As I have shared before in this blog, a person's general mental health and well being is best measured by his (or her) ability to live in the present. It sounds easy enough, but when you think about it, it's not so easy to do when our past---or the future---keeps holding us captive.
"Jane" (not her real name) was a victim of both infidelity and homicide. She had no idea that her husband was having an affair with one of his employees. With several children and another on the way, Jane found out from the police that her husband was cheating. This is because Jane's husbad was shot dead in a local area parking lot by his lover's jealous husband. From that moment on, Jane became stuck in the horror, terror, and confusion of "What's going to happen to me and my children!?"
"Phil" loved to play baseball. Phil's parents loved the idea of Phil having a career in baseball. Phil's paternal grandfather was a Houston Astros pitcher back in the late 60s and early 70s. Phil's father had often recalled all the "perks" that accompanied his own father's career on and off the field. The parties...the adoring fans...and the star treatment; Phil was a natural-born successor to his granddad's throne. Even today, all these years later, Phil will often daydream at his desk about the career that could have been. It never happened for Phil, but with his young wife now pregnant...who knows?
"Sandra" was just about to graduate from college and found herself in a major twist about the future. "I want to get out of Michigan...but I don't even have any job interviews lined up yet!", she lamented. Sandra was finding it more and more difficult to fall asleep at night, and when she finally did, she'd wake up at 3 or 4AM like clockwork. Sanda began to lose weight and her energy level was dwindling fast. "Why did I even bother to get a degree if it's all led to this?" asked Sandra...
Whatever the circumstances are we experience in life, it IS extremely easy to get caught up in what comes at us from behind (the past)...or what we perceive as being up ahead (the future). So often, we don't realize how much time and energy we spend on thoughts, feelings, and intentions that have to do with "back then"...or "up ahead". Why do we do it? As silly as it may seem or sound, focusing on "somewhere else" in time does serve as a major distraction to present-day reality. Even when that somewhere else comes from memories that are 5, 10, or 50 years old. Even when that somewhere else comes from worries, fantasies, and/or anxiety-based fictions that haven't even happened "yet"....and (more importantly!) may NEVER happen!
So many times, we avoid present reality because we literally don't want to experience the changes that go along with it. As someone once said, "Very easy to grow old; not so easy to grow up!" I was just talking to someone earlier today who said her ex husband had called out of the blue to argue about the cheating allegations which broke up their marriage. They have been divorced ten years; her husband was literally caught back then with his pants down. It may not initially appear that this is an incidence of avoiding present reality---but it was. Thinking about it, what's is anybody's point in bringing something up that happened over 10 years ago as if it is a "right now" and "real life" present day problem? It's not. Except within the mind of this particular ex husband as it was today. All he was doing by calling his ex wife out of the blue was inviting her to "play" this twisted game of "Let's go back and time and pretend we're still married..." No thanks. Roger and out. It's over. Been over for ten years as a matter of fact. Time to get real.
Drifting backwards or forwards in time serves no useful purpose unless it serves to teach us lessons we can apply in the present by virtue of our present behaviors. Otherwise, we are going to depress ourselves...scare ourselves silly....believe our own narcissistic-based fantasies about ourselves (and others!)---or hate ourselves more than we do "right now".
So, how do we move away from getting stuck in our past...or in a future that hasn't happened? One exercise is "Name 20 Things You See". You can do this when you find yourself getting caught up mentally in a whole lot of thoughts, fears, suspicions, and other uncomfortable feelings. Whether you are at work, in bed, at home, out somewhere....just name 20 things you see. By forcing yourself to think rationally in this way, "There's a picture on the wall of a man in a boat....there's my dog...there's Big Brother on the t.v......there's my 1/2 bottle glass of pinot grigio on the nightstand next to me..." we are literally taking ourselves mentally into our own present moment.
There are other similar exercises we can pursue to practice living in the present while at the same time successfully managing our own current problems, opportunities, and issues in a real-life right now kind of way. Remember, nothing can be done about things that haven't happened yet...or happened a long time ago. But, right now, today, we can work to either solve...resolve...or dissolve whatever issues, opportunities, or problems that are happening to us right now and in real time.
(In case you missed it, the 1/2 bottle glass of pinot grigio on the nightstand...that present reality DOES indeed represent a real-life right now problem if that wine keeps showing itself on that nightstand on any kind of regular or semi-regular basis!)
The past is history...the future is a mystery...and the present is of course a gift; that's why we call it "the present" in the first place! Naming 20 things we see today, 20 things we are grateful for today, 20 things we can't stop thinking about....this can represent the beginning of our way "out" (of the past and/or the future) and our re-entry into our lives, as we are living them, right now!
