Tag: Key

  • Compassion Is Key to Our Survival

    Compassion Is Key to Our Survival

    A fun fact about hummingbirds is that they are wary of loud noises. Barking dogs and loud music can scare the tiny creatures away because they don’t feel safe in noisy environments. People respond to unsafe environments like hummingbirds. We avoid situations that don’t feel safe, and when we find ourselves in one, we don’t stay long. But here’s where people differ from hummingbirds: safety issues can confuse us. Sometimes, we don’t recognize that the reason we’re uncomfortable is because we don’t feel safe, and other times we think we feel uncomfortable because we’re not safe, even though that’s not the reason.

    What do you need to be safe and take care of yourself ? The answer may not be as straightforward as it seems. Safety depends, at least in part, on whom you’re with, where you are, and how you feel. When I was in my twenties and thirties, living in New York City on my own, I regularly assessed whether riding the subway at a particular hour or in a certain neighborhood was safe. Later, living in Los Angeles with young children, I made a judgment call on whether their climbing on the high bars of a rickety jungle gym was safe. When they got older, I balanced their wish to be with friends against whether their driving a long distance at night was safe. As an empty nester, my focus shifted back to my husband Seth and me, and whether choices like getting a walk-up apartment rather than one in an elevator building made sense since our ability to climb stairs carrying luggage or groceries would change as we grew older. The answers to these questions hinged on physical safety and the odds of someone getting hurt.

    I don’t think about safety in such literal terms anymore. I now see safety as more nuanced and recognize the ways that my reactions spring from an evolutionary survival mechanism designed to keep me alive to pass my genes on to future generations, rather than critical thinking. We’re hardwired for survival. None of the ideas or takeaways I describe are scary. Still, some might carry you outside your comfort zone and trigger the survival mechanisms that run automatically when you’re in physical danger.

    When we feel safe, we’re in our comfort zones, where we perform well, set appropriate boundaries, rest, recharge, and reflect. It feels good when we’re in our comfort zones, but it’s not where we take risks or where much growth takes place. Development takes place when we’re on the far edge of our comfort zones, stretching existing skills and abilities. When a stretch is in reach, but we feel unsafe anyway, one of our innate survival mechanisms can switch into gear and shut us down. Then, a mechanism designed to protect us short-circuits our growth and gets in the way of reaching our goals. This tendency can be mitigated in several ways, but for now, I’ll mention one: kindness.

    As far back as Charles Darwin, scientists, philosophers, artists, and poets have drawn a straight line between our warmhearted urge to respond to suffering with kindness and the likelihood that we’ll survive, even thrive.

    As far back as Charles Darwin, scientists, philosophers, artists, and poets have drawn a straight line between our warmhearted urge to respond to suffering with kindness and the likelihood that we’ll survive, even thrive. To borrow from the preface of Dacher Keltner’s excellent book, Born to Be Good:[S]urvival of the kindest may be just as fitting a description of our origins as survival of the fittest.”

    Navigating Sorrow With Kindness

    I was introduced to the poem “Kindness” from Naomi Shihab Nye’s first poetry collection when I heard it recited by Jon Kabat-Zinn, the founder of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). Kabat-Zinn and his teaching partner Saki Santorelli (at the time, executive director of the Center for Mindfulness at the University of Massachusetts medical school) were international rock stars in the secular mindfulness world, and I was primed to listen. It was early morning, midway through a weeklong MBSR retreat/training in the late 1990s at the Mount Madonna retreat center in Northern California. Light streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows in the meditation hall to backlight Kabat-Zinn, who was sitting cross-legged on a meditation cushion, up on a dais. The golden early morning light gave him and the entire session an otherworldly quality. He recited the poem from memory to a room full of meditators sitting around him in a semicircle, most of whom were also sitting cross-legged on cushions. One of the images in the poem stood out then and has remained with me since:

    You must wake up with sorrow.
    You must speak to it till your voice
    catches the thread of all sorrows
    and you see the size of the cloth.

