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Part Four – Fitness Tools

Chapter 13 – Behind The Scenes

…we are at different states of mental health throughout our lives. There are times when nerve resistance is high and we feel at peace. There are times when our nerve resistance is low and we feel unrest. If you want to test whether your nerve resistance is high or low, look at how you react to the stress of your everyday life. It is quite simple. If you are reacting, your nerve resistance is down. If your nerve resistance was high, you wouldn't have all those spontaneous reactions to the events outside of you. If your nerve resistance is very low, you may feel as if you are about to explode, "blow a gasket" or "come apart at the seams."

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Thoughts and impulses control feelings and sensations. And YOU, only you, have control and power over your thoughts and impulses.

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The process of changing behavior is two-fold. First, you must form new thoughts to take control of present thoughts. Second, you must command your muscles to take control of your impulses. There is more: you only have to re-direct the thoughts or the impulses. Managing either (thoughts or impulses) will refresh feelings and sensations back to a healthy, less stressful state.

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When you want to push yourself to do something and find yourself cringing, command your muscles to move. If you develop a lump in your throat when you want to speak, tell your face muscles to relax, then your speech muscles to speak. You will prove to yourself that the act of speaking is merely uncomfortable: distressing, not dangerous.

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You can put a halt to any behavior you detest. If you hate the fact that you yell at the kids when you're stressed, control the impulse to shriek at them. Control your speech muscles. At first you may find yourself clenching your back teeth to keep from speaking, but in time you will become more comfortable with checking your impulses.

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To stop an activity or action which is already in progress, command the muscles involved in the activity to stop. If you find yourself tailgating the car in front of you and becoming more tense because traffic is snarled, command the muscles of your right foot to let up on the pressure you're putting on the accelerator pedal. You can't make rush hour traffic move faster by upsetting yourself. Would you rather be calm? Of course you would! So work at being calm. When you're weaving in and out of traffic with a scowl on your face, the only thing you are accelerating is your tension.

 

Chapter 14 – Watch Your Words

One crucial ingredient of mental fitness is to stop thinking and speaking in extremes. Adjectives only add to agony. Change the expression "horrible headache" to simply a "headache." Adverbs also overstate and maximize. You can say you cry "all" the time or replace the word "all" and say, you cry "some" or "most" of the time. Why is it so important to drop the extremes? Because they make you believe it is impossible to get well.

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In the process of learning how to stop overstating how I felt, I became aware of what a negative slant I had on life in general. I was shocked at the pattern of negative thinking I had developed. In my mind, a half-full glass was half-empty, a partly sunny day was partly cloudy. My thoughts focused on what was missing or negative. Today when I have a 4:00 p.m. deadline and it is 2:00 p.m., I still have two hours left instead of only two hours left. I have found that you can't have peace and comfort if you rarely see the positive.

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Learning to drop extremes is the first step in realistic thinking. When you omit exaggerating words, you think in a rational manner rather than an emotional one. And, when you are less emotional, you are more calm and in control.

 

Chapter 15 – Stretch And Grow

Doing something objective cuts into runaway thoughts. The purpose: to shift from thinking subjectively about what is going on inside, (the feelings and sensations), to thinking objectively of something outside of you.

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Objectivity is not just a means of distraction. The technique will not work if you merely change your thinking to something pleasant - because there is emotion involved with recalling memories. Thinking about Christmas holidays, vacation or your favorite activity may provide a diversion, but thoughts will invariably drift from pleasant occasions to not-so-pleasant ones. Because we have been trained in opposites, you are bound to think about something or someone that "spoiled" an event for you. Then, negative thoughts roll into your thinking pattern.

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Using objectivity as a means of stopping panicky thoughts means thinking of a material object in terms you can verify or measure. For me, it was good to have the same object to go back to and "see" in my mind. I chose my car. It was a Ford, grey, with four doors, four black-wall tires, full hubcaps and eight windows (front, back, side and vent). I used to remember what model it was, details about the dashboard and interior, but those memories are long gone. The point is, my objective thoughts were indeed measurable and verifiable.

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It is average to feel uncomfortable when you are in unfamiliar territory. You are confronted with discomfort when doing virtually anything "new," in any life situation. When you accept the fact that it is okay to be uncomfortable, you are not startled and frightened by your thoughts and body sensations. Facing discomfort is a normal part of stretching out of the old and growing into the new. Once you learn to handle your discomfort, you can handle anything.

