of people ready and
willing to help a stranger out. I see it all day on my Facebook feed, people
offering up formula or diapers, services to drop off food, or offering
homeschooling tools and advice.
Thankfully,
this pandemic has come during a time of advanced technological capabilities,
allowing us all to connect digitally.
Doctors,
teachers and coaches are now available online. From the comfort of your
socially distant home, you can find help right at your fingertips.
Ask. It
doesn’t make you look weak. You aren’t impositioning anyone. People inherently
like to be helpful.
Especially
if you need help dealing with the anxiety of our current situation. We don’t
make good decisions coming from a place of fear. Now more than ever it is
essential to have emotional resiliency to get through this tough time and come
out the other end whole and ready to move forward.
We’ll get
through this. Together, even though we’re physically apart. Wishing you much
love, luck, and light on your journey.
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