    I’m struck by how often I’ve remembered this image of the enormity of sorrow in the world since I first heard it. The phrase has come back to me when someone I love has fallen ill or has died and when the loved ones of people close to me have struggled with illness or death. The size of the cloth hit me at an even greater level of magnitude as I watched news coverage of the Twin Towers coming down on 9/11 in New York City. The size of the cloth was almost unimaginable when I saw footage of the refrigerated trailers parked in front of hospitals in New York City functioning as temporary morgues during the early days of the pandemic. Maybe the theme of Shihab Nye’s poem that “it’s only kindness that makes sense anymore” resonated with me because it echoed rabbinic sage Hillel the Elder’s call to action: “If not now, when? If not me, who?”

    Discomfort is one way our bodies ask us to listen.

    Scientists have long suspected that kindness in response to other people’s pain is a survival mechanism that’s wired into our nervous systems. What’s often harder for people to remember is that kindness in response to our own sorrow is also a survival mechanism. For many of us, being kind to ourselves is more of a leap than being kind to others. It was for me. I thought kindness was the Golden Rule we teach young children—do unto others as you would have them do unto you. It didn’t occur to me to apply the Golden Rule to myself. I wanted to be a good mother, a good partner with Seth in providing for our family, and to make a difference in the world. I was one of the lucky ones and wanted to pay it forward. There was no room for me to take it easy. The harder I tried to do good and be good, the more of a toll it took on me. Still, it didn’t register that the pace at which I was working was unkind to my family and me. I had to burn myself out emotionally and physically a few times before I could internalize the commonsense truth that discomfort is one way our bodies ask us to listen. Just as it took me a while to develop a more nuanced stance toward safety, it took me time to adopt a more expansive idea of kindness that included being kind to myself.

    Exploring What Safety and Kindness Feel Like

    The following practices and activity-based takeaways are designed for you to integrate into daily life easily. Doing them shouldn’t be a heavy lift and tax you, but sometimes, mindfulness and meditation bring up big feelings that are painful to confront. Please be kind to yourself. Take a break if you feel overwhelmed or if discomfort becomes too much to manage easily. Time is your friend when it comes to inner discovery, and you have plenty of room to allow the process to unfold at its own pace.

    Practice: Reflect on What You Need to Feel Safe

    Identifying your safety needs and factoring them into your choices are a meaningful and effective way to be kind to yourself. Ask yourself, “What do I need to feel safe?” “Are my safety needs being met?” “How?” If they aren’t being met, “Why not?” Remember that whether you feel safe depends on various factors, including if you’re tired, hungry, or stressed. When safety and inclusion needs are unacknowledged and unmet, our nervous systems are ripe to become hijacked by one of our innate survival mechanisms.

    Reflecting on safety needs can seem like a waste of time. When you’re in your comfort zone, it’s easy to miss the point of looking at what it takes to feel safe. Here’s why you should do it anyway: If you identify your safety needs up front, while you’re in your comfort zone, you can better take care of yourself later when you are outside of it.

    1. Find a comfortable place where you won’t be interrupted. Close your eyes or softly gaze ahead or downward. 
    2. A few breaths later, listen for the loudest sound. When you are ready, listen for the quietest sound. Don’t chase a sound that’s hard to hear; relax and let it come to you. Let your mind be open and rest in the whole soundscape. 
    3. Ask yourself, “What does it take to feel safe and welcome in a new situation?” Hold the question in mind and listen to the answers that emerge. 
    4. When you’re ready, open your eyes if they are closed and jot down your insights. 
    5. Then, draw three concentric circles on a blank piece of paper. Prioritize your insights by writing the most important ones in the inner circle. Write those that are the least important in the outer circle. Write what’s left on your list in the circle in between. All your insights matter, but doublecheck to ensure the essential items are in the inner circle. 
    6. Review the diagram and consider ways to increase the odds that, in a new situation, you will feel safe and included.

