There’s No Reason To Shut Your Mind Off

Some time ago, a private group of close friends asked me to come meet with them and guide them through a short training in The Work, so they could support each other in questioning their beliefs.

I was very inspired by their commitment to sincerely look at how to even identify their stressful thinking, much less write it down!

Or say it out loud! Gasp!

They had thoughts like these:

  • I just feel awful, nervous, angry, depressed….I don’t know why
  • When I go home, I am annoyed with my kids!
  • I hate the way I act with those I love
  • I don’t know why I can’t stop overeating, or why I don’t exercise like I used to
  • My spouse is so tiresome, he talks too much (or too little)

I could see and hear that as they spoke about their upsetting situations of life-with-family, they so quickly felt bad about themselves and their own behaviors, thoughts, or feelings….that they wanted to skip over their judgments or criticisms of the annoying people in their lives.

This can make the inner world feel like a ping-pong ball session….

…I hate that person—I hate myself for hating that person—hating myself is unbearable—but I hate that person—I hate myself for hating that person—hating myself hurts but I’m trying to control it—but I hate that person—I hate myself for hating that person….

You get the idea. BOING BOING BOING.

No solution in sight.

It’s almost like every time the energy of angst, irritation, resistance towards that person appears, it builds up even more.

If you keep going with this kind of inner experience, the weight of it may become so heavy it feels like depression, hopelessness, or apathy.

I loved working with these lovely people, who all knew each other so well, so willing and so full of desire to take a look at their uncomfortable thinking.

Even though they were doing The Work on long-term relationships, those people they had known for their entire lives in some cases (sister, father) I asked them to picture just one situation with that difficult person where the feelings generated were big….and very stressful or painful.

Even though the mind will see many situations, multiple ones if you’ve known the person a long time, where that person was irritating or puzzling….it is very helpful to pick only one.

This is what Byron Katie is talking about when she says to think of one difficult situation, and do The Work on that one.

It narrows down the field.

The mind can be very busy, fast, expansive and all-inclusive.

With one situation in mind, that troubling moment, get it really vivid. Picture the time of day, the location you were in, the sounds and light.

There is that obnoxious or frightening person, doing what they did, saying what they said….and you are holding this “scene” in your mind while you write.

Suddenly, the huge feelings that seemed so confusing, heavy, dark, uncomfortable or foggy may have a thought connected to them.

What do you want, in that situation? What should be happening, that is not happening? What do you need? What should NOT be happening, that IS happening?

In this exercise of identifying what you are thinking, you get to stop criticizing yourself for thinking it.

Yes, the thoughts may be very, very harsh, critical, sour, or full of attack.

This doesn’t mean you are a bad person.

It means you’re a human.

I loved watching the A-Ha moments as the friends working on their stressful situations discovered how to slow the entire process of The Work down and move through inquiry from beginning to end.

Not jumping to turnarounds instantly and slapping themselves in the face emotionally for being so critical and horrible.

But instead opening to understanding their critical stream of thoughts, with compassion.

“There’s a fairy tale about whenever this princess would start to say mean words, toads would come out of her mouth. You begin to feel like that’s what’s happening. Or you’re poisoning yourself with your own mean mindedness. And yet, do you stop? No, you don’t stop, because why? Because you associate it with relief from this feeling. You associate it, basically, with comfort.” Pema Chodron

In self-inquiry, rather than forcing yourself to stop thinking mean thoughts about people you love, you look at them closely.

You give yourself a break.

You give the meannie mind a forum, a voice, for once.

Next time, that bratty, vicious, nasty voice might not have to be so loud. It feels heard.

You’ve given it attention, rather than fighting it all the time.

Life becomes lighter.

Maybe even a huge weight is lifted.

“The enlightened mind is the mind that you can find no valid reason to shut down.The mind is a seeker. It just wants to know what is real and what isn’t. It’s fascinated by itself.” ~ Byron Katie

Let your apparently judgmental mind have its voice, on paper, rather than shutting it down.

You may become fascinated with yourself in the best way possible….with love, affection, attention, and understanding.

Love, Grace

Getting Un-Addicted To Addictive Thinking

Yesterday I received not one, but two letters from participants in the One Year Program of Inquiry that I facilitate.

