Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for December, 2010

January 2011 MOTMDownload the January 2011 Mandala of the month

We often associate the word surrender with a negative action…to give up, quit, hand over, roll over, or lose…just to name a few.  The surrender being referred to here is the one that asks us to surrender to what is, to stop hiding behind or resisting what we have been denying about ourselves and our lives.

I know, heavy stuff.  And that’s what makes coloring mandalas so wonderful.  We can take a look at these issues in a creative, and hopefully fun, way.

So what have we been doing or avoiding all these years as a means to survive, to protect ourselves or hide from others, that are now failing to serve us any more?   I know for many of us rather than face or deal with painful issues, we stuff them, avoid them and otherwise numb ourselves to them in some way.  For me, I usually numb with food, tv, or keeping myself too busy.   As serendipity would have it, a couple of days ago a friend shared a YouTube video of a talk given by Dr. Brene Brown where she discusses the concept of wholeheartedness, coming from a place of authenticity.  She gave some insights into this numbing thing we do and how when you numb negative feelings you numb the positive ones as well.

Let me share with you two issues that rank high on my list of areas to heal.

#1 – my weight/health

I know I’m overweight.  I hate that about myself.  I hate that I let myself go.  I hate that I have to give up foods that I love in order to be healthy.  Notice all the hate stuff?  A lot of resistance and resentments going on there.  I look at clothes that used to fit me and tell myself that I’ll hold on to them because I’m going to lose the weight.

Two days ago while shopping, I looked at some bras that were 50% off.  I must have spent at least 30 minutes figuring out which ones to buy…the ones that are actually my size or the ones that I plan to fit into once I’m in shape…or buy all of them!  I know ‘they’ tell us to ‘act as if what you want is already here’ and that from an affirmation point of view buying the ones that I want to fit into would be the more appropriate choice, a motivational item for me.   I finally just stopped myself and really took a look at the situation.  When I finally surrendered to the ‘what is‘ in this situation, namely…right now, I am 35 pounds overweight.  I knew exactly what to do.  I bought the bra that would actually fit me…right now.

To take this a bit further, I know that in order for me to be healthy, I have to surrender to the fact that I am 35 pounds overweight without all the harsh judgments and criticisms; that I have to change how/what I eat and my inactive lifestyle.  Until I fully surrender to this, taking full responsibility for where I am right now, I will continue to be stuck where I am…wishing, hoping and dreaming that I will be healthy some day.

#2 – being wrong

This is a tough one for me.  I hate being wrong.  I hate being made to look like I’m stupid.  I beat myself up over it, dropping my self-esteem down a couple of more notches every time.

Here’s how it usually plays out…

  1. someone points out that I made a mistake (which I immediately translate to “I did something WRONG”; I’m a horrible person; How could I be so stupid, etc.)
  2. I deny, deny, deny.  Play the blame game.  Declare I’m being wrongfully accused.
  3. When I realize that it really was my fault, come the excuses and the overly defensive attitude.
  4. I then become annoyed/angry/aggravated and usually take it out at the messenger (the person who pointed out the mistake).
  5. The messenger either becomes upset back at me or walks away wounded and hurt.
  6. Begrudgingly fix what needs to be fixed without ever discussing it again.

Ideally I want it to play out like this…

  1. someone points out that I made a mistake
  2. thank the person for pointing it out to me
  3. fix it, if possible
  4. apologize, if warranted
  5. determine what I learned from the mistake and go on from there

Of course the absolute ideal would be that I am perfect; without ever making a mistake again!  :-)

I know, though, that until I surrender to the idea that I am human, that I have made and will make mistakes, that I can survive and still be worthy of being liked/loved/accepted regardless of the mistake, until I surrender to all of that, I will continue to play out the first scenario.

Where do we go from here…

Let’s start this new year by being willing and open to finding those areas of our lives that have stopped serving us, that cause us pain and suffering.  Surrender to them, knowing that this is the start of living our lives wholeheartedly.  They say that half the battle on any issue is being aware that the issue even exists.  At this awareness stage, the issue usually becomes the enemy.  We usually fight it, deny it, hate it, resist it, blah blah blah.  When we surrender, however, we become one with the ‘enemy’…we are all together at the negotiating table determining where we go from here, resolving whatever needs to be resolved, finding agreeable ways to live in harmony.

