| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Pet Peeves
The little irritations we face every day can lead to dangerous levels of
stress. Here’s how to cope.
Stress Source
Barriers to Overcome
How to Cope
Stress Solver
Meditation for Beginners
Some twerp in a sports car cuts you off in traffic. The copier
at work is on the fritz again. Your spouse has, as usual, left the toothpaste
cap off. You know that you shouldn’t “sweat the small stuff,” and yet, you are
sweating. Pet peeves can add up, says psychologist and stress expert Deborah
Rozman, PhD, of the Institute of HeartMath in Boulder Creek, Calif. “People tend
to look at the big sources of stress — a job change, major life crises — as the
‘real’ ones,” she says. “But small irritations accumulate, and these little
emotional ‘paper cuts’ can create real anxiety and health problems.” The
answer, she says, is not to deny or indulge our little angers, but rather to
defuse them right away, while they’re still small and manageable.
Stress Source
Little Angers and Irritations When we allow small, relatively inconsequential but frequent sources of
annoyance to upset us, it can set up a nasty chain of negative events.
Barriers to Overcome
Clinging to the past. They’re called pet peeves because, in our own weird way,
we’ve grown attached to them. “Pet peeves proceed from old fears, old
insecurities that we’ve fed until they’ve become habits,” Rozman says. Making
it personal. Whatever the annoyance is, we feel sure it is somehow directed at
us. It’s not unusual, says Rozman, for peeved individuals to feel they are being
disrespected, toyed with or even judged by the individuals whose behaviors they
find bothersome. Denial. We can try to ignore our angry reaction to a pet
peeve, but once the stress response to that trigger kicks in, cortical-function
shutdown ensues. Our perception narrows, the body pumps adrenaline and cortisol,
and we go into fight-or-flight mode because we feel we’re under attack. The
urge to vent. “Research has shown that repressing and venting emotion have the
same bad effects on your body,” she says. “Venting creates a habit. It doesn’t
show you how to let go of the anger triggers; it just adds more triggers. Soon
everything looks and feels like a bigger deal — and actually is a bigger
deal — because you have developed an almost automatic irritation response to
it.”
How to Cope
Take a break. Whether it’s a pause for deep breathing (see
“Three Deep Breaths” in the October 2006 archives) or a
short walk, it can help take the poison out of the situation. Connect with
your heart. “Pretend you are actually breathing through your heart to restore
emotional balance,” says Rozman. In her book Transforming Stress (New Harbinger,
2005), Rozman explains how HeartMath’s research has proven that heart-focused
attention actually begins to bring about a physiological shift. (For more on
this method, see “Put Stress in Its Place” in the March 2007 archives.) Release the “deeper meaning.” We tend to attribute
overblown meanings to our annoyances. Take a mental step back and defuse this
“big deal” significance. “A bigger perspective helps you see that it’s really
not worth getting all worked up over something that is actually of very little
consequence,” says Rozman. Find something to appreciate. This doesn’t
necessarily mean that you try to enjoy a traffic jam. “Shift your attention to
anything you appreciate,” Rozman says. “Then look through that lens at the
situation you were angry about.” Make a human connection. Do something kind
for someone else, says Rozman, even if it’s just to smile at a sales clerk —
“anything to reconnect the brain and the heart.”
Stress Solver
A Mindful Response How simply noticing your anger can help you dissipate it. Psychiatrist Jeffrey Brantley, MD, of Duke University’s Integrative Medicine
Center in Durham, N.C., has a deceptively simple way to handle anger flare-ups:
He calls it “paying attention on purpose.” Another name for it is
mindfulness. “Mindfulness is just the basic human capacity for awareness,” he
explains. “We’ve all used it, even if we haven’t given it that name. It’s a
nonjudging awareness of what’s here.” When we direct this awareness upon our
anger, he says, we’re just moments away from defusing it. ORIGIN: The term “mindfulness” is borrowed from a form of Buddhist meditation. It’s
basically a simple technique to avoid being engulfed by negative emotions — and
by the stress response those emotions cause. BENEFITS: Anger stresses us because the alarming or aggravating stories it
tells send signals to our bodies that we’re in danger, thus triggering our
fight-or-flight mechanism. That’s why the simple act of acknowledging that the
story is only a story changes things: “All of a sudden the juice kind of goes
out of those thoughts,” says Brantley. “The higher centers in the brain judge
that there’s no longer a threat to the body and send a signal down through the
nervous system that basically says, ‘No problem, stand down.’” The downshift
from anger to relaxation can come quickly, he adds. “Most people notice within a
few breaths that they start feeling better. It’s an example of how simple
attention to your inner life can be of great benefit. Don’t worry about doing it
wrong — even a little awareness can make a big difference.” SIMPLE STEPS: “The minute you notice you’re angry, that’s mindfulness at
work; you’re already mindful,” says Brantley. The key is where your attention
goes from there. Shift it to what Brantley calls a “neutral focus” — your breath
or the sensations of your body. “Take a few mindful breaths, feel the earth
under your feet or the steering wheel in your hand,” he suggests. Then shift
your awareness to the story you’re telling yourself about the situation. “Anger
is a combination of an emotion, physical sensations and a story,” he says. If
you’ve been cut off in traffic, the story might be, “That idiot thinks I’m a bad
driver, but he’s the menace!” Don’t deny the story; there may be truth to it.
