4 Steps to Move Past Emotional Pain

By Jennifer Garza

In my last article “Embracing Life’s Hardships,” I discussed how pain is a gift – and it is. It clues you into your soul’s mission, and it’s important to recognize that letting the hurt in is part of your path. This allows you to move through it into the rest of your journey.

But pain also signals something else of importance.

In Mark Nepo’s “The Book of Awakening,” one passage states that pain is a signal it’s time for change. Although Nepo’s example was one of the physical – deciding when it was time to cease his chemo treatments – it very much applies to matters of the soul. Pain is a natural part of the human experience, but pain that lingers or steadily grows is a symptom that something needs to change.

Here are a few ways to choose change and move past the pain:

1. Acknowledge the Pain. Nepo suggests meditating on the pain and paying attention to where in your physical body you feel the weight of that hurt. Sit in it, and don’t run away. Let it slide over your body. I am fond of the Vedic philosophy regarding emotion and feeling. It suggests we experience pain as just an emotion, with no negative or positive attached to it. As human beings who feel detached from a higher power, we have assigned positivity and negativity to feelings. The truth is the human experience is made up of all types of emotion. It makes sense to embrace these emotions as a wondrous part of the human experience, rather than judge them.

2. Discover What Lies Beneath. After allowing the emotion to wash over you, meditate on what lessons underlie this pain. Are you self-sacrificing to the point of damaging your spirit? Are you placing too much thought and energy on life’s small stresses that you forget to enjoy the now? Are you letting fear of being alone trap you in an unhealthy relationship? Are you allowing a trauma to consume you instead of learning from it?

3. Journal. Once you identify the root of your pain, free-write about the steps you can take to release yourself. Don’t judge the answers that come. Write as quickly as you can – even if the solutions are things you cannot fathom doing. Listen to your inner voice – it knows best.

4. Take Small Steps Daily. If you sacrifice too much, commit to indulging yourself in small ways on a regular basis. If you feel alone, take steps to connect with the people in your life and allow them to support you. If life’s stressors overwhelm you, commit to letting go of the one stressor out of your control each day. If there are stressors within your control, commit to taking one action weekly that will help ameliorate them.

Jennifer Garza, M.S., has a master of science in counseling and psychology. She is a former therapist and has taught life enhancement classes at venues including college campuses, state conferences and prisons. She is the author of the inspiration journal “365 Days to Happiness: Use Your Strengths, Thoughts, and Dreams to Manifest a New Life.” Garza has been featured in Natural Health magazine, AOL, BusinessInsider.com, Young Entrepreneur.com, and on FTNS radio. Visit her website at www.authorjennifergarza.com or connect with her. 

How to Stop Being A People Pleaser

By Dr. Friedemann Schaub

Does this sound familiar to you? Your sibling calls you and complains her computer is broken. You know she looks up to you, and you immediately volunteer to buy her a new computer, although you don’t really have money for it.

Or your boss piles more work on your desk right before he leaves for the day. You decide to stay longer in the office to make sure he notices your impeccable work ethic. Maybe you’re meeting friends for lunch, and as usual, you listen and ask questions, but don’t share your own problems because you don’t want to be a downer or appear needy.

Pleasing others while putting our own needs on the back burner isn’t a virtue or a sign of generosity, but more often a long-standing, self-defeating pattern. Usually we establish these patterns during our childhood, when we were highly dependent on others to feed, shelter and accept us. Before the age of ten, our mind is like a dry sponge, soaking up any information from the outside that appears relevant to answering the three basic questions for our survival: “Where do I belong?” “What am I about?” and “What’s for dinner?”

A series of scary or confusing experiences during these early years can shake up our trust and confidence, causing our subconscious mind to develop protective patterns to ensure our safety and survival, such as trying to be perfect, or invisible, or always prepared for the worst – or, of course, trying to please others.

However, while pleasing others as a protective strategy may have at some point in our lives served a vital purpose, taking care of others at our own expense never leads to a sense of inner peace and self-empowerment. As long as we’re looking for others to fulfill our needs to be accepted and approved of instead of learning how to appreciate and value ourselves, we are remaining stuck in the belief of being powerless, unworthy and dependent on others.

