Tag: corona calm (Page 3 of 5)

Less Doing, More Being

Have you been judging yourself for not doing more during this involuntary world timeout? This has been a common theme for many I’ve spoken with this week, as a society used to doing is having a collective identity crisis.

A friend berated himself for not beginning virtual piano lessons. A family member did the same for not cleaning out closets. A coaching client was angry with herself for not following through on a creative idea. They didn’t actually want to do these things; they felt like they should. Why? Because they have more time.

What if that time wasn’t designed for more doing? What if that time was a gift that could be best utilized for something more productive than producing?

Having grown up in families and societies that value doing at the expense of being, some people have a very difficult time slowing down. Doing has been woven into our inner fabric; what we do has become synonymous with who we are. 

But we are being called to learn who we are underneath the externals that we identify with, and in some cases, even base our  entire identities upon. 

Being forced to release some of the externals of our lives, at least temporarily, can feel like a major crisis. Hence the term “identity crisis.” Who are we if we are not our careers, or some of the other activities and roles we have based our self-worth upon? 

You Are Not What You Do

Who you are, at the core of your being, has nothing to do with what you do. And when you can’t do the things you think you’re supposed to, or fulfill the roles you have built your identity around, something pretty magical can happen: you can learn who you really are.  

While growing up, many of us learned to produce in order to be of value, and had to create false identities to be approved of or feel loved. It wasn’t safe to be us, with our preferences and emotions; people got angry with us for that. If we got positive feedback for doing, and for playing roles our source figures encouraged and even demanded, these roles became entwined with who we believed ourselves to be.

If you’re a caretaker, for example, either professionally, personally or both, you likely got positive feedback for those behaviors growing up, and/or got punished for moments of “selfishness.” Who are you today if you’re not helping someone? 

Let me let you in on a little secret: you are enough, just as who you are, without any of that doing. This is a perfect time to learn that, as uncomfortable as that process may be. 

A few years ago, life forced me to release just about everything I identified with externally; layer by layer. Every role I identified with and every way of life collapsed, one at a time, like dominoes. It was an extremely painful time of my life for many reasons, but looking back, I can see the common denominator behind all the challenges: I had to learn who I was without any of the externals I had built my identity and life around.

In the process, I found out who I really am. Today, I wouldn’t trade that for anything. I can create externals again; we all can, and we will. But we’ll do so as our true selves. Please don’t miss this opportunity to find out who that is. You’ll understand why when you do it, because you will find out how truly amazing you are. 

Clear Your Traffic: 

If you’re ready to start that discovery, you can start by doing a little less. If something doesn’t feel good and it’s optional, what would happen if you simply don’t do it right this very minute? 

What if you didn’t clean that closet, learn the piano, take action on an idea or (fill in the blank for you)?

Our entire world has slowed down, and if you find yourself with more time, what would it be like not to have to “kill it,” as another family member expressed today.

Why kill time? It’s a gift. Use it to find out who you are. 

If you don’t do something you feel like you should, what feelings come up? What beliefs about yourself, or about life?

If you’re not yet convinced that you’re not what you do, think back ten years ago, then twenty, and then even further back through the eras of your life. Did you do the same things you’re doing now? Did you engage in different hobbies or activities? Did you have different people in your life? No matter the externals, you were still you. 

If the idea of not doing at all times scares you, don’t worry – you will get everything done that you need to, at exactly the right time. And once you have your own approval, regardless of what you do or don’t do, you‘ll learn to trade in those roles that haven’t been  working for you – you know, the ones that were sucking the very life out of you – for ones that feel really good. 

If you give yourself permission to just “be” more during this timeout, you’re going to cultivate the version of you that will prepare you for the greatest role of your life – one you actually want to play.

Our emerging world is going to need people who know who they truly are paving the way. You deserve to be one of them! 

Be present and compassionate as this false self begins to release. It can be an uncomfortable process. If you want to schedule a session around that, to learn some ways to make it easier, I’m here for you! 

If you’ve recently subscribed to Love Without Traffic, please do so again (box to the right or underneath this post). I was experiencing tech issues due to increased volume and can’t view the 70+ people who subscribed last week! This is why I have not been in touch about the complimentary group coaching session. I have a new subscription box up until I can get tech support. Hopefully, this one will work! Please fill out a contact from below if you encounter challenges or don’t hear from me soon. 

With so much love,

Nancy

Fake News, Real Health

Have you gotten excited about a positive health suggestion, only to learn that it was “fake news?” As your spirits sank, did you stop to consider the fact that even some of our most trusted news sources are sharing shockingly false information, sometimes in their very disputes of fake news?

