Compassion – A Powerful Doorway to Personal Growth

Written by Margaret Paul, Ph.D.


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Title: Compassion – A Powerful Doorway to Personal Growth Author: Margaret Paul, Ph.D. E-mail: mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com Copyright: © 2004 by Margaret Paul URL: http://www.innerbonding.com Word Count: 874 Category: Personal Growth

Compassion – A Powerful Doorway to Personal Growth By Margaret Paul, Ph.D.

What if there was one choice you could make that would change everything in your life forrepparttar 130027 better? Actually, there is. It’srepparttar 130028 choice to move out of judgment and into compassion for yourself and others.

Compassion is defined as a deep caring forrepparttar 130029 pain of others, often accompanied by a desire to help. There is nothing that feels more wonderful and comforting than experiencing another’s compassionate response to our painful feelings and experiences.

However, it’s interesting that compassion is never defined in terms of oneself. Yet, compassion is one ofrepparttar 130030 greatest gifts we can give to ourselves. In fact, when we give compassion to others but not to ourselves, we often end up feeling alone, worn out, and uncared for.

Jackie is a good example of a person who has compassion for others but not for herself. She is a very caring mother and wife. She listens compassionately to her husband’s work problems and does all she can to help him, even when she is having her own work problems. She is always there for her children, helping them with whatever problems arise, as well as for her co-workers. Everyone sees Jackie as a very loving person – and she is. So why is she often unhappy? Why is she often so fatigued and depleted? The problem is that Jackie is completely out of touch with her own feelings.

Jackie is so focused on meeting everyone else’s needs that she never tunes into herself and her own feelings and needs. She doesn’t know when she is tired or when she needs time for herself. She doesn’t know when she is feeling sad, lonely, or anxious. Because she has no compassion for herself, she finds herself using food to fillrepparttar 130031 inner emptiness that isrepparttar 130032 result of not taking loving care of herself.

Richard, onrepparttar 130033 other hand, lacks compassion for both himself and others. While it may seem as if he has compassion for himself, he also is not tuned into his own feelings. It seems like Richard has compassion for himself because he does what he wants – buys what he wants, goes after what he wants, spends timerepparttar 130034 way he wants. But his choices are coming from his fears and his addictive need to fill up from outside with things and approval rather than from love and compassion for himself. In addition, he is usually unconscious regardingrepparttar 130035 effect his behavior has on others. He keeps people waiting, doesn’t do what he says he is going to do, and becomes judgmental rather than compassionate inrepparttar 130036 face of another’s difficulties. Instead of caring when his wife is tired or needs help, he gets resistant and resentful that she isn’t there for him or is asking something of him.

How Stressed-Out Are YOU?

Written by Dr. David Thomas


How Stressed-Out Are YOU?

Are you feeling stressed out? Too many things to do, too little time? One more thing added torepparttar To-Do list and you feel like you’ll explode?

Whoa there, no exploding allowed! You can handle it—just listen in.

Listen? To what?

To your self-talk. Not yourself talk, but your SELF-TALK. Listen in torepparttar 130022 demands you’re making of your time, but more importantly listen in to how you’re saying them and what you’re saying.

Many of us don’t pay particular attention to what we’re saying to ourselves. We’ve never been taughtrepparttar 130023 importance of how damaging it can be to us nor have we been shown that we can use it to feel much better. You can literally un-stress yourself by using your own self-talk.

Listen in for –need-, -have-to-, -must-, type statements that you make to yourself.

“First I need to droprepparttar 130024 kids off, then I have-to go torepparttar 130025 grocery store, then I need to stop atrepparttar 130026 bank, then I have-to get home and work on those taxes before having to go back out and pick uprepparttar 130027 kids.”

You’ve just created a lot of demands on yourself. And yes, in order for your life to continue like you want, you would prefer to do all those things just like that. But you don’t NEED to, HAVE-TO or MUST.

By using demanding statements on yourself, you open up a lot of opportunities to say irrational things to yourself that create stress.

When you use demanding statements, you then create a scenario of “what-if” in your head. And whenrepparttar 130028 “what-if’s” back-up, then watch out stress level!

“What if I don’t get it done, what if I don’t get there in time to getrepparttar 130029 kids, what if this, what if that.” This is when you really go into stress mode!

Asking such open-ended questions isrepparttar 130030 origin much of your stress. You often answer with “that would be awful, that would be terrible” which compoundsrepparttar 130031 stressful feelings even more.

Since awful and terrible are labels way beyond bad, (actually labels that are beyond definition) you’ve created a situation in your head that ends up with you saying to yourself “…and I couldn’t stand it if that happened,” or “…I couldn’t stand feeling that way!”

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