Tag: recovery (Page 3 of 3)

It’s Okay To Ask For Help

With physical and emotional challenges alike, many of us are programmed to power through, instead of asking for help. Whether our resistance is due to a belief that needing help is a weakness or that we’ll burden the person we ask, stubborn determination to figure things out on our own, or any other reason we choose to struggle, it’s a limiting habit. I can think of no better time to break it.

I used to love to figure minor website tech stuff out on my own; successfully figuring out basic CSS code when this is not one of my skill sets provided a feeling of accomplishment. But people need emotional support now, not three years from now when my site looks the way I want it to. And while trying to correct minor glitches today, I created major ones. So I finally cried uncle.

Asking for help led to better results than I could have imagined. I learned that the subscriber plugin I spent three hours trying to fix was actually working – what wasn’t working was my subscriber welcome email. My list of 20 ways to stay calm and strengthen your immune system was quite possibly the driest and most verbose thing I’d ever written. If someone had sent that to me, I would have stopped reading after two sentences. Or syllables.

Many people have at least a little more time on their hands now and are happy to help. Some even have an abundance of time, and only lack a clue what to do with it. If you ask for help, you might serve them as much as yourself.

And if it’s emotional support you’re holding back from, please reach out. Now’s the time to drop our resistance and ask for whatever type of support we need.

If someone doesn’t have the time or energy to give it, they can say no. Most people want to help, especially now. And each of us is perfectly equipped to do that, in our own special ways.

Let’s give ourselves and one another that chance. Asking for help doesn’t make us weak; that’s an old belief that does not serve us. It’s actually one of the strongest and bravest, not to mention smartest, things we can do. 

 

 

Don’t Disconnect While Distancing

I have been social distancing myself on the beach for decades – the only sounds I like to hear are the ocean and seagulls. I was far from all humans while doing an immune system-boosting Kundalini class this evening, when I heard someone call out a dolphin alert.

The dolphins were so close to the beach, it seemed impossible that the water could have been deep enough for them. I could have touched one of them and I was super close to the shoreline. I almost couldn’t believe my eyes.

When they swam off, the young adults who had brought the dolphins to my attention began to walk away and I called out a thank you. They walked over to speak about what had just occurred. We were all amazed the dolphins had been swimming in water that was not even up to our knees; it almost seemed like a collective hallucination.

Unlike the spring breakers I witnessed yesterday, who acted as though they’d never heard of any type of corona outside the beer, this group of college students and recent graduates was very evolved. 

We shared a beautiful, authentic and inspiring conversation – the type that sends feel-good, health-enhancing hormones rushing through your system.

Normally, I would have hugged each and every one of them. Hugging produces oxytocin, which reduces stress and in turn boosts your immune system. But while I believe in the power of my immune system, I am taking precautions for those around me, since we can be carriers and not even know it. So instead of hugging, I put my hands over my heart and sent them love. 

Like dolphins, humans need connection, so make sure you’re getting that in other ways if you are self-isolating or under mandatory quarantine. And if you feel like you need a good dose of oxytocin, or just want to self-comfort, you can put your hands over your heart and breathe. It feels like a hug and offers that sense of comfort your favorite stuffed animal or blankie did while hugged against your chest as a child.

Or last week. Hey, comfort is comfort. 

Placing my hands over my heart is one of my go-to’s when I feel emotionally vulnerable, and also something I recommend to clients who are experiencing anxiety. 

Keeping them there for a few minutes and applying some gentle pressure while doing some slow, deep belly breathing works every time.

With love,
Nancy 

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