Structures for Self-Care Success

By Linda Dessau -

So, what is a structure? A structure is something that reminds us of what we want to accomplish – something we want to do (an action), carry out (goals) or become (our life purpose, our future vision of ourselves).

We use structures in three different ways:

As Reminders: Examples include your day planner, notes to yourself on a post-it, a shopping list to carry with you to the grocery store, or leaving something by the door that you want to take out with you.

As Inspiration: Examples include inspirational quotes or pictures, placed in areas that you look at a lot. The pictures might be of something you’d like to attract into your life or may evoke a positive memory. Pictures of your family may remind of what’s truly important. Funny pictures or quotes may make you laugh and approach your day with a lighter heart. If you’re saving money for a vacation you might have a beach scene posted.

For Tracking: Examples include exercise logs, using a pedometer to track (and increase) the amount of “steps” you take in a day. One of my favourite and most useful structures is the food journal – I not only record the food I eat, but also my emotional and mental health, my physical health and exercise and my sleeping habits.

Using structures for reminders, inspiration and tracking can help you to develop healthier habits in your life. Experts agree that it takes 21 days to form a new habit.

Until something becomes a habit, it’s necessary to create a structure or routine around it.

For example, you’d like to create the new habit of drinking 8 glasses of water a day – recommended for a variety of health benefits as well as the prevention of disabling conditions. What are some structures you might use?

Reminders:

1. Carry water with you – have a travel mug, bottle or glass next to you whenever you are sitting for long periods of time (including the car).

2. Post a note where you sit most often during the day, reminding you to drink water.

Inspiration:

1. Think of what you are trying to accomplish most with your water intake – healthy skin, overall health, weight loss – and try to find a picture that embodies those benefits. Post it or carry it with you.

2. Create a list of all of the benefits and post that or carry it with you.

Tracking:

1. Pre-measured bottles – purchase several bottles of water (which you can then refill with tap or filtered water – be sure to wash them out with soapy water in between). Use these to track how much water you are drinking during the day. Pour from the bottle into a glass or drink right from the bottle. At the end of the day, aim to finish 2 litres of water.

2. Water log sheet – List every day of the week and use checkmarks to mark when you have finished a glass of water. You can look at this as you progress and notice when your water intake is increasing. You can also notice the days you’re drinking less and you can do a little detective work – maybe it’s always the days when you have night school or maybe it’s the days you do errands at lunch time – and come up with strategies for that particular situation.

Part of what I do as a self-care coach is to brainstorm with my clients about different structures that may work for them. The best thing about structures is that you get to try them out; if they don’t work there’s always something else. So if you “fail” at creating a new habit, it’s a great learning to point you in the direction of another structure that will work better for you.

Instead of blaming yourself or using it as an excuse to stray further from your goals, remind yourself of why you want to make the change in the first place and get back to the drawing board!

TIPS FOR CREATING EFFECTIVE STRUCTURES

1. Brainstorm with someone else. The things we think of ourselves sometimes aren’t radical enough to jolt us into a new routine. The bigger the change you are trying to make the more noticeable the structure needs to be.

2. Try and use more than one of your senses. Find a structure you can hold in your hand or wear as clothing or accessories. Find something that captures your attention. Use a song – remember Ally McBeal and her personal “theme song”?

3. Play with different structures until you find the right one. Maybe something worked for a few days and then stopped. Think about what worked and use that to create your next effort.

4. People can be a structure. Being accountable to your coach, spouse, friend, colleague, children or other family members can be very motivating!

5. What has motivated you in the past? Don’t re-invent the wheel, use past experiences to help you now.

(c) Copyright 2005, Genuine Coaching Services.

Linda Dessau, the Self-Care Coach, is the author of “The Everyday Self-Care Workbook”. To receive one of her free monthly newsletters, subscribe at http://www.genuinecoaching.com/newsletter.html

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Self Pity

By Helen R Williams -

To experience self pity is to feel sorry for yourself. Self pity tends to be stultifying and inactive and can be likened to being caught in quicksand, slowly wallowing, then drowning in a morass of shame, self doubt and negative self talk.

