Listening To These Voices In My Head

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I read the advice years ago – it would be good to pay attention to the voices in my head.

This is what I read, taken directly from Eckhart Tolle’s book The Power of Now (1999):  “When someone goes to the doctor and says, ‘I hear a voice in my head’,  he or she will most likely be sent to a psychiatrist.  The fact is that, in a very similar way, virtually everyone hears a voice, or several voices, in their head all the time:  the involuntary thought processes that you don’t realize you have the power to stop.  Continuous monologues or dialogues.”

“You have probably come across ‘mad’ people in the street incessantly talking or muttering to themselves.  Well, that’s not much different from what you and all other ‘normal’ people do, except that you don’t do it out loud.  The voice comments, speculates, judges, compares, complains, likes, dislikes, and so on.  The voice isn’t necessarily relevant to the situation you find yourself in at the time; it may be reviving the recent or distant past or rehearsing or imagining possible future situations.  Here it often imagines things going wrong and negative outcomes; this is called worry.”

“Sometimes this soundtrack is accompanied by visual images or ‘mental movies’.  Even if the voice is relevant to the situation at hand, it will interpret it in terms of the past.  This is because the voice belongs to your conditioned mind, which is the result of all your past history as well as of the collective cultural mind-set you inherited.   So you see and judge the present through the eyes of the past, and get a totally distorted view of it.  It is not uncommon for the voice to be a person’s own worst enemy.  Many people live with a tormentor in their head that continuously attacks and punishes them and drains them of vital energy.  It is the cause of untold misery and unhappiness, as well as of disease.”

“The good news is that you can free yourself from your mind.  This is the only true liberation.  You can take the first step right now.  Start listening to the voice in your head as often as you can.  Pay particular attention to any repetitive thought patterns, those old gramophone records that have been playing in your head perhaps for many years.  This is what I mean by ‘watching the thinker’, which is another way of saying:  listen to the voice in your head, be there as the witnessing presence.”

(My commentary again)   I have barely revisited this concept since my initial effort fifteen years ago.  Back then, I figured out that when I am really upset, I say to myself (softly and gently, which is a good thing) “It’s okay.”  Now, when I hear me tell myself “It’s okay”, I know that I am having a significant negative reaction to a situation; that I am more than mildly disturbed about it.

Flash forward to a girlfriend in the support group that I have a long history of hanging with.  She seems to have me on her radar.  She has watched me during the twenty-five years that we have been meeting, and has picked up on how darned hard on myself I am, in my head.  I am critical of me a lot, probably constantly; I am self-doubting, always thinking of what I could have done to handle a situation better, or to have made things come out “right” instead of “wrong”.  She said to me, “You do all of these things, and then you think that you haven’t done enough, and that you aren’t good enough.  I don’t get it.”  She shook her head in some combination of disbelief and wonder.

I am saying these things because I’m clearly not the only one afflicted.  Have you ever paid attention to what you are saying to yourself, to the thoughts playing on your gramophone?  I am spurred on by a recent Twitter post by @tinybuddha which reads, “You will never speak to anyone else more than you speak to yourself in your head.  Be kind to yourself.”

You might enjoy listening to Be Kind To Yourself by Andrew Peterson; either via the video on YouTube, or the song on Spotify.

I am going to, once again, pay attention to these voices in my head, and hear what they are saying; what I am saying to me. I will try to be as kind to me as I am to others.  Will you?

 

A History of the Gramophone

Photo credit, Google images.

 

 

I’m Sexy and I Know It

As Igor from The Red Elvises, “Your favorite band!”  might say (use a loud voice and a Russian accent), “Your favorite music source!”  Spotify, Spotify, Spotify.  I can’t say it enough.  Spotify, Spotify …download the app  right here, right now,  the free version. Full disclosure – I have no ties to Spotify except that I pay their monthly fee.  I enjoy it daily.  I bet you’ll love it like I do.

Now,  how’s this for a confidence boost? …

I’m Sexy and I Know It

It’s so nice being a midlife woman. There is a calm to it.  It’s easy to identify with the trite statement, “It just is.”

