These are often symptoms that you have
an internalised self-critic at work and signs that you need to take
care of your emotional wellbeing and develop a more compassionate
self. Self compassion is the very opposite of self pity in that it
encourages you to develop a caring but wiser approach to managing
difficult emotions so that rather than using self-sabotaging
behaviours such as overeating to cope you take an active but kind
interest in your own emotional wellbeing. You can improve your
fitness through exercise and diet, you can improve your intellect
through education and skills training but to improve your emotional
wellbeing you need something quite different. That something may well
be mindfulness training.
In February, we are holding our next
Stress Management And Relaxation Techniques (SMART) programme at the
Norwich Wellbeing Centre, a 6 week course that teaches you to create
a more positive relationship with yourself. Using mindfulness,
meditation and visualisation it connects your emotional wellbeing
with your real-world existence where family and work responsibilities
and pressures are ever present. You will learn how anxiety is just as
much a physical as an emotional condition and how to create a more
harmonious mind-body connection. You will explore your own
relationship with anxiety and how anxiety can represent a low-level
nagging fear, or sometimes terror, which can sometimes give rise to
outbursts of anger.
You will learn how to treat yourself
with compassion and to extend your feelings of compassion to those
you love. In this way you will learn to treat yourself more kindly
but without destructive self-pity.
The wide adoption of mindfulness for
emotional wellbeing stems from the power that mindfulness has in
teaching us to live in the present; to learn to adopt “being mode”
rather than “doing mode”. In western culture we tend to default
to living in doing mode in which we are consumed by the need to plan,
to achieve and to acquire. Often this leads a disconnect in what we
become in order to live and what we would like to be which in turn
leads to emotional distress and the symptoms of stress.
Mindfulness teaches us to enter being
mode in which we live in the present. This does not suggest shrinking
away from responsibilities or ambition but teaches us to enjoy this
moment, which makes us more effective and can help us achieve while
at the same time enjoying this moment and this task.
We learn to be mindful by using breathing, meditation and
visualisation, but this is only the start. Can we be mindful in a
meeting or when with the family? Can we present in this moment time
and in this place with these people? Can we look on ourselves and
others with compassion?
For more information about the Stress
Management And Relaxation course, please visits www.innercalm.co.uk.
The course is limited to a maximum of 12 people. The normal cost of
the course is £180 but there is a £30 discount for places booked by
the 8th January and a further £30 discount for liking the
the Inner Calm Facebook page. At £120, perhaps a place on the course would make
a fantastic Christmas gift.
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