I read on the New York Times website that human beings do not possess the ability to alter PH levels nutritionally. I had to check to see if the article was written 100 years ago, before the advent of antacids. That industry has made its billions on the fact that we very much can, and do, change our PH levels, with each and every food and beverage choice we make.

If the New York Times is posting news that blatantly inaccurate, how can we ascertain what is true and what isn’t? I saved a link to the article so I could quote it directly, but they have since taken it down! https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2020/04/03/us/ap-not-real-news.html

The Deal With PH

I don’t know if this virus can thrive in high-alkaline systems. I’ve heard from some very trusted medical sources that it can’t. What I do know, is that that our alkaline-acidic balance has an effect on our immune system and health in general.

It will matter less whether or not Covid-19 can survive in your high-alkaline system if having one improves your immunity. With a robust immune system, chances are you won’t get it in the first place!

Maybe you know people who live on fast, fried and processed food, sugar, soda, beer, liquor, dairy, artificial sweeteners, coffee, etc. who have strong immune systems and are in perfect health. I don’t. 

That doesn’t mean you have to get obsessive and not eat or drink anything acidic. It’s all about balance. I’m not a nutritionist but I have heard each meal should be 75% alkaline to 25% acidic. Throughout the day, the more alkaline your habits are in general, the better your body will tolerate the (small amounts of) crap you give it. 

Some foods can fool you. Lemons and limes, for instance are acidic, but are reported to have alkalizing effects on your body.

There are ways to test your PH levels (you can order a kit or learn other methods online), but if you listen to your body, it will let you know when you need to make changes.

Why Listen To Your Body? 

It’s a lot smarter than your mind is, probably because it doesn’t take in and obsessively spin out about fake news all day. It will let you know if you’ve eaten too much, haven’t chewed your food well enough or have taken in too many acidic foods and beverages. But if your habitual response to its protest is to pop a few Tums, you’re basically giving your digestive system the middle finger. 

Antacids shouldn’t be taken regularly, if at all. Too many people assume that over-the-counter medications are safe, because they are sold OTC and they grew up taking them. Our parents’ generation didn’t know better. We do. All antacids do is turn down the volume on your body’s desperate pleas to change your dietary habits, while confusing the hell out of your system.

If your body is producing more acid in attempt to digest something it isn’t designed to, and then you take a medication that tells it to stop producing that acid, what’s it going to do? Probably try harder. So you might want to stop messing with your body’s mind. 

Digestive medications might help you feel better for the moment, but in the long-run, you are going to think you need more and more medication and sometimes several different types, each helping with with different side effects of the others. What you really need is to start listening to your body. 

Occasional digestive challenges can be remedied naturally with apple cider vinegar, natural enzymes, ginger, mint and other natural supplements. But what can help most of all is prevention. If you experience digestive issues on a regular basis, your body is either asking for nutritional changes or your attention to emotions that are not being acknowledged and digested.

Another Myth Busting Buster

In other “fake” news, drinking more water may or may not help with Covid-19 directly, but it is a health-positive habit. How can media outlets tell people it won’t help? So many people are dehydrated on a regular basis. If you get thirsty, chances are you’re one of them.

A few friends have shared how much more water they are drinking now that they are working from home. File “using a restroom whenever my body wants to” on my ever-growing list of things it never before occurred to me to be grateful for!

Another thing the media could bear in mind before shutting down fake news that encourages people to do things that will support their immune system and overall health is this: the placebo effect is real. If you believe garlic is going to ward off illness, and someone gives you a substance that tastes like garlic but isn’t, the belief alone can support your health.

I’ll save the body-mind connection diatribe for another day.

The media is profiting greatly from corona-fear. Even media companies that essentially have nothing to do with it are finding ways to cash in. Unless the fake news about Covid-19 not surviving in heat turns out to be real news, I’m not sure what a covid column is doing next to my hourly and ten-day forecast on weather.com. Don’t they have enough in the way of natural disaster reporting to keep their business thriving?

Chronic fear depletes your immune system and over enough time, stress and anxiety can lead to a very long list of major health issues. So please don’t just focus on staying healthy now. Take this opportunity to get in better habits that can keep you that way years and decades after we can drop terms like social distancing and sheltering at home from our vocabularies.

Our bodies are amazing, resilient expressions of life. They deserve a lot better than they’ve gotten from most of us. Now is our chance to make amends and give them what they’ve been begging for.

Nothing fake about that.

Clear Your Traffic:
Making positive changes do your nutritional habits will not only improve your immunity and health, but also help you feel more energized and emotionally grounded and present. Some find it helpful to jot down the dietary changes in a journal, including any changes in how they feel physically, emotionally and energetically. It sometimes takes a bit of time so don’t give up if one or two days of better habits doesn’t produce immediate results.

 

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