Our group began meeting in June, and we connect by phone or skype with a different topic each month. Then we’ll meet live and in person in both September and next March (for those who can travel to Seattle).

I’m excited, because a second group will start on Thursdays, Sept 12th in the afternoon instead of the mornings (5:15 to 6:45 pm).

Here is what these sincere inquirers wrote:

Dear Grace,
I am grateful for your classes, and your spirit, and just doing what you do. The relationships I’ve developed through your classes…with you…and others…it’s so amazing how there are now all these like-minded people in my life…and how these relationships of radical openness spill over into “regular” relationships…with [my friend], my sisters, my Mom, Brother in law, nephew…just seems to be more and more a way of being. ~ JB A Year Of Inquiry Program
 
And to our Private Group Forum:
Hi All! I’d like to say how much I’m enjoying being a part of this group. I thank you all very much for coming together and making it possible. (I thank me, too, for this gift to myself:) ~ DS A Year of Inquiry Program
There is no one more grateful and impressed  than ME by the sweet connection, authenticity and determination of the people who chose to join.

The full title of the year is A Year Of Inquiry For The Addictive Mind. 

(But I like to call it YOI for short. It makes me laugh).

Addictive MIND? But no one in this group is consumed by addictive behavior, or using drugs or alcohol all the time, or engaging in intense or flippant compulsive behavior, or lying in the gutter…..

….they really aren’t.

And yet they answered a call of being invited to join for a full year with fellow passengers on a journey to understand their own compulsive and painful thinking.

They all wanted to investigate the thoughts, ideas and notions that create their own suffering.

They wanted to do it over the passage of time….so that events, changes, or circumstances might occur, and they’d have a support group to work with as life happened.

That’s what I have signed myself up for, as I have worked with groups and teachers being a student of The Life of Grace Bell (whoever that is) and the Human Condition.

Addiction is defined in the dictionary as the state of being enslaved to a habit or a practice.

It feels true with thinking sometimes…..have you noticed?

Something alarming happens, someone says something threatening, there is change….and the mind is off and running, believing everything that makes it nervous.

Addictive thinking is that automatic reactive thinking that works faster than the speed of light, it seems, at believing that uncomfortable (or excruciating) things are absolutely true, without stopping to question them.

On the flip side, it is also believing that I want more, and more, and more of the Truth, of feeling good, whatever that may be.

Very tricky mind.

The mind, which appears to have a compulsive way about it, says “grow this beautiful state of experience over here” and then “get away from that nasty experience over there“.

Once when I was in meditation retreat, a man came to the microphone and told his terrible story of heroine addiction.

The teacher, Adyashanti, commented that this man’s addictive process was just like everyone else’s! Even the people trying to catch the drug of spiritual enlightenment and bliss all day long!

“Addictions are always the effect of an unquestioned mind. The only true addiction to work with is the addiction to your thoughts. As you question those thoughts, that addiction ceases because you no longer believe those thoughts. And as those thoughts cease, as you cease to believe them, then the addictions in your life cease to be. It is a process.” ~ Byron Katie

Once inquiry begins, this way of thinking followed by immediately reacting begins to slow down.

Relaxing becomes possible, without anything needing to change in our environment.

Pain is present still….it appears that this is something that is a part of life. Pain, death, loss, sickness, hardship, fear….all here in this world, in the middle of this life.

The pain of my father’s death, my friend who just died at age 22, the best friend I thought I once knew having committed a stunning betrayal, the man who dramatically threatened to kill himself, the woman who lied, the man who was verbally violent, the desperation of some I have met….

….all so painful. Destruction appears to happen here. Endings. Change. Goodbyes. Beginnings. More Endings.

But ongoing suffering? Ruminating on the past? Thinking about all these painful events over and over? Asking why, endlessly? Trying to avoid them ever ever happening again?

Surrendering, not believing that is it absolutely true that it is all a House of Horrors and a Big Mess….knowing there is nothing I can do about any of it…..the suffering fades away.

I am open to what is mysterious in this moment, the Great Unknown.

I notice I am breathing and still here, today. I notice my heart is beating. Or should I say, “this” heart is beating (I’m quite sure now it is not “mine”).

