What really helps us reduce our sadness, anxiety, and other emotional distress?
We experience emotional distress in
all sorts of ways, as sadness, anxiety, addictions, unproductive obsessions,
unwanted compulsions, repetitive self-sabotaging behaviors, physical ailments,
boredom, and as all sorts of angry, bleak, and agitated moods.
What helps relieve this distress?
What helps a person to heal? The mental health system
as currently constituted says that the following two things help the most: drugs and
talk therapy. Setting those two aside, what else
helps? Here are ten tips for emotional healing:
1. Be yourself
You must be yourself. This means asking for what you want, setting boundaries, having your own beliefs and opinions, standing up for your values, wearing the clothes you want to wear, eating the food you want to eat, saying the things you want to say, and in a hundred other ways being you and not somebody small or false.2. Invent yourself
You come with attributes, capacities and proclivities and you are molded in a certain environment. But at some point you must say, “Okay, this is what is original to me and this is how I have been formed but now who do I want to be?” You reduce your emotional distress by deciding to become a person who will experience less emotional distress: a calmer person, a less critical person, a less egoistic person, a more productive person, a less self-abusive person, and so on.3. Love and be loved
Part of our nature requires
solitude, alone time, and a substantial rugged individualism. But this isn’t
the whole story of our nature. We feel happier, warmer and better, live longer,
and experience life as more meaningful if we love and let ourselves be loved.
We must be individuals (see tips 1 and 2) but we must also relate. To do both,
to both be ourselves and relate, requires that we acknowledge the reality of
others, include others in our plans, not only speak but listen, and makes
ourselves fit by eliminating our more egregious faults and by growing up.
4. Get a grip on your mind
Nothing causes more emotional
distress than the thoughts we think. We must do a better job than we usually do
of identifying the thoughts that don’t serve us, disputing them and demanding
that they go away, and substituting more useful thoughts. Thinking thoughts
that do not serve you is the equivalent of serving yourself up emotional
distress. Only you can get a grip on your own mind; if you won’t do that work,
you will live in distress.
5. Forget the past
We are not so completely in control
of our being that we can prevent past sore points from returning. They have a
way of pestering us as anxious sweats, nightmares , sudden sadness, and waves of anger or
defeat. But we can nevertheless try to exorcise the past by not playing along
with our human tendency to wallow there. We must tell ourselves to move on and
mean it. If you have a secret attachment to
misery, you will feel miserable. As best you can, imperfectly but with real
energy, let go of the past and forget the past.
6. Flip the anxiety switch off
Rampant anxiety ruins our
equilibrium, colors our mood, and makes all the already hard tasks of living
that much harder. There are many anxiety management strategies
you might want to try—breathing techniques, cognitive techniques,
relaxation techniques, and so on—but what will make all the difference is if
you can locate that “inner switch” that controls your anxious nature and,
deciding that you prefer to live more calmly, flip it to the off position. With
one gesture you announce that you will no longer over-dramatize, that you will
no longer catastrophize, that you will no longer live a fearful life
or create unnecessary anxiety for yourself.
7. Make meaning
Meaning is nothing more arcane than
a certain sort of subjective psychological experience. We can have much more
meaning in our life if we stop looking for it, as if it were lost or as if
someone else knew more about it than we did, and realize that it is in our
power to influence meaning and even make it. By making daily meaning
investments and by seizing daily meaning opportunities we hold meaning crises
at bay and experience life as meaningful. Meaning problems produce severe
emotional distress and learning the art of value-based meaning-making
dramatically reduces that distress.
8. Let meaning trump mood
You can decide that the meaning you
make is more important to you than the mood you find yourself in. Rather than
saying “I’m blue today” you instead say, “I have my business to build” or “I have
my novel to write.” You start each day by announcing to yourself exactly how
you intend to make meaning on that day, how you intend to deal with routine
chores and tasks, how you intend to relax—how, in short, you mean to spend your
day—and you consider all of that, the rich and the mundane alike, as the
project of your life, one that you are living with grace and in good spirits.
You reduce your emotional distress by checking in more on your intentions and
less on your mood.
9. Upgrade your personality
You may not be the person you would
like to be. You may be angrier than you would like to be, more impulsive, more scattered, more
self-sabotaging, more undisciplined, more frightened. If so, you require a
personality upgrade, which of course only you can supply. You choose a feature
of your personality you would like to upgrade and then you ask yourself, what
thoughts align with this intention and what actions align with this intention?
Then you think the appropriate thoughts and take the necessary action. In this
way you become the person capable of and equal to reducing your emotional
distress.
10. Deal with circumstances
Would you experience more distress
sunning yourself at the beach or facing a long jail sentence? Circumstances
matter. Our economic circumstances matter; our relationships matter; our work
conditions matter; our health matters; whether our nation is at peace or
occupied by invaders matters. Many circumstances are completely out of our
control and many are within our control. We can change jobs or careers, we can divorce, we can reduce our calorie intake, we
can stand up or keep quiet, we can do exactly as much as we can do to improve
our circumstances. As a result of those improvements, we feel emotionally
better. Emotional healing requires that you take real action in the real world.
Who knows if we are in the throes of a “new depression epidemic”
or a “new anxiety epidemic” or whether keen emotional distress has been a
significant feature of human existence from the beginning. What is different
now is that the paradigm of self-help is
completely available to anyone who would like to reduce his or her emotional
distress. You can understand yourself; you can form intentions and carry them
out; you can learn from experience; you can grow and heal. Naturally none of
this is true if you are unwilling to do the work required. But if you are, you
have an excellent chance of reducing your emotional distress and experiencing
genuine emotional health.
Eric R. Maisel Ph.D
wahh kereen bangett ya nih gan, saat ampuh buat gua
BalasHapus