    Takeaway: How might connecting with playfulness, attention, balance, and compassion help you feel safer and more welcome?

    Practice: Let Yourself Be Immersed in Self-Compassion

    Throughout our evolutionary history, humans have relied on kindness to survive. Strong social bonds, effective communication, and meaningful collaboration create a supportive external environment that allows us to thrive in diverse situations and overcome challenges. Similarly, we create a supportive internal environment when we are kind to ourselves, one where we become more emotionally resilient. Kindness is a self-reinforcing behavior. By being kind to ourselves, we can better support and care for those around us. By being kind to others, we build trust, strengthen relationships, and create a sense of social support and belonging that helps us cope with stress and navigate adversity.

    I first learned about the following self-compassion practice reading Zen priest Edward Espe Brown’s book No Recipe: Cooking as a Spiritual Practice where he writes: “[I]n the early ’80s, when Thich Nhat Hanh was giving a talk prior to departing from the San Francisco Zen Center where I was living, he said he had a goodbye present for us. We could, he said, open and use it anytime, and if we did not find it useful, we could simply set it aside. Then he proceeded to explain that, ‘As you inhale, let your heart fill with compassion, and as you exhale, pour the compassion over your head.’”

    1. Imagine you are in a sweltering but beautiful jungle, holding a coconut shell in one hand. Can you feel the rough shell against the palm of your hand? Picture a wooden barrel filled with cool rainwater on the ground next to you. Can you see your reflection in the sparkling water? 
    2. Imagine the rainwater is a nectar of compassion that soothes busy minds and big feelings. As you breathe in, imagine filling the coconut shell with compassionate rainwater. As you breathe out, imagine pouring the nectar of compassion over the crown of your head. 
    3. Let go of the images of the bucket and coconut shell to focus on sensation. Imagine what it would feel like for a nectar of compassion to wash over you and soothe your body from head to toe. 
    4. Starting at the crown of your head, feel the compassion rinse slowly over your face and head, then over your neck, shoulders, chest, upper arms, lower arms, and hands. 
    5. Move your attention to your torso and imagine feeling a nectar of compassion wash slowly over your torso, pelvis, upper legs, knees, lower legs, and feet. 
    6. When you’re ready, lightly rest your attention on your outbreath. If thoughts and emotions arise, don’t fight them. With no goal or purpose, allow your mind to be open and rest.

    Takeaway: Find at least one way to be kind to yourself today, then see if there’s a ripple effect.

    From Real-World Enlightenment: Discovering Ordinary Magic in Everyday Life by Susan Kaiser Greenland © 2024 by S. Greenland, Inc. Reprinted in arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc. Boulder, CO. www.shambhala.com



    Source link

  • Your Key to Body Image Freedom

    Your Key to Body Image Freedom

    I was 13 when I went on my first diet.

    I had been struggling with my weight for about six years, and my obsession with how I looked was starting to dominate my life.

    I only had two to three shirts that I felt comfortable in. The only thing that mattered was that they didn’t make me “feel fat.” Even those chosen shirts were always under my West 49 sweater, for extra coverage.

    The cherry on top of this presentation was my slouched shoulders—a defense mechanism to protect against exposing my “man boobs,” the body part that had dynastic reign for being my biggest insecurity.

    The way I viewed my body governed my self-worth.

    I felt that my body held me back from enjoying countless moments of my life, and by the ripe age of 13, I decided I was sick of it.

    I figured the only way I could change this purgatory was by changing my body.

    I started exercising three to four times a day. For my first two meals a day, I drank a sludge of water mixed with “weight loss smoothie powder” (really just a glorified protein shake). Whenever I “cheated,” I punished myself the next day by eating even less or exercising even more.

    In about 5 months, I lost 60 lbs. One third of my body weight to be exact.

    This was how I spent the summer transitioning from elementary school to high school. Counting calories over making memories.

    To no surprise, this was met with endless praise. And it felt good. Scratch that, it felt incredible.

