Tuesday, August 19, 2014

What you resist, persists



What you resist persists
Tim Connor

I’m sure you’ve heard this phrase – what you resists persists.  Exactly what does this mean and how does it impact the quality of our future and life in general?
Resistance - something that is a source of opposition to the flow of energy. In psychology - the process by which the ego keeps repressed thoughts and feelings from the conscious mind.

My definition – when we oppose, confront, struggle with or are in denial of what is – truth or reality.

Here are my thoughts.

The mind is in control of our life.  It is filled with myths, misrepresentations, old inappropriate information, lies and yes truth, experience and reality. 

But the question remains, when confronted with circumstances, people or events that you are uncomfortable with, don’t like, disagree with or are afraid of how do you react?  What are your emotional responses? What do you think?  What do you do?  This is the real issue – what does your mind default to in these situations - courage, confidence, hope, acceptance, trust, faith or action or fear, anger, doubt, resentment, worry, stress and anxiety?  Another question is – do you have any control over which reaction you have?   

Let’s take the first one first – what does your mind default to?

First of all, we tend to resist what we are uncomfortable with, can’t control, are unaware of or disagree with.  And why? For starters our mind can have two reactions to everything in life – come from a fear position - flight, fight or flee perspective or from a love position – joy, peace, confidence, belief, hope and faith.  Due to our biological historical makeup and human evolutionary history the average person initially always comes from the fear perspective first.  This is our tendency and our heritage.

What you believe determines how you perceive people and circumstances. How you perceive these, determines your actions, decisions and behavior.  These actions contribute to your consequences and outcomes.

Do you have control over your response or reaction?

Emotions are the primary contributors to our reactions and responses.  We can choose to respond with fear emotions (and there are many) or with love (not romantic love) emotions. These we have control over but the ability to control emotions requires a number of factors such as; discipline, confidence, acceptance, courage and self-control.  When we let our emotions drive our responses we are literally turning the control of our life over to these outside circumstances.  I know that most people have what they feel are legitimate excuses for their behavior but in the end even these excuses are grounded in our emotional body.

Until we learn to let our desires, dreams, hopes and experience determine our responses to circumstances we will always tend to make things worse due to our lack of perceived control.

So, the answer to this question above is – Yes, but it takes consistent conscious awareness and presence to accomplish this.

How do we do this?

There are many ways to accomplish the above but keep in mind that it takes; patience, persistence, awareness, the desire to change, the willingness to change and mature actions.  Here are a few things to consider to accomplish your desired changes.

Anchors and triggers – An anchor or trigger can be any approach you use as a reminder to think or act in a certain way.  It can be an affirmation- verbal or illustration; it can be a sentence you repeat when something happens. For example one of mine is – whenever I drop something I have trained myself to use that as a trigger to repeat one of my affirmations.  It can be anything that keeps you focused on how you want to feel or act no matter what is going on around you.

Evaluation – A careful and honest self-evaluation is essential if you want to change anything.  You need to ask yourself questions like; why am I here?  How did I get here? Why do I always act this way? Is this the way I want to act? Why do I let others behavior influence me? Etc.

Meditation – Mediation is simply quieting the mind for short periods of time and just listening – to your inner voice, your spirit, your experience etc. This is also an excellent way to manage stress.

Prayer – I won’t go into detail on this as there are numerous books available on why pray, how to pray, when to pray etc.  I suggest you read a few of them – regardless of your spiritual inclinations.

Therapy – This can be an excellent way to get in touch with some or all of the causes of thoughts, mindsets, attitudes, behaviors and feelings.  A word of caution however, if you are not willing to be honest during this process – don’t waste your time or money.

Focus – Focus is the single best way to create a moment by moment personal environment that is productive, peaceful and leaves you with few regrets and disappointment.  Focus isn’t easy as we live in a very distracting world but in the end if you can learn to keep your focus on what really matters you will be amazed at how much more effective you will be and how little what is going on around you controls you.

Learning – Keep learning.  Keep reading.  Keep growing. Keep adapting.  Use change as a positive motivator but don’t let it change you in negative ways.

There are many more approaches, I have just shared a few of the more common ones but any one of them can move you in the right direction if you do them consistently and routinely.

“Four steps to achievement: plan purposefully, prepare prayerfully, proceed positively, pursue persistently.”
William Ward

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