It is a very powerful emotion. Yet, when we are feeling self pity, we rarely express it to others as, I am feeling sorry for myself. It is most frequently observed in people with low self esteem.

Instead, we tell the story of the situation that has happened to us, and which provokes the feeling, and our over-riding self pity encourages the listener to collude, or join together, with us.

Collusion in self pity is like forming a conspiracy together. The self pity needs to be fed in order to exist, so it requires complicity and agreement, both from within us and from others in order to stay alive. This in turn, fuels our sense of pity for ourselves, keeping us trapped.

Here is a little story which ably demonstrates this principle.

An old American Indian Grandfather was teaching his grandson about life.

“Inside each one of us there are two wolves constantly fighting”, he said.

“One of the wolves is positive and is filled with peace, calm, love and kindness. The other wolf is negative and filled with fear, anxiety, self pity and self doubt”.

“Grandfather”, said the boy. “If the wolves are always fighting, which one will win?”

“The one you feed the most”, said the Grandfather.

How can we choose to walk down a different path?

How do we choose not to feed the negative, all devouring wolf within us?

As the old saying goes, “Misery loves Company“.

As this powerful feeling evokes a reciprocal response from others, then treading the pity path can become a powerful habit. As with all habits, if it is indulged and well fed it can become tenacious and prevent us from choosing a better pathway.

Choice is a gateway which opens many possibilities for action.

Unfortunately when we go through the gateway and tread our way down the path to self pity, we prevent ourselves from seeing the other gate which leads to the pathway marked positive action, understanding and contentment.

Sometimes the habit of self pity becomes deeply entrenched and we fail to recognise that we have fallen into the pit of feeling sorry for ourselves.

However, once we recognise that we have this tendency to deal with situations in this way, we can often detect when we are swimming in the pity pool and haul ourselves painfully out of it, after swimming for a while.

An effective tool is to write it all down, under the heading, I Feel Sorry for Myself Because…..

Put the list aside overnight and read it out to yourself the next day. Often you can see more clearly that some of these ideas can be dealt with through action, or through grief, some through talking them out, some can just be crossed off the list, while others incur horrible embarrassment.

Have Courage and Be an Enabler

It can be very powerful to help someone to see that self pity is the name for the feelings they are having.

Trying to talk to someone who is drowning in self pity about positive opportunities can be like waving a flag from the beach to help a drowning man instead of swimming out with a lifeline.

My experience has been that to offer the lifeline to someone, in the form of actually naming the feeling or experience as self pity, can raise huge amounts of anger initially.

It takes courage and a certain amount of love and concern for the person. Often we come away from being with someone who is fully engaged in self pity, with a sense of unease and shame.

We recognise this because we know we would rather avoid them, than collude with them again. It doesn’t make us feel good about ourselves either.

However, the sheer truth of it is often received later as a positive experience.

Help your child to avoid walking the pathway to self pity.

* Don’t model this behaviour yourself.

* Discourage sulking.

* Enable your child to name his feelings.

* Provide opportunities for quiet, gentle, safe discussion.

* Build up your child emotionally.

The difference between self pity and grief and sorrow

There is a need to differentiate between self pity and hurt and emotional pain.

There are many times when the appropriate response to a situation is sadness, grief and sorrow.

This is more easily recognised as we usually express this to others using language such as, I feel as though my heart is breaking, or I never imagined I could feel this much sadness.

Active listening allows us to hear the pain within this and also allows for the expression of it. Grief dissipates over time as one grieves and allows the grief.

It is important in our care for others as well as ourselves that we understand, recognise and know the difference between self pity and grief.

