Posts Tagged ‘empowerment’

"Ignore Button" Meditation for Life's Trolls



All instant messaging and email services have a function called the “ignore button.” If someone’s being abusive or just irritating, with the click of a button you can shut them out of your experience. Wouldn’t it be nice if we had something like this in real life?

Thanks to a technique I’ve developed and gotten a lot of good use out of, we do. It works well whether you want to shut a specific person out of your life, or you want to keep the person but want to shut out specific aspects of them that you don’t want any part of. Here are the two variations.

Your Life Is Your Castle

Get into a relaxed, meditative state. Picture yourself inside a large, stone castle fortress. This is to symbolize the self, and the fact that you are taking responsibility for who and what you will allow into your experience. In here, you’re safe — allow that feeling of security and confidence to build.

Picture the person in question at the gate. Outside is not only that person, but the universe in which you formerly associated with them — you’re leaving that universe, blocking off the entrance and crossing into a new one that they have no part in. Firmly tell them exactly why you’re doing what you intend to do. Explain why you can’t have that person in your life anymore. Say everything you would say to them in person (ideally you would do both, but sometimes this isn’t always practical, or even safe). Tell them that you refuse to allow them, their works and any of their influence in your life from this point on. I don’t allow the other person to speak during this exercise, because usually when I get to this point, the time for discussion is over and the fact that I can’t continue to have them in my life, abundantly clear. The next part is crucial: you then release your feelings about the situation into the old universe, and release the person as well. Tell them to go in peace.

When you finish, shut the door. I find it helpful to see and feel a heavy door that takes mental effort to push closed (an exercise of will, to further cement your intention), and seal. I then wave my hand over this door, making it disappear, leaving only a blank stone wall. At this time I turn around to the opposite wall where there’s another door. Outside this door is a bright sunny scene, with all your friends and loved ones whose company and role in your life you value the most. Stay in this scene for as long as you like, and then gently bring yourself back to full waking consciousness.

You can vary the imagery to suit your individual taste — if you’re more comfortable in a modern building with an advanced security system than a stone castle, use that. I just have a thing for medieval imagery. :P

Variation: Blocking Out Specific Aspects

By the time I got around to creating the alternate exercise, closing off to specific aspects of a person without shutting out the person themselves, I was doing this less with visual imagery and more by feel and will alone. As such I just held the concept of what I wanted to shut out, felt myself doing so, and opened up to their more positive aspects. I realize that explanation is a bit abstract and maybe not as easy to implement, so I’ve reverse engineered a variation of the original that should work the same way. In this exercise, outside the first gate you picture a situation where you encountered the aspect of the other person that you want to block out. See yourself in that situation, but instead of being annoyed, hurt or victimized, you say “STOP!” and then firmly explain that you will not allow this or situations like it to happen again; you will no longer allow this into your experience. Release your feelings about the situation as you exit that scene. After sealing the first gate, you walk out the second one into an experience you’ve had with the other person that you enjoyed.

Keeping the Castle Clean

These techniques can be extremely effective — but this depends largely on your willingness and ability to take responsibility for your own experience, and reactions. If you do the exercise but continue to simmer over what the person has done, or it’s still easy for them to “push your buttons,” then you’re still putting yourself in the victim role, which requires the presence of a tormentor. In other words, you’re sending out conflicting messages: you’re shutting them out and then inviting them right back in again to give them even more of your personal power. When we hold on to hurt and resentment, we hold part of the other person and the situation within us. In this case I recommend cord cutting, and doing the exercise from this post with the aspect of yourself that’s offended. That aspect needs to know that the other person is no longer a factor, but to keep it that way it needs to release the resentment. You may need to do the castle meditation more than once.

My experiences with this have been good and even surprising. Interestingly my most stunning success with it was with someone I’ve never actually met. This was the ex husband of someone I cared about who was harrassing her in various forms on an almost daily basis, and walking the fine line of legality. Since this was affecting me by extension, I did the technique to shut them and all their influence out of my experience. The harrassment stopped literally overnight, giving my loved one the breathing space to sort out her own perceptions and shut the harrasser out of her experience as well. What I believe happened was that by me doing the exercise, the aspects of the person being harrassed had to choose between aligning with me, and the harrasser, at the subconscious level, which was a no-brainer methinks. I have also used this to great effect with people I personally could not have in my life anymore, and it has become another powerful tool for me to take responsibility and determine the course of my experience.