As time wears on, the need and emptiness in between those brief moments of feeling accepted become greater and start to consume any residue of our self-worth. The dilemma is similar to a coin. One side of the coin represents the approval, recognition, and acceptance of others, and the other symbolizes their judgment, criticism and pressure. The problem is, we can’t just pick up one side of the coin. It’s impossible to enjoy and cherish praise and acknowledgment without also becoming more susceptible to disapproval and dismissal.

The following steps can help you to put this coin down and overcome being a people pleaser by practicing self-reliance and independence from other people’s approval.

Take Notice. Notice how often your opinion of yourself depends on what other people are thinking of you. How often are you trying to please others, trying to make them like you, trying to meet their expectations?

Question the Result. Once you notice you’re trying to please someone else, ask yourself whether doing so increases or diminishes your confidence and self-worth.

Create Boundaries. Create healthy boundaries as an expression of self-worth and self care instead of overextending yourself. As my wife likes to say, “No is a complete sentence.” Practice saying “no” to somebody else’s expectations and “yes” to taking care of your own needs.

Change the Dynamic. Change the dynamic of your relationships by adapting the opposite of your habitual pleasing role. Move from being the listener to the one who shares, from the giver to the receiver. Instead of being passive, try the active role. Instead of following others, make a decision.

Please Yourself. You can please yourself by attending to your own needs. For example, eat something healthy and nourishing, take a bath, book a massage appointment, or go to bed earlier than usual. Do something that makes you feel good about yourself and increases your self-appreciation.

Ask Yourself. “Is the person or organization I’m trying to please my true source of happiness, self-worth and inner peace? This question serves as a reminder that the power and responsibility to build a solid inner foundation of confidence and self-esteem lies with you.

Being less of a people pleaser and more self-reliant and independent from the approval of other’s doesn’t mean that you become antisocial, ignorant, or closed down. Self-reliance simply means that you become your primary frame of reference for how you choose to relate to yourself. Self-reliance leads to not only greater self-appreciation and confidence, but also greater openness, equality, and fulfillment in your relationships with others.

Friedemann Schaub MD, PhD is the author of “The Fear and Anxiety Solution.” As a physician specializing in cardiology and molecular biologist, Dr. Schaub became increasingly fascinated by the powerful influence of our thoughts, emotions and beliefs on health and disease. He recognized our abundant self-healing abilities can only function effectively when mind, body and spirit are in alignment, and believes the subconscious mind holds the keys to accelerated healing, well-being, and success.

Dr. Schaub created a breakthrough and empowerment program combining his medical expertise with NLP, Time Line Therapy™, clinical hypnotherapy, meditation, and more. For more details about his work, visit www.celluarwisdom.com and www.thefearandanxietysolution.com. You can also find him on Facebook and Twitter: @drschaubf.

Oprah Joins Deepak Chopra for Chopra Center’s New 21-Day Meditation Challenge

A new Chopra Center Free 21-Day Meditation Challenge starts March 11, and this time Oprah Winfrey is joining Deepak Chopra with a focus on Perfect Health.

Meditate and journal each day toward perfect health in mind, body and spirit. Deepak and Oprah will guide participants to embrace the vision of their best self, expand understanding of the body, and achieve greater balance and wellbeing, according to the Chopra Center.

Participation is free, and individuals will learn:

-The individual perfection of their intuitive body and it’s healing system
-Restore balance and live agelessly
-Practice conscious breathing

This 21-day journey will include inspiring words by Oprah Winfrey; daily, guided meditations by Deepak Chopra; practical tips and wisdom to assist you in living perfect health; and a worldwide community of like-minded individuals exploring the gifts of meditation.

Register for free, and take the 21-day challenge!

Young Woman Needs 4 Donor Organs to Survive

When Molly Pearce was born 24 years ago with Hirschsprung’s disease, a blockage of the large intestine due to improper muscle movement in the bowel, doctors predicted she wouldn’t live more than one year. Against all odds – and a number of setbacks – she survived.

