Friday, July 10, 2009
Moving Day!
Monday, July 6, 2009
The Elephant in the Room
5. It there's an 'elephant in the room' talk about it.
How many times have you had a conversation with someone while being really careful not to mention the elephant in the room? Think of all the energy it takes to walk that mine field. Really, it's energy that could be used for something else... Like having an honest, open relationship with someone maybe? The next time this happens, try saying the words: The 'elephant in the room is...' then talk about whatever awkward subject needs to be spoken about.
Monday, June 29, 2009
Rule Number Four
4. Speak the truth.
I like mine better, of course! Here's why: It's positive. It says what to do instead of what NOT to do. As humans we always seem to respond better to positives. I've spent three days trying to think up wise things about rule four that you don't already know and can't come up with anything. Just speak the truth, to yourself, to others.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
The Science of Happiness
In general the epidemiological data show that only 20 percent of Americans are flourishing. The rest are either languishing or just getting by. Maybe they remember a time in their lives when things were coming together easily; there wasn't a lot of self-concern, self-scrutiny, or self-loathing because they were focused outward and contributing ot the world. But now they're just doing the minimum necessary to get by. This "just getting by" mode is not depression or mental illness. It's mere ly lpeople lifing lives of quiet despair. Upwards of 60 percent of the adult population feel like they're going through the motions.
~~~~~
Nobody in positive psychology is advocating full-time, 100 percent happiness. The people who do beest in life don't have zero negative emotions. In the wake of traumas and difficulties, the people who are most resilient have a complex emotional reaction in which they're able to hold the negative and the positive side by side. Say you're in mourning for a spouse, but you're still able to laugh or feel blessed when you appreciate the deceased's good qualities, or to appreciate that your neighbors are taking such good care of you. It doesn't mean that you're not deeply pained by the death. And the positive emotions you feel are quiet, more reverent. Denying the negative and painting on thpositive is unhealthy, and nobody who makes it their goal never to express a negative emotion quickly drives everyone away from them, because we know their positivity isn't real. And the reason we know it's not real is that emotions should reflect our circumstances, and nobody goes through life with 100 percent good circumstances. There's no escaping loss, grief, trauma and insult.
~~~~~
Negativity doesn't always feel like a choice; it feels like it just lands on you , and you have to deal with it. Positive emotions, I think, are more of a choice.
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(On ways to increase one's positivity) One way is to be aware of the present moment, because, again, most moments are positive. We miss many opportunities to experience positive emotions now by thinking too much about the past or worrying about the future, rather than being open to what is.
Another way is to pay attention to human kindness - not only what other have done for you, which helps unlock feelings of gratitude, but also what you can do for other people, how you can make somebody's day. We found that even just paying attention to when you are kind - not necessarily increasing how often you're kind, but just paying attention to the times when you are - can make you more positive.
Another simple technique is going outside in good weather. One of my former students, Matt Keller, who's not on the faculty at the University of Colorado at Boulder, found that people who spend even just thirty minutes outisde when the weather is good show an improvement in their mood. There are more-involved ways to increase your positive emotions, such as to practice either mindfulness meditation of lovingkindness meditation. You can also rearrange your life around your strengths. Ask yourself: Am I really doing what I do best? Being employed in a job that uses your skills is a great source of enduring positive emotions.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
The Secret / Rule #3
3. Do nothing in secret.
I like to use this rule when I have an agenda. Getting the agenda out in the open frees me to be completely in the moment with another person. I'm also a fan of admitting mistakes, even if no one knows about them, by turning myself in. Do this, too, when you've broken an agreement, turn yourself in and make a new agreement. Try keeping everything in the open by doing nothing in secret. Speaking my agendas, turning myself in, and owning my mistakes has fundamentally changed my intimate relationships for the better.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Who's in the Driver's Seat?
2. Listen to your heart, then do what it says.
When I operate from a heart space there's no deliberation, only one clear answer. That one answer is always compassionate, loving and the right answer for the situation. It's important to remember that this rule has two parts. Knowing what my heart says isn't enough, I must take action. Without action, it's just masturbation, just for myself.
Give this rule a try the next time a decision looms ahead. Give your brain a vacation. Listen to your heart, do what it says.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
The 10 Commandments

The rules are in a somewhat random order, except for the first one. It's the most important and every other rule is a subset of it:
1. Love ruthlessly.
It's one thing to love, it's completely different to love ruthlessly! To love ruthlessly is to love with complete abandon, getting vulnerable and staying there. It's loving people on their terms while avoiding thought of what I want it to look like. It's putting my heart in the driver's seat and giving my brain the day off. When I love ruthlessly my life gets better, my decisions are from the heart and I'm more compassionate and caring toward everyone, including myself.
That's the first commandment, love ruthlessly. It's easy and it's hard, just like everything else. What does ruthless love look like to you?
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Brother Cesare Bonizzi

"I do it to convert people to life, to understand life, to grab hold of life, to savour it and enjoy it. Full stop"I want to be just like Brother Cesare when I grow up!
Monday, March 23, 2009
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Compassion
Morning Poem
FIND A BETTER JOB
Now
That
All your worry
Has proved such an
Unlucrative
Business,
Why
Not
Find a better
Job.
- The Gift: Poems by Hafiz, The Great Sufi Master, Translations by Daniel Landinsky
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Poem
Civilization
by Carl Phillips March 23, 2009
There’s an art
to everything. How
the rain means
April and an ongoing-ness like
that of song until at last
it ends. A centuries-old
set of silver handbells that
once an altar boy swung,
processing . . . You’re the same
wilderness you’ve always
been, slashing through briars,
the bracken
of your invasive
self. So he said,
in a dream. But
the rest of it—all the rest—
was waking: more often
than not, to the next
extravagance. Two blackamoor
statues, each mirroring
the other, each hoisting
forever upward his burden of
hand-painted, carved-by-hand
peacock feathers. Don’t
you know it, don’t you know
I love you, he said. He was
shaking. He said,
I love you. There’s an art
to everything. What I’ve
done with this life,
what I’d meant not to do,
or would have meant, maybe, had I
understood, though I have
no regrets. Not the broken but
still flowering dogwood. Not
the honey locust, either. Not even
the ghost walnut with its
non-branches whose
every shadow is memory,
memory . . . As he said to me
once, That’s all garbage
down the river, now. Turning,
but as the utterly lost—
because addicted—do:
resigned all over again. It
only looked, it—
It must only look
like leaving. There’s an art
to everything. Even
turning away. How
eventually even hunger
can become a space
to live in. How they made
out of shamelessness something
beautiful, for as long as they could.
I found the poem here.
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Repost - After you watch/read the news... Read This!
"We are experiencing the initiation of the human race into a new level of consciousness, and that is a very terrifying experience. It does no good to turn and run from the terror of our darkness into light; we must sit it out: zazen.
"We must take our counsel from The Tibetan Book of the Dead and realize that these frightening projections of famines, economic disasters, ecological catastrophes, floods, earthquakes, and wars are all only the malevolent aspects of beneficent deities. If we sit and observe them, do not identify with them, but remember our Buddha-nature, we will not be dragged down by them into an incarnation of the hell they prefigure.
"If we run from them, we validate them; we give the projections the very psychic energy they need to overtake us. Then, as Jung has pointed out, the situation will happen outside as fate."
- William Irwin Thompson, Evil and World Order