Delete Holiday Stress!
By Dr. Margaret PaulDecember 22, 2014
Are your holidays stressful instead of peaceful? Do you feel overwhelmed instead of having fun? You CAN change your holiday season from stressful to peaceful and fun!
The holidays are supposed to be a time of celebration when friends and families get together to share food, fun, gifts and love. They are supposed to be a time of giving, caring and connection when we celebrate important and meaningful events.
Why, then, are they often so stressful and what can we do to make them more fun and peaceful?
Changing the holiday season from stressful to peaceful depends upon one thing: INTENT. Your intent is whatever is most important to you in any particular moment or situation.
At any given moment, we are always in one of two intents. Put in simple terms, it is either more important to you in any given moment to:
1) Be loving to yourself and others, or
2) Get love and approval
Your intent determines your behavior and many of your feelings. Let's take an example.
Yvette is married with two children. Yvette grew up in a family where she was trained to define her self-worth through other's approval - that is, Yvette believes that if others value what she does, she is okay, but if they don't, then she is unworthy and unlovable. Therefore, Yvette's almost constant intent is to have control over getting love and approval. She does this by trying to do everything perfectly - the house has to be perfect, the food has to be perfect, and she has to get everyone perfect gifts. She believes that if everything is perfect, she can have control over how others feel about her and she will get the approval she believes she needs to feel worthy.
The problem is that trying to do everything perfectly creates a lot of stress. Whatever means we use - whether it be perfection, compliance, anger or blame - we will always be stressed when the intent is to have control over getting love and approval.
Because Yvette does not know how to define her own worth, she feels empty inside until she gets approval. Once she gets the approval, she feels a moment of fullness, which rapidly disappears and she then needs to fill up again with more approval. Others around her feel her pull for approval, and may also feel stressed in the face of it. They may like what she does for them, but they may not feel loved by her giving to them to get their approval.
Deena is also married with children. Deena also grew up to believe that her worth was based on others' approval. However, Deena has done enough Inner Bonding to learn to define her own worth. Because she is no longer dependent upon others' approval to define her worth, she is free to express herself in ways that are loving to herself and others. Rather than worrying about what anyone will think of her, Deena joyfully goes about decorating, cooking and buying presents because it's fun for her to do so. For Deena, the holidays are an opportunity to express herself and her love for others. Because she is defining and expressing her own worth, she feels full inside. Approval may be the icing on the cake, but it is not the cake itself.
Because Deena receives such joy from expressing herself and giving to others without needing anything in return to feel worthy, others feel loved by her giving. While others may be stressed if they are giving to get approval, Deena herself remains peaceful and joyful.
We all have a choice each moment to decide who we want to be - a person who is trying to have control over getting love and approval, or a person who is giving love to ourselves and others. Who we decide to be determines much of how we feel. If our intent is to get love and approval, then we may think that others determine all of our feelings, but it is really our own intent that is responsible for much of how we end up feeling.
Why not start now noticing your intent and practicing Inner Bonding? Why not do all you can right now to have a wonderful holiday season!
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Daily Inspiration
True compassion starts with oneself. If you extend compassion to others before giving it to yourself, you are giving from an empty place and your compassion may be manipulative. But if you give it to yourself and then extent it to others, you are giving from a full place within. Then your compassion is truly loving and healing, because you don't need anything back.
By Dr. Margaret Paul