Posts Tagged ‘TOOLS’

Dissociation again, observe from a distance in this moment, now!!!!!


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Practice slowing the breath during a panic episode, observing anxiety as a spectator.
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I visualize this scene as thoughts, emotions, fear, etc at the end of my outstretched arms, at a good distance from our true self. This highlights their insignificance and impermanence.
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Emotions or emotional thought do not last, changes sometimes within minutes, and fades from consciousness. Observe an emotion from this distance and notice how small, fleeting they are. Observing thought from this distance allows us to see how powerless and insignificant without action.
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Integration happens quickest when PTSD is triggered and firing. This is the place where trauma is the scariest, strongest, however it is also at its weakest. Observe from a distance and healing is close behind.
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All other symptoms will disappear when we stop dissociating and integrate with our focus. It is simple, not easy.
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Let the fear alone, focus and slow the breath.
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Slow and quiet the breath and nervous system, our entire body as we engage our parasympathetic nervous system. Use neuroscience and meditation as a lethal force to heal and improve.
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Attention Again:…updated

Focusing Inward

Focusing Outward

To the left we focus attention inward, observing with stillness.  To the right, we focus attention on our thoughts, ego, identity, and judgments.

Where you bring attention determines your day.  Focus on the ego, engaging thoughts, leads to misery.

Direct attention inward and discover the freedom of now.

Simple thought, simple decision, huge consequences!!

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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C-PTSD: One with One Million Zeroes behind it? Updated

Celestial Tree by Robert Venosa

We all have the same chance at happiness, look at how many zeroes are behind our minute by minute choices.

From the book Buddha’s Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom by Rick Hanson:

The brain is the primary mover and shaper of the mind.

It’s so busy that, even though it’s only 2 percent of the body’s weight, it uses 20–25 percent of its oxygen and glucose. Like a refrigerator, it’s always humming away, performing its functions; consequently, it uses about the same amount of energy whether you’re deep asleep or thinking hard.

The number of possible combinations of 100 billion neurons firing or not is approximately 10 to the millionth power, or 1 followed by a million zeros, in principle; this is the number of possible states of your brain.

Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder limits our choices to trauma thoughts exclusively on some days.

But there are too many choices to settle for a few.

Do Something a little uncomfortable, Today!… Updated

Jacek Yerka

Today, let us try something, that feels a little uncomfortable.  Notice the pattern of the minds machinations preparing to face uncomfortable.  Is dread, doom, anxiety and avoidance present?

Follow the emotions that arise around this uncomfortable task.  Does the mind try to avoid, does it weave a scenario of what could happen, going towards uncomfortable?

Do we sense danger, doom, shame or loss of self worth?  Do we seek out the pleasant and avoid the unpleasant?  Do circumstances and situations bring avoidance and anxiety?

Start with the feeling of uncomfortable, today, and see  the pattern the mind has chosen.

More Buddhas Brain: Hunger for Approval?

When you take things personally—or hunger for approval—what happens? You suffer. When you identify with something as “me” or try to possess something as “mine,” you set yourself up for suffering, since all things are frail and will inevitably pass away.

When you stand apart from other people and the world as “I,” you feel separate and vulnerable—and suffer.  On the other hand, when you relax the subtle sense of contraction at the very nub of “me”—when you’re immersed in the flow of life rather than standing apart from it, when ego and egotism fade to the background—then you feel more peaceful and fulfilled.

You may have experienced this under a starry night sky, at the edge of the sea, or when your child was born. Paradoxically, the less your “I” is here, the happier you are.

Or, as both Buddhist monks and inmates on death row sometimes say: “No self, no problem

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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Physiological Effects of Adrenal Stress: Fight or Flight Mechanism:..Updated

James Sebor

This is what we consider the fear we experience. See here it is a chemical reaction set off by our amygdala, nothing to be afraid of. We can learn to be calm and use our breath to dissipate the cortisol.
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Freedom From Fear” by Peyton Quinn. 

1. Tunnel Vision: One’s field of vision narrows and tunnels into the perceived threat.

2.Auditory Exclusion: The hearing tends to shut off.

3. Loss of fine motor skills: Often only gross motor functions are possible under the adrenal state.

4. Tai-chi-Psyche:  Everything seems to move in slow motion.

5. Increased heart rate, blood pressure and respiration.

This is the environment PTSD places us when we are triggered.  Our skills have deteriorated along with our ability to respond to a delusion threat.  This is why we have a daily practice, so we can stay present and observe this phenomena correctly.
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Compassion:…updated

One day when leaving the house vow to forget about yourself and focus on sharing some compassion with a needy soul.
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Search out someone at a store or in a park and invest some quality minutes with them.
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Show them respect and empathy. So little a thing may make their day.
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Kind acts change you and guess what, your PTSD just faded for a while.

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Simple acts of kindness soften the soul and bring a healing presence to our center. Try this for yourself and see.
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The Breathing Track: Secrets I think? –Updated!!!!

Alex hogs the show.  We have both been working everyday, amazed at where this is taking us.  Alex, at 70 has changed drastically.  He was a perfectionist, rigid, clinging to thinking and fighting to be able to control life.

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He used to worry, thinking about all the ways to please others, so many obligations, no time left for him.  Searching for the self-worth, that a child has hidden away from his constant search, he was lost.  Now, he has gained flexibility, a curiosity for the unknown and the focus to let go.

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Practice, so you can let go too.

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