Greetings Everyone,
I can’t tell you how wonderful it is to have found this forum. I feel like I’ve been searching for a similar space to share my journey for quite some time, and to have finally found this site has immediately eased some of the anxiety I’ve been carrying with me in the recent past.
I’ll start with a brief introduction about myself: I’m from Australia, blessed with a gorgeous family that I love and who love me. Life is good, in that we’re surrounded by a loving family and from a material perspective we have a roof over our heads, clothes on our backs and food in our belly’s.
In a most confounding way I’ve found that despite life gaining more and more consistency relative to the things that I thought mattered most i.e. family, the quality of relationships I hold dear, and the capacity for me to feed and protect my family I’ve observed an increase in my levels of anxiety, frustrations and fears.
These thoughts and feelings seem centred around expectations and standards I have of myself, and that others have of me. Sometimes the most mundane act can trigger quite uncomfortable feelings and sensations of anxiety if and when it doesn’t measure up to my own expectations. These acts are at times relatively involuntary and outside of my control: for example maintaining eye contact with someone, or are a little more structured but no less foreboding in the way they make me feel e.g. delivering a piece of work as part of my job that doesn’t measure up in terms of quality, speed or expectations.
As such, I now find myself in a space where my peace of mind is being compromised daily. As I mentioned above, the anxiety surfaces in the moment: I could be talking to someone and immediately a thought enters my head about ensuring I don’t say something silly or stupid and my focus shifts and I’m caught up in a paradigm of unconscious awkwardness as my mind tries to juggle the conversation I’m having with the fear of it going awry. Similarly the most structured areas in my life also appear to be caught up in this with my mind almost automatically starting catastrophise things when faced with the smallest hurdle or obstacle.
Resilience and vulnerability are traits I’ve struggled with my whole life, I have, until now, been able to counter that through my own personal energy and drive. That though seems to be on short supply of late.
To counter all of this I’ve reaffirmed my commitment to mindfulness. I meditate on most days, alternating between guided meditation and meditation that focuses on my breathing and it seems to help: but of course I have good days and bad ones.
I’m hoping to use this forum to gain some more insight into how I may continue to detach myself from the worries, fears and anxieties that seem to be hanging around me more and more of late by adopting a practice of mindfulness in what is becoming an increasingly stressful and anxious world.
Thank you for taking the time to read this rather long introduction and I look forward to becoming an active contributor of this community.
Sincerely,
Nomad
G'Day from Down Under
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- Posts: 13
Hello Nomad - I think you might have the best user name ever
Thank you for your introduction and a very warm welcome to the community. I look forward to reading your posts and sharing the journey with you.
Thank you for your introduction and a very warm welcome to the community. I look forward to reading your posts and sharing the journey with you.
“Being mindful means that we take in the present moment as it is rather than as we would like it to be.”
Mark Williams
http://adlibbed.blogspot.co.uk/p/mindfulness-me-enjoy-silence.html
Find me on twitter - @feehutch
Mark Williams
http://adlibbed.blogspot.co.uk/p/mindfulness-me-enjoy-silence.html
Find me on twitter - @feehutch
Galactic Nomad wrote:but of course I have good days and bad ones.
You wouldn't be human if you didn't.
It's lovely to meet you - great username.
Mindfulness won't stop you having bad days, but hopefully it will begin to teach you that the bad days are just that - bad days. The day will be over soon enough, and there is sure to be a good day along soon enough.
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- Posts: 13
Thank you Gareth & Fee for such a warm welcome!
Indeed, yesterday was such a day: in that I was conscious of my rising anxiety and in an attempt to observe them mindfully in a non judgemental (all be it tentative, and slightly fearful) way I was able to let the anxiety pass and I was again able to focus on the present moment through breath.
It was relieving, and slightly liberating. The challenge now for me is consistency, and action. I've isolated my anxiety down to my current job which is incredibly stressful and riddled with a lot of pressure and risk if I don't deliver on what I'm working on. Perhaps a uniquely "first world problem" (if I can borrow the term!) I'll open a thread in the broader sections on how those of us operating in similar environments can use mindfulness to be conscious, at peace, focussed and dare I say it "effective"?
Thank you again, the simple ability for me to put these thoughts down has acted as some what of a balm to ease what was turning into a very ragged and uncomfortable experience for me, and I am already benefiting from the gift of perspective and non judgemental awareness.
Sincerely
Nomad
P.S. If you're ever in Sydney drop me a PM and I'll buy you a beer!
Mindfulness won't stop you having bad days, but hopefully it will begin to teach you that the bad days are just that - bad days. The day will be over soon enough, and there is sure to be a good day along soon enough.
Indeed, yesterday was such a day: in that I was conscious of my rising anxiety and in an attempt to observe them mindfully in a non judgemental (all be it tentative, and slightly fearful) way I was able to let the anxiety pass and I was again able to focus on the present moment through breath.
It was relieving, and slightly liberating. The challenge now for me is consistency, and action. I've isolated my anxiety down to my current job which is incredibly stressful and riddled with a lot of pressure and risk if I don't deliver on what I'm working on. Perhaps a uniquely "first world problem" (if I can borrow the term!) I'll open a thread in the broader sections on how those of us operating in similar environments can use mindfulness to be conscious, at peace, focussed and dare I say it "effective"?
Thank you again, the simple ability for me to put these thoughts down has acted as some what of a balm to ease what was turning into a very ragged and uncomfortable experience for me, and I am already benefiting from the gift of perspective and non judgemental awareness.
Sincerely
Nomad
P.S. If you're ever in Sydney drop me a PM and I'll buy you a beer!
- Metaphysical Me
- Posts: 169
Ooh, hi I'm from Oz too, but living in Europe these days. I really liked your post. XXX
I've been practising formal meditation for 15 years.
*~*~*~* I love keeping beginner's mind. *~*~*~*
Not a fan of mindfulness being taken tooo seriously.
*~*~*~* I love keeping beginner's mind. *~*~*~*
Not a fan of mindfulness being taken tooo seriously.
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