I am finding that every now and then a little irony threads through my life, and I can see it here again.

This irony from awhile ago:  I always chuckled that for some of us mothers, as we perhaps voluntarily sacrificed an income to be more hands-on in raising our children, we had time. Time. In a mother sort of way, which means two minutes here and five minutes there.  But we always had the possibility of a little bit of time, with the freedom to gather the little ones and go do something fun – sometimes just anything to get out of the house – that carrot dangling in front of us.

And then while we were busy sacrificing our income, and finding ourselves with some very real mobile possibilities within our day, we, at the same point, didn’t have the extra money for shopping. We had time, but no money. Sigh.

And now I find myself having confidence in my body.

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I’m finally coming to at least some peace with the fact that we women are judged on our looks.  I can also finally see that I shouldn’t be so critical of myself.  Where did all of my constant self criticism come from?

I find that we women are judged by our looks absolutely constantly, either obviously or subliminally, in our culture.  I also find that men are judged by their income, either obviously or subliminally, in our culture.  I don’t think either one is healthy, and the pressure is on just the same:  24 hours a day, 365 days a year.  I think that we each just get to come to terms with this reality at some point in our lives.  This point seems to be, for me, around now, fifty something.

But wouldn’t it have been better timing to have been confident when there was a little more to be confident about, when it was a twenty something body, or even a forty something body?

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It’s the irony again.  I wonder what the next irony will be.

 

Jimi Hendrix


He was born “starting at age zero”.

“People ask me whether I dress and do my hair like this just for effect, but it’s not true.  This is me.  I don’t like to be misunderstood by anything or anybody, so if I want to wear a red bandana and turquoise slacks and if I want hair down to my ankles, well, that’s me.  All those photographs you might have seen of me in a tuxedo and a bow tie playing in Wilson Pickett’s backing group were me when I was shy, scared and afraid to be myself.  I had my hair slicked back and my mind combed out.”

Interviewer:  “Do you comb your hair?”

Jimi:  “No, I use a brush.  A comb would get stuck.  A girl asked me if she could comb my hair.  NOBODY can comb my hair.  I can’t even comb my hair.  But I think this hairstyle is groovy.  A mod Shirley Temple.  A frizzy permanent.  Anyway, it’s better than having dull, straight hair.  The strands, you see, are vibrations.  If your hair is straight and pointing to the ground you don’t get many vibrations.  This way, though, I’ve got vibrations shooting out all ways.”

Interviewer:  “Why is it necessary to be dressed peculiarly?”

Jimi:  “Well, I don’t consider it actually necessary.  This is the way I like to dress and look, off stage and on.  I like shades of color that clash.  I always wanted to be a cowboy, or Hadji Baba, [*Haji Baba Sheikh was the prime minister of the Republic of Mahabad.  After the republic was conquered by the Iranian army in 1947, he was not executed.  He was immune because of his religious standing.] or the Prisoner of Zenda [*an adventure novel, 1894, by Anthony Hope, in which the King of fictional Ruritania is drugged on the eve of his coronation, and is therefore unable to attend the ceremony and take the crown.]  Before I go onstage my road manager says to me, ‘Jimi, you scruffy looking git, you’re not going on looking like that tonight, are you?’  And I say, ‘As soon as I’ve put out this cigarette – I’m fully dressed.’  I feel comfortable like this.”

Interviewer: “Where is fashion going?”

Jimi:  “I don’t know, and I don’t care, really.  Maybe people will wear different colored sheets, like in the olden days.  And don’t ask me those silly questions about whether I wear underwear.  I swear you should have gotten someone else for this interview.”

Wisdom, from the mouth of a babe. 