Helen Williams
Editor Consistent Parenting Advice.com
http://www.consistent-parenting-advice.com/index.html

I believe that being a consistent parent is both vitally important and totally necessary to ensure a happy family life. However, becoming a consistent parent is rather like trying to push water uphill if we are not consistent within our selves. This website addresses HOW to adopt a firm, clear, consistent parenting approach, while enabling you to enhance and increase your emotional well-being.

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Choose Superior Thoughts – Consciously

beliefslrgBy Dorothy M. Neddermeyer, PhD -

Every thought habit that you use in life has been conditioned and indoctrinated, giving them strong power. You can crowd out inferior thoughts with superior thoughts.

Superior/positive thinking has a higher frequency in them. You can feel it in your body. You will feel more expansive. When you are having a positive/superior thought, you will feel your shoulders relax. You will feel your forehead relax. You will feel your muscles relax as you lean into and open up to your connection with your Truth.

Words connoting lack or scarcity or criticism and condemnation can be crowded out by focusing on superior positive words. As you train yourself to mentally look for the superior/positive, and appreciate it, you will see and experience more of it in your life.

The power to choose your thoughts is up to you. You are in charge of the words that come into your mind. If your mind is on auto-pilot, you need to tune in to your thoughts to know what words are inferior/negative or superior/positive.

The following steps will help you change inferior/negative thoughts.

• Decide what thought you want to change. For one week listen to your thoughts and chart how often and when you use the thought.

• Decide what thought you want to use instead. For one week listen to your thoughts – each time you hear yourself use the ‘inferior/negative’ thought, change it in mid-thought or mid-sentence with the positive/superior thought.

• It takes 30 – 45 days to move the old thought out and anchor the new thought as a habit.

Engaging with a hypnosis practitioner is a highly effective tool to change thoughts with one to three sessions.

Dorothy M. Neddermeyer, PhD, Metaphysician – Certified Hypnosis Practitioner, Author and Speaker. Dr. Dorothy facilitates clearing blocks, fears and limiting beliefs. You can live the life you desire. She brings awareness to concepts not typically obvious to one’s thoughts and feelings. http://www.gen-assist.com

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Focus on Joy to Manifest Happiness

blue-butterflyBy Ali Bierman –

Whatever you focus on expands. To feel joy think thoughts that let you feel joyful. Simple, yes? Ah, here comes the challenge-you cannot think joyous thoughts now and then during the day. You must think joyous thoughts most of the day to live in a joyful state.

You want to continue this new behavior until you establish the habit of feeling joyful. Yes, living in joy is a habit you can create. What is so good about habits? You do them without thinking. They become automatic–operating out of your awareness.

Think about learning to drive a car. You had to learn how to start the car, shift gears, use the brake and accelerator, etc. You focused your mind continually, monitoring every aspect of making that car move and stop safely. You paid attention at 100%–no cell phone conversation, etc.

In time your driving became automatic. Now you just get in, start the motor and off you go. You can talk with others (cell phones still pose safety questions for drivers) and eat and still drive safely, right?

The same holds true for creating a new behavior. First you repeat it over and over until it becomes a habit.

The more you think and therefore feel joy in your life, the easier it becomes to stay in those thoughts and produce that kind of energy. Your emotions and muscles wire together. In fact, neural networks form “tying” together joyful feelings with joyful thoughts. Your physical body will also assume certain postures that get wired into those Joy Networks.

Every time you think, feel or perform an action that triggers part of that network, guess what-the entire Joy Network kicks into action! Soon (for most people that period is about 28 days) joyful thinking replaces your old habits that left you feeling crummy at worst and ho hum at best.

Twenty-eight days. Hmm. is your well being worth making a concentrated effort for twenty-eight days? You see, you will not have to wait twenty-eight days for your world to look different or for good things to happen regularly. In fact, that shift will happen the very first day you apply attention to how you feel and shift into joy whenever you slip away from it.

Ali Bierman is an expert at showing people how to get unstuck. Want to learn more about what keeps you from being happier? Download her free ebook NOW at: http://www.creatingthelife.com/ebook2.html

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