Chapter 16 – Knowledge Versus Skill

In a single class you may acquire knowledge, but skill and knowledge are not synonymous. Skill comes from taking knowledge and putting it to use. Having a skill means being proficient.

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You can play handyman and switch out the drain in your sink or fix a leaky faucet, but that does not make you a plumber. You can learn a computer word-processing application, but you will not remember how to access all the features unless you use the program on a regular basis.

Knowledge teaches you what to do, but practice shows you how to do it. There is on-the-job (OTJ) practice required to turn knowledge into skill.

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There were times when I felt silly repeating, "distressing but not dangerous" to myself dozens of times per day. Nevertheless, it worked. It made me feel comfortable, secure and at peace. Full understanding and belief came only after many months of miniature successes. When you consciously work at thinking secure/safe thoughts, there is no room for the insecure/negative ones.

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The repetition was part of my comprehensive wellness program. I had a lot of core thinking to cancel out, and wasn't going to accomplish creating a new "me" overnight. I have yet to see a catalogue advertising replacement brain cells. We have to re-imprint our own and it takes time.

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You know the printout from a computer program will not change unless you replace the data in the file. It is the same with life. Your personal life will not change unless your thoughts change. You can't just wish things to change.

 

Chapter 17 – A Pause In Progress

After you have made some headway, there are going to be times when you step sideways. There will be times when your symptoms are stronger than they have been in a while, times when you think you are going to lose all the ground you have gained. Even though setbacks are average, they are frightening because they produce fear and doubt. A setback, or lull in progress, is the reason why so many people quit so many self-improvement projects and resume the search for the "right" path.

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During a setback it is typical to fall back into comparing yourself to others and feel as though you failed. It is a time when vision is clouded… During a setback, you may think that you are back to "square one." But, we never go back as far as we were. The very fact you have new knowledge, insight, and practice in dealing with a disorder, does not allow you to go back to the beginning in managing that disorder. Also, the return of the symptoms does not mean return of the illness.

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It was difficult to emerge from early setbacks because I became angry at myself and questioned "what" I was doing wrong. I became even more enraged because I had struggled so hard. …it is typical to have an angry, "why me" attitude. It is common to think, "What did I do to deserve this," and "I'm angry because I feel this way." Everyone goes through it. It is tough not to adopt this viewpoint when you cannot function at your former levels as easily as everyone else. As much as I suffered, I did not want to accept that I had any kind of mental disability.

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You can have the same kind of "why me" attitude lurking inside without a diagnosed disorder. It surfaces after you acknowledge that you have any problem which requires intervention and effort on your part. You can recognize the temper at your condition, by the mere fact that you question "why" you are more prone to anger, weight problems or any of the other outer manifestations of lowered self-esteem. The temper is evident when you ask "why" you have to work so hard to correct your personal difficulty.

Chapter 18 – Create A New Self-Image

Part of the human thinking pattern is to compare ourselves to others. When you are in a less than healthy mental state, you don't believe you measure up to anyone's standards. You need a specific tactic to make you start believing in yourself when your self-confidence and esteem are ground to dust. Affirmations such as, "I'm doing great!," are not going to work, because you are not doing great and you know it. Just because you feel down and distraught, doesn't mean you can lie to yourself and believe it.

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… give yourself credit for the energy you put forth, not any outside results. Endorse for effort, not the outcome. Self-endorsement is a mental "pat on the back" from you, to you. As much as we think we need appreciation and approval from those around us, it is absolutely necessary to fill most of the void ourselves.

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Endorsing for effort provides motivation when you think you are not making improvement. When I learned to endorse for effort, there were tremendous benefits. Self-endorsement changed the tide from helplessness, to self-respect. I no longer looked for other people to reassure me that I was a valid, worthy human being.

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Self-endorsement taught me to step back and be an observer, to redirect my thoughts from what I was unable to achieve, to what I was accomplishing. When you don't feel like hopping out of bed in the morning, but resist the impulse to stay under the covers, you can endorse for the effort of moving your muscles and proceeding with your day. When you go to a birthday celebration and don't enjoy any aspect of it, endorse for the effort of going to the event. When you drag yourself though a workday and you would rather be home, you can endorse for the effort. You can even endorse for effort when you are writing and your thoughts don't read clearly when you see them on paper. Self-endorsement provides encouragement no matter what the task.

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Self-endorsement is not a form of flattery, but gentle, loving praise and encouragement. It is a sincere compliment for you, from you, to enhance your self-respect.


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