However, she is now in a hospital bed at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha surviving on machines and fighting for her life. Pearce needs four donor organs to live – a liver, kidney, pancreas and small intestine – and is in need of a deceased donor with type O blood.

Helping her in her quest for a donor is the Flood Sisters Foundation, a NY-based organization started in 2008 after sisters Cynthia, Jennifer and Heather Flood found a kidney donor for their father via Craigslist.

“We function as a non-profit, and people register online with their blood type looking for a donor,” Cynthia Flood, co-founder of the Flood Sisters Foundation told Elevated Existence. “We have donors online and we help match people.”

The foundation also works to educate the public on organ donation and the transplant process online, as well as through fundraising events around the country. So far the group has assisted in seven transplants, and is hoping Pearce will be the eighth.

“We have never worked with a four organ case like this, and have arranged for healers to provide services to her in Nebraska,” Flood said.

Pearce managed her disease with the help of doctors until at the age of 12 when she was given an antibiotic too powerful for her size. The medicine destroyed her small intestine and kidney – putting her on a liquid diet. Then at age 18, she received a small intestine transplant, and her mother donated a kidney, according to a report on CNN.com.

In 2011, Pearce suffered a negative reaction to a blood transfusion, causing widespread intestinal failure, where she had to have both transplants removed, along with her pancreas and liver. By December 2011, she found herself on dialysis in need of four organs.

“I was so depressed that I was telling my mother and everyone that I didn’t want to live anymore,” Pearce told CNN.com in a report. “I just wanted to give up because of how many things had gone wrong. After a few months, I realized I could either die or try to get better – and I at least wanted to try.”

In the past year, Pearce overcame pneumonia, only to be exposed to MRSA, a skin-borne infection, which is common in hospitals and hard to treat. She is now in an isolation room being fed through a tube, and has not eaten solid food since November 2012, the CNN.com report stated.

While she is on a variety of donor lists, the Flood Sisters Foundation is working to open up her case nationwide in hopes that a donor will come forward, perhaps with a terminally ill family member.

If anyone can help or knows someone who would want to donate the organs from a deceased family member with O blood type, please contact the Flood Sisters Foundation at info@floodsisters.org, via the Facebook page set up for Pearce, or through the foundation Web site at www.floodsisters.org.

VIDEO: “44 Holistic Tips for Peaceful Sleep,” by Keri Nola

Do you struggle with getting a good night’s sleep? Is it hard for you to fall asleep, or stay asleep through the night? Maybe you sleep through the night, but always feel tired when you wake up in the morning.

In her new book, 44 Holistic Tips For Peaceful Sleep author and psychotherapist, Keri Nola, offers solutions for these issues and more.

Nola explains in the book how the majority of factors influencing our sleep are actually things we can control, and walks the reader through rituals to help the body and mind prepare for sleep. She also gives suggestions to create an environment to assist with rest, and takes the emotional, mental, physical and spiritual self into consideration.

“The body is a wonderful teacher because it can communicate to us when things in our lives are out of alignment,” she says in the book. “When struggling with quality sleep, before medicating the issue, I invite you to consider what your mind, body, and spirit may be trying to bring to your attention.”

In a recent video interview, Elevated Existence founder, Tammy Mastroberte, talked with Nola to discuss some of the tips people can use right away to make a difference in the quality of their sleep.

See the video below for the interview, and Subscribe for FREE to our YouTube channel for more! And order Nola’s book for Kindle (at only $2.99) here: 44 Holistic Tips For Peaceful Sleep

The Chopra Center Abundance Long Sleeve Shirt

New to the Chopra Center line-up of clothing is the Abundance Long Sleeve burnout raglan crew with self bottom band for women. Made of 50 percent cotton and 50 percent polyester, it features the elephant headed Hindu deity Ganesha, who is revered as the Lord of Good Fortune and Destroyer of Obstacles.

It is garment dyed and washed to make it super soft, and because of it’s burnout fabric, no two shirts are exactly the same.

Whether headed to yoga or hanging around the house, take Ganesha and the intention of abundance with you!

Visit the Chopra Center store for more information. The shirt sells for $65.