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Just One Thing |
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Simple Practices for Resilience and Happiness from |
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DR. RICK HANSON |
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When you don't feel seen, valued, or appreciated, it can leave a deep ache that's hard to shake. My upcoming Self-Worth Workshop helps you develop an inner sense of worth that doesn't depend on others recognizing it first. Sign up by Friday to save 25%. |
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What's the hurry? |
THE PRACTICE: |
Avoid The Rush. |
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— Why? — |
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As I was meditating one morning, our cat hopped up onto my lap. It felt sweet to sit there with him. And yet - even though I was feeling fine and had plenty of time, there was this internal pressure to start zipping along with emails and calls and all the other clamoring minutiae of the day.
You see the irony. We rush about as a means to an end: as a method for getting results in the form of good experiences, such as relaxation and happiness. Hanging out with our cat, I was afloat in good experiences. But the autopilot inside the coconut still kept trying to suck me back into methods for getting relaxation and happiness - as if I weren't already feeling that way! And of course, by jumping up and diving into doingness, I'd break the mood and lose the relaxation and happiness . . . that is the point of doingness.
Sometimes we do need to rush. Maybe you've got to get your kid to school on time, or your boss really has to have that report by end of the day. OK.
But much of the time, we rev up and race about because of unnecessary internal pressures (like unrealistic standards for ourselves) or because external forces are trying to hurry us along for their own purposes (not because of our own needs).
How do you feel when you're rushing? Perhaps there's a bit of positive excitement, but if you're like me, there's mostly if not entirely a sense of tension, discomfort, and anxiety. This kind of stress isn't pleasant for the mind, and over time it's really bad for the body. Plus there's a loss of autonomy: the rush is pushing you one way or another rather than you yourself deciding where you want to go and at what pace.
Instead, how about stepping aside from the rush as much as you can? And into your own well-being, health, and autonomy? |
— How? — |
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For starters, be mindful of rushing - your own and others. See how other people assume deadlines that aren't actually real or get time pressured and intense about things that aren't that important. (And yep, you get to decide for yourself what you think is real or important.) Notice the internal shoulds or musts or simply habits that speed you up.
Then, when the demands of others bear down upon you, buy yourself time - what the psychologist and Buddhist teacher Tara Brach calls "the sacred pause" - in order to create a space in which you are free to choose how you will respond. Are you letting the rushing of others become your own? Slow down the conversation, ask questions, and find out what's really true. Consider the sign I once saw in a car repair shop: "Your lack of planning is not my emergency."
On your own side of the street, try not to create "emergencies" for yourself. You can get a lot done at your own pace without rushing; plan ahead and don't procrastinate until you're forced into hurrying. More fundamentally, be realistic about your own resources. It's a kind of modesty, a healthy humility, to finally admit to yourself and maybe others that you can't carry five quarts in a one-gallon bucket. There are 168 hours in a week, not 169. It's also a kind of healthy renunciation, relinquishment, to set down the ego, drivenness, appetite, or ambition that overcommits and sets you up for rushing. And it's a matter of seeing clearly what is, a matter of being in reality rather than being confused or, in a sense, deluded.
Nkosi Johnson was the South African boy born with HIV who became a national advocate for children with AIDS before dying at about age 12, and not one of us can do more than what he said here: Do all you can, with what you have, in the time you have, in the place where you are.
Also watch how the mind routinely gets caught up in becoming: in making plans that draw us into desires that draw us into rushing. The trick is to see this happening before it captures you.
Most deeply, try to rest in and enjoy the richness of this moment. Even an ordinary moment - with its sounds, sights, tastes, smells, sensations, feelings, and thoughts - is amazingly interesting and rewarding. Afloat in the present, there's no need to rush along to anything else.
Even when you don't have a cat in your lap. |
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NEW PLACE TO CHECK OUT MY STUFF: |
I'm on Substack! |
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If you prefer Substack as your place to read articles, you can now find new writings from me there. And if you've never used Substack but want to check out a different kind of article from me, check it out! |
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NEW ON THE BEING WELL PODCAST |
The Self-Abandonment Loop: Shame, Self-Criticism, and How to Break Free |
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Why is it so hard for us to do what we actually want to do? In this episode, Forrest explains the hidden structure of self-abandonment: how shame drives the loop, how the loop produces more shame, and how the inner critic uses a "can't win" situation to keep us stuck. Then he and Dr. Rick explore what actually breaks the cycle, including the role of anger, the difference between shame and grief, self-compassion, and what it really means to get on your own side. |
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NEW FROM THE WEDNESDAY MEDITATIONS + TALKS |
Wise and Courageous Compassion for Others – and Yourself |
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Last week I offered a live meditation on In the Enoughness of the Present, followed by a talk on Wise and Courageous Compassion for Others – and Yourself, and I hope you'll check it out.
If you haven't yet, sign up to join me every week for this free, live offering.
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MORE GOOD STUFF |
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SCIENCE NEWS (VIEW ARCHIVE HERE)
Scientists have shown recently that potatoes can grow in Moon-like soil if you mix in a bit of worm-made compost, though the plants get stressed and soak up extra metals like copper and zinc. Even so, their nutritional value ends up surprisingly similar to regular Earth potatoes, hinting that lunar farming might be workable with some careful tweaking.
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FOR PARENTS
It's really natural to feel pulled in a million directions when you're a parent. And, unfortunately, some important goals or needs of yours can get pushed to the back burner indefinitely. To deal with this, it helps a lot to have some sense of your guiding purposes and priorities.
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NEW BOOK - NOW AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER |
A Happy, Healthy Mom |
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This gentle, practical guide is for mothers who feel exhausted, overwhelmed, or stretched too thin during the early years of raising a child. I wrote this book with my wife, Jan (a nutrition expert) and my good friend Ricky Pollycove (a gynecologist-obstetrician) to help moms reconnect with their own needs, restore their energy, reduce stress, and feel more supported—physically and emotionally. If you're a mom - or know one who could use some more support, I hope you'll check it out!
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WORDS OF WISDOM |
"On your own side of the street, try not to create "emergencies" for yourself. You can get a lot done at your own pace without rushing." |
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— RICK HANSON, PHD |
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JUST ONE THING (JOT) is the free newsletter that suggests a simple practice each week for more joy, more fulfilling relationships, and more peace of mind. A small thing repeated routinely adds up over time to produce big results.
Just one thing that could change your life. (© Rick Hanson, 2024) |
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