–Palehorse

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Smoother Sailing Through Stressful Situations


Yesterday I explained how a change in my perspective made me a lot less easier to offend or stress out. But one of the most effective ways to deal with a difficult situation with another person is to avoid it before it happens. Using the law of attraction, it is possible to alter your vibration such that many of these situations are avoided, by changing your thoughts and perceptions.

The law of attraction states that what we focus on the most, we receive more of in our lives. Conversely, what we take our focus away from, will diminish. This can be used to make our interactions with others a lot smoother — whether there’s someone you can’t easily avoid playing an antagonistic role in your life, you want to have an easier time in crowds or traffic, or you have to deal with someone in a professional capacity you’d rather not. I recently used it to have the easiest time going through airport security and customs that I ever have, and I made sure to email and thank them for the smooth positive experience afterward (expressing gratitude is important!). :)

The key is to focus on what you want (as opposed to what you don’t want) which is the very best that person or situation can offer you. Your perception is key here: if your perception of someone is “nasty person,” can you really blame them for acting nasty? In reality people are complex and dynamic, and what makes someone “nasty” is your perception of their behavior. And perceptions can be changed

If you have to interact with a person you’re not particularly fond of, take some time to reflect on their best qualities. Or express thanks to the universe (or your higher power of choice) for encounters with them that have been pleasant, or at least civil. It’s a well known behavior-modification technique with kids, that they eat up praise and compliments like candy, and will behave more often to get them, as opposed to focusing on their bad behavior. I’ll let you in on a secret: people never really grow out of this. So, if it would be appropriate to thank or compliment the person for something positive about themselves, I highly recommend it.

For less personal situations, I recommend sending some love and gratitude in advance; we’re all interconnected, so if the intent is there they’ll get it on some level. If you have to deal with a person in an authority position, reflecting on their humanity rather than their occupation, and visualizing the encounter being a smooth and positive one. If it’s traffic, thank the universe for open roads and courteous drivers. This can be extended to just about any situation you’d rather not be in, where other people are involved. Once you make these exercises into habit, you will begin to see your circumstances rearrange to remove the negativity — whether by improving the quality of the interaction, removing the person from your life, or allowing you to avoid the situation.

If you don’t see dramatic results immediately, don’t worry! Changing your vibration can take time, largely depending on what your prevailing mental habits are like right now. You can’t expect to do two minutes of visualization and have everything go swimmingly, if you’re spending the rest of the day bitching about every last source of irritation. But if you start putting consistent effort into changing your habitual way of thinking about people and situations, I can promise that your experience will rearrange to reflect it!

In the next post, I’ll share a technique I’ve developed that’s a bit more direct, for diminishing the influence of a person, or maybe just aspects of them that aren’t beneficial to you, in your life. I call it my “Esoteric Ignore Button.” ;)

–Palehorse

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Conquer Your Fear #3: Embrace Change!



Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature,
nor do the children of men as a whole experience it.
Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure.
Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing.
To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits
in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.

–Helen Keller

Next to social anxiety, fear of change, the unknown and attachment to “security” are the other biggest obstacles to truly living. This idea of security can be a powerful influence. We often prefer what’s familiar, even if it’s not in our best interest. The toxic relationship. The job you can’t stand. The “comfortable” life devoid of risk when you know you have the potential to be more. You know when you’re in this sort of situation, because you can feel it; your discomfort is your spirit longing to express itself more fully. Ultimately, the only true source of security is within — it’s a state of mind that you can achieve now, regardless of your external circumstances.

Life is perverse in the sense that, the more you seek security, the less of it you have. But the more you seek opportunity, the more likely it is that you will achieve the security that you desire.
–Brian Tracy, as quoted by John Clark

The fear of uncertainty is perfectly natural – but the truth is that security is an illusion; change and uncertainty are two of life’s constants. Resisting change only leads to stagnation and stunts our growth. But something I also learned from experience is that when you start making moves toward your passion and your highest good, reflecting more of your true self, the universe will respond by opening up new paths to allow you to keep going.