Just pay attention to the fact that you are having an emotion, feeling a bodily
sensation and telling a story. Jon Spayde is a St. Paul, Minn.–based writer and editor.
Meditation for Beginners
By Jack
Kornfield, PhD (Sounds True, 2004) Think the only way to meditate is to assume the full lotus position under the
watchful eye of a Zen guru? Think again. In this slim, accessible volume,
renowned meditation teacher and clinical psychologist Jack Kornfield, PhD, busts
some of the myths about sitting still — namely that we need a perfect
environment in which to meditate. On the contrary, writes Kornfield,
meditation isn’t about sitting on some cushion in a forest, lost to the world,
but simply about being more present, compassionate and mindful in your everyday
life. And he offers many practical suggestions on how to meditate and bring
mindfulness to even the most mundane activities — including how to connect with
the breath; work with bodily sensations, feelings and emotions; and witness your
thoughts. The goal? A quiet mind, an open heart and a steady spirit. (Added
bonus: The book comes with a helpful CD in which Kornfield narrates six guided
meditations.) — STAFF
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pet Peeves
The little irritations we face every day can lead to dangerous levels of
stress. Here’s how to cope.
By Jon Spayde | Renewal Department, June 2008 |
Stress Source
Barriers to Overcome
How to Cope
Stress Solver
Meditation for Beginners
Some twerp in a sports car cuts you off in traffic. The copier
at work is on the fritz again. Your spouse has, as usual, left the toothpaste
cap off. You know that you shouldn’t “sweat the small stuff,” and yet, you are
sweating. Pet peeves can add up, says psychologist and stress expert Deborah
Rozman, PhD, of the Institute of HeartMath in Boulder Creek, Calif. “People tend
to look at the big sources of stress — a job change, major life crises — as the
‘real’ ones,” she says. “But small irritations accumulate, and these little
emotional ‘paper cuts’ can create real anxiety and health problems.” The
answer, she says, is not to deny or indulge our little angers, but rather to
defuse them right away, while they’re still small and manageable.
Stress Source (Back to Top)
Little Angers and Irritations When we allow small, relatively inconsequential but frequent sources of
annoyance to upset us, it can set up a nasty chain of negative events.
Barriers to Overcome (Back to Top)
Clinging to the past. They’re called pet peeves because, in our own weird way,
we’ve grown attached to them. “Pet peeves proceed from old fears, old
insecurities that we’ve fed until they’ve become habits,” Rozman says. Making
it personal. Whatever the annoyance is, we feel sure it is somehow directed at
us. It’s not unusual, says Rozman, for peeved individuals to feel they are being
disrespected, toyed with or even judged by the individuals whose behaviors they
find bothersome. Denial. We can try to ignore our angry reaction to a pet
peeve, but once the stress response to that trigger kicks in, cortical-function
shutdown ensues. Our perception narrows, the body pumps adrenaline and cortisol,
and we go into fight-or-flight mode because we feel we’re under attack. The
urge to vent. “Research has shown that repressing and venting emotion have the
same bad effects on your body,” she says. “Venting creates a habit. It doesn’t
show you how to let go of the anger triggers; it just adds more triggers. Soon
everything looks and feels like a bigger deal — and actually is a bigger
deal — because you have developed an almost automatic irritation response to
it.”
