Posts Tagged ‘RECOVERY’

Desire and loss are connected!!!


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Desires are not bad, evil or detrimental when we realize their impermanence in this life. Many desires, fulfilled and unfulfilled end up as loss. For instance a marriage, a glorious union with a mate ends in divorce so many times.
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Desires do not define who we are, loss as well, does not describe who we are.
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Desire and loss are impermanent, subject to change or collapse in the future. Therefore, with marriage, circumstances change along with desire, so divorce happens frequently.
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We desire shallow things also, approval, disapproval, status, importance, power, or control. These desires have no reflection on who we are.
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Attaining these desires sometimes depresses us, because happiness is no where to be found in the temporary satisfaction acquired.
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We waste life if our desires become to strong, dominate our consciousness or become habit. My life has changed drastically because my focus on the breath brings awareness to now, desires get pushed to the back burner without effort.
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I still have desires, spend time chasing them, but realize they are not permanent, not of great importance if happiness is my goal.
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Understand desires and the amount of appropriate time and interest involved. This is called balance, mind, body, soul.
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Sit quietly and sort out the permanent in your life. You will understand and experience happiness on this journey.
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Do the work and the rewards follow. Simple, concrete, and aware of only this moment, heals our trauma.
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Practice!!!!!!!!!!
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healing from a Peripheral nerve disease, paralysis, pneumonia and chronic pain!!!!!!


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January fourth I entered ICU, paralyzed from a rare peripheral nerve disease called Guillain Beret. One in a 100,000 contract this harsh disease. Why me? No, Why not me? My coping skills and discipline from professional sports are ideal to cope, fight and recover from GBS.
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that being said, my condition was deteriorating the first four or five days in ICU, lungs and heart involved, total paralysis of limbs, partial left side paralysis of my face, and chronic pain increased with this new disease. Later, I found out how close I was to being intubated. A nurse informed me, I would be in the hospital another six months, if intubated.
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That scenario did not fit into supporting my daughter and three grandchildren. This is the seminal point of demarcation, so to speak for me. I resisted with all my might and vowed to give complete effort. At this moment my mind and willpower engaged this disease directly. I used my mindfulness practice to let go, allowing my body to heal.
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Looking back, this action saved my life and maybe a year or two of intense recovery/rehab. My action was to focus on the breathing track model, letting go of worry, doubt, fear or anger. I did not sit and ask to be healed or any goal, rather as always, I sat to strengthen focus and healing. The results could be the opposite and enduring this brought happiness, either way. We can not guarantee anything, we all die so recovery does not happen always.
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Those who witnessed, doctors, nurses, assistants, and friends were amazed at my attitude, strength, humor and willpower. Me, I just focused on my breath with crystal clear awareness and let things heal like trauma healed. I vowed to greet the nurses, doctors, janitors or therapist as the best patient I could be. My reward was being treated ever so kindly by all that came into contact with me. Many friends were made in the hospital and rehab center.
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Somehow through all this, people touched me and I impacted them and some beliefs. Good things happen when the ego gets a break and our true self comes out to guide us subconsciously or intuitively. What I do know, is that something special happened with my progress and recovery. It was not isolated to me but was contagious to those who witnessed it. I sat without goals, offering intention to support others and let thought fade until a blissful, thoughtless space arrived. Healing happens on its own, we do not have to do anything but focus better and better.
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I embraced my disease and accepted this was where I needed to be and immersed myself in my surroundings. Many others in rehab were hurting more than me, so I started supporting them in small ways. A kind word, some encouragement in the gym and an example that I would be enthusiastic and disciplined, healing in front of them by example.
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looking back, just working my practice everyday over and over, brought such healing, physical therapy could not account for. What I did in the gym one day could not explain the gigantic increases the next day. in a two day period I suddenly could walk without parallel bars. Then I could walk incredible distances for a man paralyzed one week before.
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Everyone warned me about overtraining, being too fatigued, accepting I would be in a wheelchair for a year, needing assistance at home, special railings and chairs, etc. In a two week period, I went from quadriplegic to walking, dressing, showering, brushing my teeth.
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looking back again, my practice, disciple and willpower would not take heed of that lament, to watch over doing it, fatiguing yourself! Overtraining, in a word! No one knew where overtraining existed. How much effort could my body and mind handle. Why would I hold back until I had reached that mark, the competitive athlete screamed in me.
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One poignant Sunday with a new physical therapist, in a harness to let me walk a treadmill, she asked at the five minute level, what my goal was 6 minutes? My response was till exhaustion! She did not see many jocks who challenge or apply pressure to the limit against any challenge. It was habit to devise a plan to heal physically. I could sense, till exhaustion was not heard, sadly.
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We are all capable of more than we could ever imagine. It requires effort, discipline and courage, daily. It must be incredibly difficult if so many do not heal. I totally disagree with the last sentence, believing healing is not that difficult, when done correctly.
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My PT agreed that actual walking was the best exercise or attempting to walk for a while, I could do. My feelings were much stronger and believed the biggest muscles in the body, the legs would pull the rest of me along quickly. My theory does has some proof, now. She found a gradual ramp which was like a pure training session for me. My legs built strength as I pushed beyond pain, relaxing into my legs, getting comfortable with all the weaknesses.
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After physical training, I would get back in bed, relax, meditate and then let go of the pain, enabling recovery. My whole youth was training, playing, competing. That discipline coupled with my mindfulness practice served me well. My practice was under immense pressure, not felt since healing from C-PTSD. How would it hold up under a real life threatening, debilitating disease at my age, 61.
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Whatever happened in those seven weeks, would not have been possible without my meditation/focus practice. The ability to focus and let go of fear, doubt, even negative thought amazed me. My practice had power, had strength to heal beyond anyone’s expectations.
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As the occupational and physical therapist assessed my progress, they kept telling me, remember you could not sit up, grab a peg with my left hand, etc. How did I do this, they wanted to know. I do not have a chronological recollection of what transpired those seven weeks. My focus and awareness were so present, thought, wandering, doubtful thought ceased, replaced by living in the moment, as much as I ever have.
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To be finished later
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PTSD:’,,,,,Respect, yes;…. Ourselves…..Oh!