I realize the idea of surrendering is scary; it makes us vulnerable.  God forbid in this culture we appear to be weak in any way.  And yet, in Dr. Brown’s talk, she states how being vulnerable is a major factor in living wholeheartedly; it allows us to connect with others.  She states that “vulnerability is the birthplace of joy, creativity, belonging and love.”  Now who would want to resist that?

Ponder this as you color this month’s mandala of the month.

Happy New Year!  Happy Coloring Everyone One!

joyfully, Maureen The Mandala Lady

I’m starting a new project tomorrow (1/1/2011) called “The Mandala of the Year” … more coloring!

I would love to see your colorings…Upload them to Flickr at  http://www.flickr.com/groups/mandalas/

Read Full Post »

December 2010 MOTM

December 2010 MOTM

Download the December 2010 Mandala of the month

What is…right now…right this moment?  Sitting at my computer, writing this post I catch myself thinking about what to eat for breakfast then about how late I am with getting this posted and then about the meeting I have later this morning.  Yet I’m missing what is…what is happening right in this moment.

People talk about how cool it would be to be time travelers…well folks, we already are.  When we are everywhere in our heads but where we are in the moment we are either in the past or in the future.  I gave my two time traveler voices names: The Rehasher and The Rehearser.

The Rehasher goes over and over in its mind an incident that happened an hour ago, a day ago, a year ago.  The Rehasher analyzes ever possible angle to find out how it could have, should have, would have been handled differently.  The Rehearser practices in its mind what it is going to say at an upcoming meeting, or plan out the rest of the morning, or figure out something for some future moment.  Often, much of what The Rehearser processes fails to even happen.  Both of these voices take me away from the present moment.  Please note, obviously planning for anything is important.   Designate a time for planning and focus on planning only at that time rather than when you’re busy doing something else.

So why is it so important to be in the moment?  Because that’s the only time and space where you can actually experience  or feel anything, it’s the only time you are alive.  What happened yesterday is done and gone; tomorrow may fail to appear.  I can relive that great roller coaster ride from four years ago all I want in my mind however it pales in comparison to the actual moment the ride shot down the ramp at 120 mph about to shoot straight up 400 ft into the air.   Or I can contemplate that piece of dark chocolate sitting on my kitchen counter right now all I want however until the actual moment I bite into and chew it, it’s only a thought, a future experience that may happen or, perish the thought, may be lost because it has been eaten by someone else.  If that were to happen, to quote Mr. T,…I pity the fool!  :-)

A great example of missing the moment, and we’ve all seen this, is the parent who is filming their child doing something (piano recital, baseball game, etc.) instead of being in the moment experiencing the actual event.  Yes I know, parents want to have this recording for posterity, to show to people who missed the event…all of which are valid points.  Just know that while focusing on filming the actual experience of the event, the magic of the moment is missed or lessened.

Which would you rather have?  The in-the-moment joy of experiencing your daughter’s first home run, standing up and cheering her on with the rest of the crowd as she runs all the bases and finally comes to home plate where her team mates greet her with a group hug?  or reliving it by watching a video of it.  How many times have you heard someone say after watching such a video…I wish I could have been there, I bet it was great.  A possible solution to the filming vs experiencing thing would be to set the camera up on a tripod and let it do its thing while you allow yourself to be fully in the moment.

So ‘what is’ going on in your life right now, right this moment?  I know that multitasking is seen as a positive thing to be able to do however in the process of multitasking our focus is lessened on each task and we often overlook what is actually going on.  I truly believe that’s how we lose things.  We come in the house with bags of groceries thinking about what to make for dinner while the kids are arguing and the dogs are barking and we have to be someplace else in an hour.  An hour later the car keys are missing.   Had we focused in the moment as we walked in the door, paid attention with each step, with the placing of each grocery bag down on the counter we would remember that we left the keys in the front door of the house…been there done that a few times :-)

Okay, our assignment for the month of December, and an appropriate assignment I might add, is to be with what is.  Be in the moment with the holiday shopping, the festivities, the family/friend get togethers, your child’s choir performance, Uncle Joe’s funny laugh…all of it.  Be in the moment.

And be in the moment as you allow yourself the time, joy, and well-being of coloring this month’s mandala.  Better yet print enough copies for everyone in your family to color together, creating a wonderful in-the-moment family experience.

Happy Coloring!

joyfully, Maureen, The Mandala Lady

I would love to see your colorings…Upload them to Flickr at  http://www.flickr.com/groups/mandalas/

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 399 other followers