How to Cope (Back to Top)
Take a break. Whether it’s a pause for deep breathing (see
“Three Deep Breaths” in the October 2006 archives) or a
short walk, it can help take the poison out of the situation. Connect with
your heart. “Pretend you are actually breathing through your heart to restore
emotional balance,” says Rozman. In her book Transforming Stress (New Harbinger,
2005), Rozman explains how HeartMath’s research has proven that heart-focused
attention actually begins to bring about a physiological shift. (For more on
this method, see “Put Stress in Its Place” in the March 2007 archives.) Release the “deeper meaning.” We tend to attribute
overblown meanings to our annoyances. Take a mental step back and defuse this
“big deal” significance. “A bigger perspective helps you see that it’s really
not worth getting all worked up over something that is actually of very little
consequence,” says Rozman. Find something to appreciate. This doesn’t
necessarily mean that you try to enjoy a traffic jam. “Shift your attention to
anything you appreciate,” Rozman says. “Then look through that lens at the
situation you were angry about.” Make a human connection. Do something kind
for someone else, says Rozman, even if it’s just to smile at a sales clerk —
“anything to reconnect the brain and the heart.”
Stress Solver (Back to Top)
A Mindful Response How simply noticing your anger can help you dissipate it. Psychiatrist Jeffrey Brantley, MD, of Duke University’s Integrative Medicine
Center in Durham, N.C., has a deceptively simple way to handle anger flare-ups:
He calls it “paying attention on purpose.” Another name for it is
mindfulness. “Mindfulness is just the basic human capacity for awareness,” he
explains. “We’ve all used it, even if we haven’t given it that name. It’s a
nonjudging awareness of what’s here.” When we direct this awareness upon our
anger, he says, we’re just moments away from defusing it. ORIGIN: The term “mindfulness” is borrowed from a form of Buddhist meditation. It’s
basically a simple technique to avoid being engulfed by negative emotions — and
by the stress response those emotions cause. BENEFITS: Anger stresses us because the alarming or aggravating stories it
tells send signals to our bodies that we’re in danger, thus triggering our
fight-or-flight mechanism. That’s why the simple act of acknowledging that the
story is only a story changes things: “All of a sudden the juice kind of goes
out of those thoughts,” says Brantley. “The higher centers in the brain judge
that there’s no longer a threat to the body and send a signal down through the
nervous system that basically says, ‘No problem, stand down.’” The downshift
from anger to relaxation can come quickly, he adds. “Most people notice within a
few breaths that they start feeling better. It’s an example of how simple
attention to your inner life can be of great benefit. Don’t worry about doing it
wrong — even a little awareness can make a big difference.” SIMPLE STEPS: “The minute you notice you’re angry, that’s mindfulness at
work; you’re already mindful,” says Brantley. The key is where your attention
goes from there. Shift it to what Brantley calls a “neutral focus” — your breath
or the sensations of your body. “Take a few mindful breaths, feel the earth
under your feet or the steering wheel in your hand,” he suggests. Then shift
your awareness to the story you’re telling yourself about the situation. “Anger
is a combination of an emotion, physical sensations and a story,” he says. If
you’ve been cut off in traffic, the story might be, “That idiot thinks I’m a bad
driver, but he’s the menace!” Don’t deny the story; there may be truth to it.
Just pay attention to the fact that you are having an emotion, feeling a bodily
sensation and telling a story. Jon Spayde is a St. Paul, Minn.–based writer and editor.
Meditation for Beginners (Back to Top)
By Jack
Kornfield, PhD (Sounds True, 2004) Think the only way to meditate is to assume the full lotus position under the
watchful eye of a Zen guru? Think again. In this slim, accessible volume,
renowned meditation teacher and clinical psychologist Jack Kornfield, PhD, busts
some of the myths about sitting still — namely that we need a perfect
environment in which to meditate. On the contrary, writes Kornfield,
meditation isn’t about sitting on some cushion in a forest, lost to the world,
but simply about being more present, compassionate and mindful in your everyday
life. And he offers many practical suggestions on how to meditate and bring
mindfulness to even the most mundane activities — including how to connect with
the breath; work with bodily sensations, feelings and emotions; and witness your
thoughts. The goal? A quiet mind, an open heart and a steady spirit. (Added
bonus: The book comes with a helpful CD in which Kornfield narrates six guided
meditations.) — STAFF
Print
| Email
| Comment
| Subscribe
| Give a Gift
|
|