Life Lessons from a Supervillian

A wise friend once explained to me that the universe never wastes energy – it’s not going to lay a bunch of options in front of you that you may or may not overcome your fear enough to move toward. So, get to steppin’, and then you’ll start to see new opportunities. For some reason this explanation gave me the mental picture of Magneto in one of the X-Men movies. If you’ve never seen them, Magneto is able to control metal, and there’s a scene where he steps out into empty space and pieces of scrap metal are forming a walkway under him as he goes. This was a powerful image for me (hey, whatever works, right? ;) ) — step out in faith and you’ll find yourself on your path. Even if it looks like there IS no way possible – I urge you to just start moving. If you don’t know what to do or don’t have any sense of direction, just do something different from what you’ve been doing, and if you don’t like the results of that, do something else. Don’t wait either – start moving today, even if you only take a baby step. You’ll start taking bigger steps once you reinforce your confidence, but you have to start somewhere or you’ll never start at all. If you’re thinking you have too many commitments and attachments and “responsibilities” to think about moving in a different direction, that just means your first steps need to be toward releasing some of them. If you’re not completely happy with your life as it stands now, and not living out your passion, then you owe it to yourself to try something new (and if you are, hell, write me a guest post and tell us how you got there. Heheh. :P )

Testing (or Being Tested By) My Philosophy

Once I realize something, like change, is a given, I tend to embrace it and do whatever I can to turn it into an asset rather than an adversary. I’ve found that this approach is great for reducing resistance and stress in my life. In keeping with my previous post about “arranging the playing field on your own terms,” after finally ending a mutually unhealthy relationship, I confronted many of my fears about change, security and social situations… by going on vacation. :D

My wacky adventure started when a long time online friend from Delaware invited me to head over for a visit. When I mentioned this in my personal blog though, I was suddenly inundated with demands to “visit me too!” Long story short, this evolved into an epic hippie-trek down most of the east coast. At the time this was a big step out of my comfort zone – I had a lot of anxiety surrounding things like being out of my element, meeting new people, having to be social for extended periods, getting lost and generally not feeling like my circumstances are under my control. As such I kind of knew this was going to be more than a regular vacation, and I was deliberately using it as an opportunity to confront a lot of stuff at once. But by this time I had been taking deliberate (though smaller) steps out of my comfort zone for a while, often just to see what would happen.

In the weeks leading up to it, and during the trip itself, I was definitely tested. Everything about it from the order of the visits to the actual people I’d be visiting kept changing as people dropped in and out of the arrangements, and the whole thing looked to be on the verge of falling apart several times. The day before I was supposed to leave I even discovered someone had yoinked my suitcase for their own vacation, thinking it was theirs, and at that point I couldn’t afford a new one. To say I was getting tense is an understatement; I was frequently worrying about what I had gotten myself into, even thinking I was probably a bit nuts for agreeing to all this (luckily for me my sanity has often been the subject of debate :D ). But every time something changed, I made it a point to remain calm and kept reaffirming that everything would go perfectly, exactly as it needed to. Right before I left I happened to hear from my mom that she had been out and stumbled upon a suitcase even better than my old one that was being sold at a fraction of the regular cost because of some small cosmetic defect. I took it as a good omen. :)

The testing didn’t end once the trip began, either. It started out with security taking too long and my gate being changed after my layover… resulting in me running across Phoenix airport with my belt and boots in one hand, holding up my pants with the other, and getting let onto the already closed plane by amused employees, which is a lot funnier now than it was at the time. I did get completely lost in the baffling labyrinth that is Penn Station in NY… and then managed to find and board my train at 1:33 that left at 1:35. There was another day when I had an all day train ride across several states into PA, but still hadn’t heard from the next person to know whether I had a place to sleep that night.

But you know what? By the time all was said and done, the whole thing went off even better than anything I could’ve planned myself. Nothing went so wrong as to be a serious problem, I had a great time, and came back with a lot of good stories. I attribute this to the fact that I surrendered my concept of security and trusted that things would turn out fine. The whole experience had a profound impact on my philosophy and approach; even the course of my life itself. Years after the fact, I also see that trip as “training” — without that, I’m not sure I would have been able to suddenly pick up and move over to the UK, when the opportunity presented itself within a span of a few months. But it was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made, and I’m still getting confirmations along this crazy journey that I’m continuously moving toward fulfilling what I came here for: my soul’s full self-expression.

Now it’s your turn: what did you do today to move toward your highest good?

–Palehorse

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