“Suddenly I realized that what I was addicted to was me–me, the one who was struggling; me, the one who was striving for enlightenment; me, the one who was confused. I was a junkie for me. Even as I was trying to get beyond myself, to break through to a different view, I couldn’t because I was actually addicted to me. And there wasn’t a secret about how to get un-addicted. I had to get to the point where I bottomed out, where I stopped, where I realized that I didn’t know anything.” ~ Adyashanti

Oh boy!

If you’re ready to Un-Know Everything, practice self-inquiry with others, learn to facilitate well, study your thoughts, connect intimately…

….then come join us starting in September for a Year of Inquiry.

YOI for YOU!

Read all about it by clicking here.

And if this group isn’t quite right, check out the other telegroup classes below, find a partner to work with, or just begin by writing down your stressful beliefs and calling the Help Line to speak to a volunteer facilitator (I am sometimes there too!)

Much love, Grace

A High Score Means Hazardous Thinking

Not long ago I was reading about a man who was no longer drinking, sober after a long and troubling relationship with alcohol, looked back at his “assessment test” he had been given before entering treatment.

He noticed that if he substituted the word “thinking” for the word “drinking” this gave him a pretty clear assessment of his own mind.

I decided to look at some addiction assessment tools myself to see if this applied to …ahem… my own mind.

I found some good assessment questions that were created for people wondering if they have a problem with drinking…..but I substituted “thinking” to see what my answers might be.

Take the following test to find out if you have THINKING that is hazardous to your health:

*Have you found that you have not been able to stop thinking once you have started?
*Have you failed to do what you expected yourself to do because of thinking?
*Have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse after thinking?
*Have you lost time from work due to thinking?
*Is thinking making your home life unhappy?
*Have you ever felt remorseful after thinking?
*Have you gotten into financial difficulties as a result of thinking?
*Does your thinking make you careless of your family’s welfare, or your own?
*Has your ambition decreased when thinking?
*Does thinking cause you to have difficulty sleeping?
*Has your efficiency decreased when thinking?
*Is thinking jeopardizing your job or business, or relationships?
*Do you think to escape worries or troubles?

GOSH!

That would be Yes, Yes, Yes, Yes, Yes….and Yes. To the whole list.

That’s why I love doing The Work.

It’s a prescription for recovery from the pain of believing stressful thoughts, at least it sure has been for me, and for hundreds of people all over the world.

Maybe since thinking seems to bring on some tough results like the list above, it’s not only helpful to do some in-depth looking at it….but pretty dang important.

So important that without looking at your mind and questioning the usual beliefs and processes you have in place…it may be hazardous to your health, and hazardous to your peace.

“If all you experience is mental noise, then you begin to derive your identity from the thoughts in your head, what the thoughts tell you about yourself….and you are trapped in that identity that is based on identification with thinking.” ~ Eckhart Tolle

There is something more than what we are thinking. (Thank goodness!) In fact, almost every spiritual teaching suggests to find out what it is!

And if your thoughts are getting in the way, in any part of your day, from experiencing peace, then diving right into them to understand and investigate them, may be one of the most important, amazing, fun, difficult, powerful things you will ever do.

Avoiding the thoughts, forcing yourself to be different, sweeping them under the rug, and wishing they weren’t there all don’t work.

If you notice that your thinking starts to dominate your experience, and you generate a false sense of self where your mind and beliefs are telling you who you are…and you’d like the incredible power of a group and a structure to support your inquiry process…then join Life Support For The Compulsive Thinker starting in six weeks.

This is an entire year of inquiry, three telesessions per month and two weekends retreats in Seattle, Washington, USA. We start in June on Tuesday mornings Pacific time.

Quite a few people have written to ask if they can do the teleconferences ONLY, since they live half way across the world. The answer is YES.

This whole year is a guided step-by-step look at all the topics that bring on stress and pain in our thinking.

We’ll be able to tag the thoughts, identify them clearly, share via email, and stay on track.

See the details and the payment plans and hopefully all you need by clicking HERE.

“An uncomfortable feeling is not an enemy. It’s a gift that says, ‘Get honest; inquire.’ We reach out for alcohol, or television, or credit cards, so we can focus out there and not have to look at the feeling. And that’s as it should be, because in our innocence we haven’t known how. So now what we can do is reach out for a paper and a pencil, write thought down, and investigate.” ~ Byron Katie

Much love,
Grace