Archive for the Category ◊ Uncategorized ◊

Optimize Reality: Learning to Live with Power and Grace

• Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

In any given moment, we have far more choice than we know. We all have moments when our reaction to external circumstances may feel like it controls us. These moments are precious teachers, for their very intensity wakes us up.

12/26/09: I am swooping along mountain roads that lace along the Kootenai River in remote NW Montana, on the way to visit cousins. We’ve been blessed with dry roads, little traffic, blue sky, and sunshine.

In these perfect conditions, I don’t notice the speed limit lower as we approach town.

A patrol car passes, does that distinctively timed braking and pulls a u-turn. I am the only car on this long expansive road. All bets are… he’ll pull me over.

How many of us know this moment, and the flood of emotions, and reactions, this may bring? In these moments, and in every moment of our lives, we have far more choice than we know.

For me, this moment is exacerbated by the knowledge that this scenario may well trigger nightmares for one of my children. I really care about this unfolding with grace.

Below, I’ll explain what I did in the moment, in that lovely mountain valley, with my family watching. In future posts, I’ll break down and expand each of the steps.

As I watch the patrol car turn, I notice my sensations. A rush of heat and prickly intensity rises through my chest, throat and face. Fear. I do not fight the feeling, but simply relax around it, allowing the sensations to flow through me.

If we can stay out of our own way, the bio-chemistry of emotion will flush from our system within 90 seconds. By not constricting against the fear, I let it wash through, and resolve.

I notice and choose my thoughts.

“He is going to pull me over. “ I am able to choose (based on much practice) this thought to think: “this is an excellent chance to practice” – my shorthand for practicing staying centered, calm, focused, and resourceful.

Our minds are like steering wheels, steering us towards the emotions we feel and the physiological states we access. We actually can shift perspectives, and choose where to aim our minds.

I steadily drop my attention to my lower abdomen, and consciously shift my breath pattern to slow, low, full, and relaxed. I proactively pull over on the rocky shoulder.

Our breath is a potent “re-set button” that we can use to shift into a calm, centered state.

Reassuring my children, I speak truthfully about what is occurring in a gentle, steady voice…. no blame, no shame… just the reality. “He is pulling me over. I was likely going a little fast. All is well. His work is to help keep us safe.”

The truth sets us free. Fighting reality is the cage. Choosing to see myself working with others, vs. against, gives me far more options in how I move.

I am not fighting “what is”: instead I am making the most of what I can influence.

When I accept “what is”, then I can make the most of everything that is within my influence and control.

I focus on being the most relaxed body I can be.

Our energy is viral: we literally are contagious with each other. It is as if our emotional state and physiological state is like a stone thrown into a pond, making ripples that reach out in every direction.

We are always making ripples. The question is: which ripples do you want to create? What are you actually creating?

On this Montana highway, I want to create a sense of safety for my children and a spirit of cooperation with the patrolman. I do not fight what is unfolding; I simply do everything I can to make this as graceful an experience as I can.

After a peaceful exchange, the officer issues me a warning, and we softly continue on our way. Within minutes, the town now behind us, clear skies give way to a mountain snow squall, our wide-open road narrows in a long canyon, and I am grateful…

for the officer who helped me slow down.

From calm center, we have infinite choice over what we perceive.

This is a simple path…. a joyous path… one that can lead to living with far more power, and more grace.

Where in your life are you fighting what is?

What might you ‘soften into’?

What situation do you choose to see with new eyes?

Where might aligning with the truth set you free?

Share

Regaining Center

• Monday, June 22nd, 2009

As we practice centering on a regular basis, we might contemplate being centered all the time. If we work to be centered all the time, we will be, except when we are not! (Even the masters lose center; they just regain it far more quickly!)

So how do we regain center? The same way we got there the first time:

Pause the action. Focus on your breath. Locate your center along length (your full height), width, (open through your sides), and depth (your front and back.) Placing one hand just below your navel can help. Drop your breath and your awareness, and let go of muscular holding and tension.

How many times you can regain center today?

Share

What Does Being Centered Feel Like?

• Monday, June 15th, 2009
A client asked this yesterday. What a great question! What does it feel like for you?
Where are the places for you to put your attention in order to accentuate this feeling of being centered?
 
Leading from center, we have more breath, more choice, more freedom.

Take just a moment to access your center, and notice the sensations that you feel. Now sink your attention even more deeply, and see what emerges. Let yourself linger in this awareness.

Share

Leading from Center

• Monday, June 08th, 2009
Leading from center, we have more breath, more choice, more freedom.
 
What practice best helps you find your center?
 
Leading from center involves both the capacity to access the physiological sense of calm that comes when we drop our awareness and our breath, and the energy and focus generated from living inside a positive story about ourselves, our work, and our world.
Once you access center, what thoughts best help you stay there?
 
(To read more on Leading From Center, go to http://InnerCompassLeadership.com/leading-from-center)
Share