Have a great week!
"Jane" (not her real name) was a victim of both infidelity and homicide. She had no idea that her husband was having an affair with one of his employees. With several children and another on the way, Jane found out from the police that her husband was cheating. This is because Jane's husbad was shot dead in a local area parking lot by his lover's jealous husband. From that moment on, Jane became stuck in the horror, terror, and confusion of "What's going to happen to me and my children!?"
"Phil" loved to play baseball. Phil's parents loved the idea of Phil having a career in baseball. Phil's paternal grandfather was a Houston Astros pitcher back in the late 60s and early 70s. Phil's father had often recalled all the "perks" that accompanied his own father's career on and off the field. The parties...the adoring fans...and the star treatment; Phil was a natural-born successor to his granddad's throne. Even today, all these years later, Phil will often daydream at his desk about the career that could have been. It never happened for Phil, but with his young wife now pregnant...who knows?
"Sandra" was just about to graduate from college and found herself in a major twist about the future. "I want to get out of Michigan...but I don't even have any job interviews lined up yet!", she lamented. Sandra was finding it more and more difficult to fall asleep at night, and when she finally did, she'd wake up at 3 or 4AM like clockwork. Sanda began to lose weight and her energy level was dwindling fast. "Why did I even bother to get a degree if it's all led to this?" asked Sandra...
Whatever the circumstances are we experience in life, it IS extremely easy to get caught up in what comes at us from behind (the past)...or what we perceive as being up ahead (the future). So often, we don't realize how much time and energy we spend on thoughts, feelings, and intentions that have to do with "back then"...or "up ahead". Why do we do it? As silly as it may seem or sound, focusing on "somewhere else" in time does serve as a major distraction to present-day reality. Even when that somewhere else comes from memories that are 5, 10, or 50 years old. Even when that somewhere else comes from worries, fantasies, and/or anxiety-based fictions that haven't even happened "yet"....and (more importantly!) may NEVER happen!
So many times, we avoid present reality because we literally don't want to experience the changes that go along with it. As someone once said, "Very easy to grow old; not so easy to grow up!" I was just talking to someone earlier today who said her ex husband had called out of the blue to argue about the cheating allegations which broke up their marriage. They have been divorced ten years; her husband was literally caught back then with his pants down. It may not initially appear that this is an incidence of avoiding present reality---but it was. Thinking about it, what's is anybody's point in bringing something up that happened over 10 years ago as if it is a "right now" and "real life" present day problem? It's not. Except within the mind of this particular ex husband as it was today. All he was doing by calling his ex wife out of the blue was inviting her to "play" this twisted game of "Let's go back and time and pretend we're still married..." No thanks. Roger and out. It's over. Been over for ten years as a matter of fact. Time to get real.
Drifting backwards or forwards in time serves no useful purpose unless it serves to teach us lessons we can apply in the present by virtue of our present behaviors. Otherwise, we are going to depress ourselves...scare ourselves silly....believe our own narcissistic-based fantasies about ourselves (and others!)---or hate ourselves more than we do "right now".
So, how do we move away from getting stuck in our past...or in a future that hasn't happened? One exercise is "Name 20 Things You See". You can do this when you find yourself getting caught up mentally in a whole lot of thoughts, fears, suspicions, and other uncomfortable feelings. Whether you are at work, in bed, at home, out somewhere....just name 20 things you see. By forcing yourself to think rationally in this way, "There's a picture on the wall of a man in a boat....there's my dog...there's Big Brother on the t.v......there's my 1/2 bottle glass of pinot grigio on the nightstand next to me..." we are literally taking ourselves mentally into our own present moment.
There are other similar exercises we can pursue to practice living in the present while at the same time successfully managing our own current problems, opportunities, and issues in a real-life right now kind of way. Remember, nothing can be done about things that haven't happened yet...or happened a long time ago. But, right now, today, we can work to either solve...resolve...or dissolve whatever issues, opportunities, or problems that are happening to us right now and in real time.
(In case you missed it, the 1/2 bottle glass of pinot grigio on the nightstand...that present reality DOES indeed represent a real-life right now problem if that wine keeps showing itself on that nightstand on any kind of regular or semi-regular basis!)
The past is history...the future is a mystery...and the present is of course a gift; that's why we call it "the present" in the first place! Naming 20 things we see today, 20 things we are grateful for today, 20 things we can't stop thinking about....this can represent the beginning of our way "out" (of the past and/or the future) and our re-entry into our lives, as we are living them, right now!
Have a great week!