In the shower, first thing in the morning, where does your mind gravitate towards. Is the coming day filled with worry, fear and avoidance or is the day filled with opportunity and energy.
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The basic personality of the ego comes forward in the shower for me. For some reason my mind scans the coming day. This scan use to produce terror, avoidance, fear and a feeling I was flawed, personally. Not my behavior, but me.
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I had no way out, if I believed I was flawed. Respect towards ourselves has opportunity and a lust for life.
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How do we change a negative self (ego)? Affirmations repeated until they become habit, a positive core. This is extremely important to our healing. If we buy into the basic flawed individual, healing is not possible.
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There will always be something that blocks our progress. The ego is in control, when that flawed individual is active in the present. This is a judgment and only another cognitive, small, worthless delusion of the ego.
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Let go of this judgment and recite these affirmations, everyday.
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I strive to live in this present moment.
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I strive to let thoughts exist on their own.
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I direct my attention to the present moment, experiencing all of life.
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I embrace myself and all my human imperfections, completely.
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Practice, practice, practice.
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Let things, situations and people exist on their own

this is why we practice mindfulness, to be able to focus on the breath when triggers explode. It takes daily practice, since mindfulness is an accumulative endeavor. Each day of practice builds on the past days of mindfulness.
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When our focus becomes strong enough, we learn to observe thoughts and emotions, letting them exist on their own. This is how we integrate trauma, slowly. Staying present while fear and anxiety fire off, heals us.
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This is a simple and powerful way of healing.
We complicate our healing with complex thoughts and therapies. Simplicity is the secret, along with maximum effort.
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If you try to think your way out of PTSD, you will suffer and PTSD will grow. Practice, practice, practice.
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Judgments,,, Judgments,,,, Judgments,,,,,