    I had experienced both sides now: One where I felt valueless because I was in a fatter body, and one where I felt accepted and prized because I was in a thinner body.

    In another version of this story, I might’ve learned something from my newly widened perspective: I might’ve gained empathy, seeing the unfair stigma projected at people in larger bodies. I might’ve gained bravery, advocating for more body acceptance, regardless of someone’s size.

    But instead, I participated in the problem.

    I built up the identity of being a “former fat person” who is proof that “anybody can lose weight.”

    However, as this script typically goes, over the next few years, I gained a lot of the weight back.

    This sent me into a depression. I felt like I had lost my value; like I had won the lottery and blew through my fortune.

    That was the pattern I repeated for almost 15 years.

    Until I stumbled on something called “body neutrality.”

    For me, adopting a more body-neutral approach created a paradigm shift—it offered a way to uncouple my appearance with my happiness. It also caused me to ask some deep questions about my body, and the kind of life I wanted.

    Questions like:

    “Do I want my self worth to be defined by my external appearance?”

    “Do I want to continue this cycle—and potentially pass it on to any future kids I might have?”

    “What would my life look like if I fought to value myself for who I am as opposed to what I look like?”

    My answers weren’t immediately clear. But body neutrality created an opportunity to step off the hamster wheel of chasing aesthetic goals—and finally, truly reflect.

    In this article, I’ll walk you through the process of adopting a more body neutral approach to your own self image and self-care.

    You’ll learn:

    • What body neutrality is
    • How to think about your body and your health—in a way that isn’t dependent on appearance
    • Five actionable, body neutral strategies you can apply today—if you want to stop letting your weight, size, or shape dictate your happiness

    Let’s begin.

    What is body neutrality?

    Body neutrality is a mindset that encourages you to value how your body functions and feels over how it looks. This perspective helps you develop self-acceptance, while still working to care for yourself in ways that promote overall health.

    In practice, this looks like:

    ✅ You exercise and eat nutritiously—not because it makes you look a certain way—but because it makes you feel good.

    ✅ You still have treats (because life is too short to be deprived of pizza!) but you don’t eat them to excess because they don’t make you feel the best, physically.

    ✅ You wear clothes and celebrate your appearance in ways that feel authentic, but how you “display” yourself isn’t the foundation of your self-worth.

    ✅ You don’t always love all aspects of your body, but you don’t let that stop you from enjoying your life; Improving your appearance doesn’t “earn” you the right to be happy.

    ✅ You might still care about how you look, but you broaden your self-concept so it also includes your values and your inherent worthiness as a human.

    I value seeing friends and family. I value playing rec sports. I value new experiences.

    When I’ve been heavier, I’ve neglected these things in favor of isolating myself.

    “I’ll do them again when I lose weight” is something I’ve uttered to myself more times than I can count.

    Body neutrality helped me realize I still deserved these things—no matter how I looked.

    Everyone can benefit from body neutrality.

    Body neutrality isn’t just for people in larger, or otherwise marginalized bodies.

    It’s also useful for people with “ideal bodies,” who’ve been the recipients of validation and privilege because of the way they look.

    “I’ve worked with clients who are fairly satisfied with their appearance, but they still struggle with their body image because their self-worth relies on it,” says Shannon Beer, registered nutritionist and body image coach.

    People with idealized bodies sometimes aren’t living the life they want either, because they have to exhaust their energy to maintain an image of “perfection.”

    (If you want to know what kind of sacrifices it takes to meet those “ideal” standards, check out: The cost of getting lean: Is it really worth the trade-off?)

    “The ‘meh’ is the magic.”

    That’s a quote from Jessi Kneeland, body neutrality coach and author of Body Neutral: A Revolutionary Guide to Overcoming Body Image Issues, when they sat down with some PN coaches to talk about body-neutrality.

    (Want to listen in on the whole conversation? Watch it here: PN Coaches discuss body neutrality and negative self-talk)

    The goal with body neutrality isn’t to love your body and all of its parts all of the time. Nor is it to be so toxically positive that you ignore real—and sometimes negative—feelings about your body.

