Monday, June 29, 2009

Emotional Self-Care

Emotional self-care involves feeling and expressing all of our emotions appropriately. Sounds easy, right? But somehow it isn’t. Expressing all of our feelings means the negative ones as well as the positive ones. And don’t forget that all important caveat ‘appropriately’.

We’ve all seen or heard obnoxious people who loudly express their anger in public, yelling at their children, flipping people off from the safety of their cars. This is definitely expressing your negative emotions, but it isn’t what you’d call ‘appropriate’.

At the other end of the spectrum are those who are unable or unwilling to give voice to their feelings. When we keep things inside, they don’t go away. They tend to manifest physically, as headaches, stomach pains, stiff necks and other discomforts.

So what is the happy medium? Recognizing an emotion as it arises, figuring out how to express it in a way that feels respectful to you and others, and then letting it go and moving on.

Expressing positive emotion is important too, especially gratitude and self-love. It’s easy to focus on the things we don’t have and forget to be thankful for what we do have, unless we make an intentional effort to do so. And loving ourselves isn’t something that we’re usually taught to do. But it’s key to being able to live a healthy life.

Observe your emotional responses in the next few weeks. Look for appropriate reactions to both the positive and negative things that happen to you. Pay attention to any physical symptoms and ask yourself what the emotional connection could be. Looking at that kind of connection can be scary, but a good Life Coach can make the journey a remarkable learning experience.

One of the best books I’ve read on emotional self-care was written back in the 1980’s by Harriet Lerner, called “The Dance of Anger”. Dr. Lerner does a great job dissecting the ways that women help or hinder themselves when they express their feelings, and gives good suggestions for finding ways to do so appropriately.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Mental Self-Care

Mental self-care involves stimulating your mind in ways that make you reach, grow, and develop. And it also means relaxing your mind in equal measure.

My personal routine consists of a day of seeing coaching clients ending with an hour of my favorite television show, Reba. I stretch my mind in order to assist clients who are longing to create sacred spaces and relationships, then I spend an hour laughing my behind off at the antics of Reba’s loving, dysfunctional
family.

Another way to take care of your mental health is to read books or magazines that make you think and argue and learn, interspersed with absorbing novels that don’t force you to think about anything except the next belly laugh.

Getting out of a rut that you my not have even realized you were in is another mental exercise. Take a different route to work. Buy a shirt in a color you would normally pass right by on the rack. Even figuring out what mental self-care means to you is a form of mental self-care! You have to engage your mind to figure out what works.

Your ‘call to action’: spend some time in the next couple of weeks experimenting with the concept of mental self-care. What stimulates you, makes you think, challenges your set ideas? What combination of working and resting your brain provides you with maximum mental self-care?