The left hemisphere of the brain/mind (Ego) is like a computer. It treats our judgments as fact. Fact.
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Utter a sentence like, I face overwhelming physical challenges today, and the ego will bring up past memories to back this up. It will become our reality, the truth for us.
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Judgments sabotage our life, limiting our chances of being aware, alive, and free. Ignore or vacate judgments, letting things exist on their own.
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The trick is to stay present, avoiding dissociation into the story of the ego. Let go of thought, judgment, and the past stories of failure.
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We have a choice of letting these thoughts, judgments flow on through us. We can choose to be present, freeing us to pick the best path for us.
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Our chance for living fully, exists in this moment, period. If we make a judgment, try something like, I have conquered every hardship faced so far. My willpower and sKills to stay present, make happiness available.
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My Status

Today, my first Day of rehab, I did not recognize who I saw looking back at me, a much older, 45 pound diminished, drawn ghost, filled with pain and apprehension.  My goal of supporting my daughter seems far away at this moment.
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18 days in ICU has eviscerated my strength and co-ordination, paralyzed my legs and made it hard to take care of myself.
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The words that I am not the man my wife married, rings so true today.  So true!  Devastating words for my soul right now.
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My journey seems impossible and rewards, who knows.  Chronic pain, divorce, Guillain-Barre syndrome, and C-PTSD are formidable.  Will I ever function again normally?
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My inside support is non existent, as I face this alone for the most part.

Updated:—Perception and Mindfulness: Focused and Fearless; Shaila Catherine!!!

Shaila Catherine:

Most people perceive things through the distortion of desire, aversion, or delusion; grasping for objects with thoughts, “I like this, I don’t like this,” or grasping for self with assumptions of “I am this, I am not this.”

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It is our predisposition and assumptions that distort perception. For example, we might be basically aware that we are experiencing sadness, yet there is a difference between being able to say “I am sad” and being mindful of sadness.

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When somebody is just generally aware that they’re sad, they may be caught in the story of it. They may be judging their experience or be caught in a reaction to the experience.

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That is not mindfulness.

If IT Were Not This (An Old Post) updated: the human Spirit is amazing!!!

An old post and video that I watch from time to time.

This kid opens me up to reaching a little farther, risking a little more, searching a little beyond my limits.  How he lives his life amazes me.   Happiness exists in the strangest places is all I see.  It exists in small areas where you think suffering and resentment would thrive.  It thrives in everyone he touches.

Loss: What feelings come forward when we think of Loss?–Updated response

Dan Heller

Loss, like time is a man-made concept that confuses the mind into believing them real.  We wither and die, so creating delusional loss brings misery.

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Let us address the concept of loss related to our trauma.  It does not exist. I lost nothing in childhood till this moment.  My life has so many breaths whether I feel loss and suffer or let go and live free.

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Adopting loss is the only loss we can experience.  Everything withers so accept our frailty and be here to experience all of life.  Desires bring loss with expectations of others responsibility.

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My healing began when I accepted full responsibility for me right now.

Updated:___Shaila Catherine: Feelings are to be Felt, Known, Understood Fully!

Horsetail Falls- Yosemite National Park- Nader Behheshti from Photobotos

“Often  people bring negative associations to the term detachment—thinking it implies cold indifference.

*Feelings are to be felt, known, understood fully.

We intentionally cultivate mindfulness with feeling.

We feel our feelings, but with a mind that is detached from the reactivity of desiring more pleasure, and anger at pain.

*The Buddha’s teaching does not encourage detaching from feeling, but rather it is an invitation to feel feeling detached.”

This is the opposite of avoidance.  How can we dissociate into trigger thoughts if our awareness is experiencing  all of the current feelings.

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