    That just isn’t realistic for most people.

    Instead, an underrated goal is to feel sort of… meh.

    You’re not overly glorifying or criticizing your body; its appearance just doesn’t hold that much importance.

    Self-hate to self-love process. ... starting with: 1. Super extra really hate self 2. Hate self fairly strongly 3.Kinda hate self 4. Meh 5. You know what, self, you're not complete grabage 6. Hey you, you deserve some care, don't ya? 7. Learning what makes me feel good makes it easier to feel good! 8. Maybe, eventually, I'll get to

    When you’re used to hating your body, getting to neutral (or ‘meh’) can actually be hugely freeing. From there, you may learn to appreciate yourself in a deeper, less appearance-centric way.

    In practice, you may love certain parts about your body—but also feel ambivalent or mildly negative about other parts.

    For example, you may see your stomach and feel ashamed because you don’t like what you see.

    This feeling is uncomfortable, but it’s not “right” or “wrong.” You just don’t want that feeling to dictate your behavior. (Such as seeing your stomach and then saying, “Alright, I’m not going out tonight,” or, “Diet starts tomorrow!”)

    To give you a personal example:

    As a dude living in North America, I feel pretty ‘meh’ about being 5’9” tall.

    Would I love to be 6’2”?

    Sure.

    But I’m not 6’2”—and I can’t change that. My height won’t ruin my day and I surely won’t be depriving myself from the things I enjoy most in this life because of it.

    Body neutrality and aesthetic goals

    Some people worry that if they adopt a more body neutral approach to their health and fitness, it means they have to relinquish any desire for physical change.

    They also might worry that being more body neutral might make them lose certain aspects of their appearance that they like (such as muscular legs or a slim torso).

    Here’s the thing: Body neutrality advocates for health.

    Being body neutral doesn’t mean your body can’t change.

    It just means your self-worth isn’t dependent on that change, and that your whole life isn’t consumed by the pursuit of a physique goal.

    If you’ve been starving yourself and overexercising to the point of burnout, body neutral principles will encourage you to disengage from those extreme activities in the pursuit of a specific physique.

    If you’ve been overeating and avoiding exercise because you can’t stand your body, body neutral principles will encourage you to tune into your genuine sense of care and love for yourself, and help you choose food and movement that support your body—regardless of its shape.

    In this sense, body neutrality can have a balancing effect on health and fitness behaviors, and, according to Beer, is unlikely to take away from physical health, if applied correctly.

    Plus…

    There’s nothing inherently wrong with having an aesthetic goal.

    Body neutrality rejects physical or aesthetic change only if it’s to the detriment of your overall mental, emotional, social, physical, and existential health.

    5 things you can do today to be more body neutral

    Congratulations: Just setting the intention to step away from an appearance-centric approach to health and fitness is a great start.

    But, ultimately, it’s only action that creates deep, lasting change.

    So, here are five tangible strategies you can work on immediately to develop a more body neutral approach.

    Strategy #1: Do the things you love today.

    Stop waiting to achieve the “ideal” body in order to be able to enjoy your life, and start doing more of what you love now.

    Start with something easy that you tend to stop yourself from doing when you feel insecure about your appearance.

    When I was in my worst spots, I stayed inside too much—even though I love being outside. It might sound silly but even reading outdoors in nice weather was helpful for me.

    The point is: It can be that small.

    Find one thing you’ve deprived yourself of in the past and do it—even if it’s a small dose, regardless of how you feel. Re-teach yourself that you don’t need a certain body shape or size to allow joy into your life.

    (If you want more ideas on how to stop thinking you’re simply [insert thing you think you need] away from being happy, check out: “I’ll be happier when I lose weight” is a recipe for regret. Here’s the counterintuitive solution)

    Strategy #2: Set body-neutral goals.