Excerpts from:  Jimi Hendrix, Starting at Zero: His Own Story  *Haji Baba Sheikh information from Wikipedia.  *Prisoner of Zenda information found on feedbooks.com.  Hand stamped metal necklace on Etsy by AmbeauLynn.  Color photo link:  http://www.vintag.es/2015/04/sept-17th-1970-samarkand-hotel-london.html. Black and white photo link:  https://www.google.com/urlsa=i&source=images&cd=&ved=0ahUKEwi5hZyil6vNAhWIKWMKHSDyBnsQjB0IBg&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Fpin%2F395190936031096556%2F&psig=AFQjCNFISkt2hezhCNDfUCh6S2eHBnaHvQ&ust=1466117790086842&rct=j

Remind Yourself to Sit Up Straight

“Happiness is the result of inner maturity.  It depends on us alone, and requires patient work, carried on from day to day.  Happiness must be built, and this requires time and effort.  In the long term, happiness and unhappiness are therefore a way of being, or a life skill.”   – Matthieu Ricard

 Am thinking we make life too complicated.  Maybe it’s just not that hard.  It is hard, of course, but sometimes I think we add to it.  I’m excellent at ruminating, so I would be speaking to myself here.  I’m remembering a conversation with a girlfriend when she was in her thirties.  She is upbeat, overcomes the obstacles she encounters in life with a great attitude and a lot of energy, and is very fun to watch.  She was also the victim of sexual abuse (incest, to be specific), growing up.  It is extremely difficult to get over sexual abuse, and perhaps especially for her as she felt she had broken up her family in the process of defending herself as a teenager.  My psychologist Aunt Linda told me one time that she can “get through” and “help” most everyone that she deals with, but that she has the most trouble getting through to sexual abuse victims.  Her comment was, “they cry, and they cry, and they cry”.   Not too long after hearing this I was with my girlfriend.  She said that sometimes she runs into other victims of sexual abuse and that they are always fairly astonished with her happiness in life.  She said, “They always ask me,  ‘HOW do you do it??’ ”  She tells them that it’s just like reminding yourself to sit up straight.  Whenever it comes back to her, she reminds herself that this does not define her, and that she is happy now.  Just like that.  As the British say, “Simples.”

Easy for me to say, I know, I mean I really know, because I was much more fortunate in life than to have to reckon with anything like this.  

But I still want to say it, for her, because it’s gold.

Treat You

Do you dance?

When’s the last time you danced by yourself, say, in front of a mirror, with some great music and maybe a glass of wine or something?  Or while putting on makeup?   Or maybe you are able to turn the lights down?  Your favorite song?

What are you waiting for?

I Hesitated to Say That Life Isn’t Great All the Time

I’m surprised.  When I wrote about coping with the hard times in life I felt a little guilty.  I added the caption “not always, certainly…”  to a snap I took of my “Life is good” mug, challenging their ever positive way of thinking, which I normally pretty much buy into.  That’s why I have the mug.

I remember listening to my favorite priest when the boys were growing up.  Father Jack was admonishing us, telling us emphatically that an older, blind gentleman with a pretty, white seeing eye dog came in and sat in the front row every morning for the 7a.m. Mass.  The man was very grateful, and cheerful, and we with all of our sight, were supposed to emulate him.  We were to put our feet that we were so lucky to have on the floor every morning, use our legs that we were so lucky to get out of bed with, and begin our day of hearing with our ears, seeing with our eyes, and speaking with our voices. We were to be grateful every morning!

Well I do emulate this gentleman.  And of course I am grateful.  And I try not to get pulled into the dark side.  But then, there’s reality.  And somehow I feel a little relief by letting myself admit that life can suck sometimes, and sometimes it can suck greatly.  And that’s okay, because that’s just how it is, and how it goes.  What feels like the really great part is knowing when you’re in the great part.  I tell my husband to “Be  Zen” at these times. Better appreciate them.  (sing-song now, from the cartoon movie about dinosaurs, “Weee’rre  ba-a-a-ck)….   “They’re hee-ere”.

To me, it feels like a cycle.  I hang out with six very cool women, and have for more than twenty-three years now.  I notice that a couple of us are up, in really good places, while at the same time one or two of us are in really low, pretty lousy places, and the rest of us make up the middle ground.  And it all changes around as to who is where when.  We’ve been hanging out long enough to see cycles.