    This is a gamechanger in my coaching experience. I’ve seen clients transform their relationship with exercise when they focus more on what they can do as opposed to how they look. “I feel so much better but I haven’t lost any weight,” is a sentence I’ve heard repeatedly.

    When you’re overly appearance-centered or focused on weight, you risk missing other indicators of progress—like how good you feel.

    If your fitness goals tend to be aesthetic-centric, try setting a goal that has nothing to do with how you look.

    This can look like:

    ▶ Setting strength and performance goals in fitness (such as beating a deadlift PR, or a sprint time)

    ▶ Practicing slow, mindful eating at more meals (if you usually inhale your meals in seven minutes tops, see if you can make a meal last 20 minutes, chewing your food well and savoring each bite)

    ▶ Working to develop a new a skill in the gym (like your first pull-up, or a cool Olympic lift, like a clean and jerk)

    None of these depend on your appearance; They’re all focused on what you can do. (And chances are, you’ll feel more empowered than ever when you start achieving them.)

    Strategy #3: Curate your environment.

    Take control of the parts of your environment that feed the body-image obsessed wolf. Starve that beast wherever you can.

    Here are some ideas:

    ▶ Unfollow social media accounts that prey on insecurity or promote unrealistic ideals. Follow more that are body-neutral, or inspire other aspects of your personality (like comedy, or crafting).

    ▶ See what it’s like to reduce your exposure to your own appearance. This can look like having fewer mirrors (or covering some up for a period of time), or turning off the self-view on Zoom.

    ▶ Consider ditching the scale. Most people struggle to stay “neutral” about whatever number that shows up.

    ▶ Set boundaries around body talk. Some environments are rife with commentary about body hang ups or goals. If someone begins talking about their new weight loss diet or “disgusting gut,” try changing the topic, or just exit the conversation. Eventually, people will realize you’re not the right audience.

    Strategy #4: Find your people.

    Body neutrality won’t be the most common approach you’ll run into in the fitness world.

    But, intentionally seeking out and surrounding yourself with more body neutral folks can keep you from constantly getting sucked back into an appearance-centric mindset.

    There are body neutral, body positive, or HAES (health at every size) community groups all over social media and the internet, and this can be parlayed into finding local groups near you too.

    Seeking out these spaces will only provide more support—and positive momentum—as you pursue a more body neutral approach.

    Strategy #5: Strive for improvement, not perfection.

    You don’t need to be a body-neutral icon or master. The expectation is not that you 100 percent divest from focusing on your appearance.

    Body neutrality exists on a continuum.

    Assess where you are right now in terms of how appearance-centric you are when it comes to health and fitness. If all your eggs are in the “aesthetics basket,” then even taking one metaphorical egg out (and say, putting it in the “gardening” basket) is progress.

    Use the list of suggestions above to set some small goals, and just begin where you can.

    You might always care about your appearance (maybe even more than average), but if it’s progress from where you started, you’re winning.

    What life on “the other side” looks like

    Even after sharing all of this, I won’t sit here and lie to you by saying I’m pure-bred body-neutral, all the time.

    But I like to think I’ve grown a lot since my days of hiding out inside during “fat days.”

    I’m better at doing the things I love, even when I don’t feel confident in my body.

    I’m better at wearing comfortable clothing when I don’t feel good about my body— instead of cramming myself into something that’s too tight and suffering all day.

    And, I’ve expanded the way I see fitness for myself and my clients, focusing more on feel and function, rather than achieving a certain look.

    For me, this is progress.

    Yours might look different.

    Be kind to yourself, and acknowledge that you might be working through decades of programming. Body neutrality sure isn’t a quick fix, but the lasting freedom, joy, and genuine sense of self-worth it offers is worth it.

    If you’re a coach, or you want to be…

    You can help people build sustainable nutrition and lifestyle habits that will significantly improve their physical and mental health—while you make a great living doing what you love. We’ll show you how.

    If you’d like to learn more, consider the PN Level 1 Nutrition Coaching Certification.

    Source link