If I stop and acknowledge when I am in a rough cycle and try to relax in it, bummer though it is, instead of panicking my way through, it goes better.  Anthony deMello was a Catholic Jesuit Priest (1936-1987) who was raised in India, but spent most of his career here in the United States.  He was also a psychotherapist.  He is of the same order, Jesuit, as Pope Francis.  I don’t know any of the details about what is rumored to be his excommunication from the Catholic Church after he died, but it is said that he began teaching some of the philosophies of the eastern religions, considered out of synch with Catholic teachings.  I find his writings interesting.  If you want to take a peek you might check out his “Awareness Articles” on The deMello Spirituality Center website.

Anthony deMello’s brutal honesty about life shook me up when I started reading his stuff.  Right now I am remembering what he said about feeling depressed.  He said (super paraphrasing here) that we all go through it sometimes, and to acknowledge it, and just be with it, and that eventually it will pass.  I took that to mean don’t go getting all panicky about hard times, or about feeling down.  Someone said to me once to “find joy within my pain”.   I wasn’t sure how to do that.  But now I take the approach of, okay, life isn’t great, it isn’t what I would choose, but here I am.  I’ll entertain myself with whatever helps me feel good (the joy).  I will not spend time in my mind either questioning why I feel this way, or fighting to change it.  No use saying “Why me?”  Why me?  Because it’s my turn.  Life’s a cycle, and sometimes I’m not in the good part. Things will naturally change again.  They always do.

Where’s Your Place of Comfort?

                Not always, certainly. . .

Quick question:
Where is the place you go to comfort yourself when you need it?  I’m not talking about turning to another person.  I mean when you have only yourself to turn to for the support that you need at a difficult time, or through a difficult period.  What would you turn to, and what would you do to make yourself feel better?

I know I’ve done a couple of things that feel kind of weird to admit, but they have both worked for me.  During one particularly lengthy and difficult time in my life I used to sit in candelight and listen to soft music on a chair in my bathroom.  The room was small and comfortable, and I thought a lot.  I, believe it or not, had a bunch of imaginary conversations with another person (I picked one), describing for them in detail what was going on and how I was feeling about it.  I described my day, I described my dilemma, and I shared my emotions.  I shared my tears sometimes, too, which was a helpful release.   I do the same “conversation with another person” type of thinking sometimes when life is feeling challenging and I’m jogging, which is a much less intense way of mulling things over.  When I admitted this to my psychologist aunt she told me that I had become my own best friend.  I liked the sound of that.

The other thing that helped me deal with hardship, (loss in particular), was playing some of the old television shows that brought me back to a really good place from my childhood.  My mother and I, usually with my dad reading in his La-Z-Boy in the corner and my sister and brother upstairs studying, used to watch television shows that she particularly enjoyed.  Ours was an ideal home, full of a calm and peaceful life with caring and rules and limits and love.  Sometimes we’d sit and watch two or three shows back to back. My mom would laugh at each of the different light hearted comedies at least once during each show.  It was really enjoyable.  It was pleasant and secure, and fun.

When my best best best friend in the world died four and a half years ago, my first thought was that I would stick my head in a book and come out when I felt the grief lifting, when the world felt okay again.  I went out and bought War and Peace, about the Napoleonic Wars and the French invasion of Russia, by Leo Tolstoy, because it is famous for its length, (1,273 pages in my edition), and I’m always up for a book that’s been around for a good long time (1869).  I found that I couldn’t focus on even one paragraph; not a single one.  I don’t know how many times I reread the first page of the book, and I couldn’t compute even a single word of it.  I never made it to the second page.  So I gave up after several evenings and instead turned to The Mary Tyler Moore Show (with Rhoda and Phyllis and all three of their fabulous and colorful wardrobes) and The Bob Newhart Show (the one with Emily and her darling floor length sun dresses and her corduroy midi skirts, where Bob is a psychologist before it was cool).  I turned them on, and while I couldn’t exactly laugh, I felt surrounded by a warm sense of comfort.

I’m just wondering if you have a plan, and a place?  Where’s your place?