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Strength and Resilience

Tag Archives: Health

The Spiral Stair

28 Wednesday Jan 2015

Posted by strength and resilience in Advanced Reset technique, Simple Reset for Adults

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Health, Spirituality, Stress

When you want to institute a change in your life by changing your behavior, whether it is by actively taking something away, (i.e. less eating, less drinking, less time online), or by adding something, (more time at the gym, practicing meditation), an optimist’s perception, (“it’ll be no problem”), is represented by the following picture.

You just take the first step, and then climb ‘away’ from the initial starting point of your decision, until you you have moved far away from where you began.

For many people the optimist’s stairs lead to disappointment, as there is no way to understand the phenomena of ‘backsliding’, except as return to the beginning.

This next picture represents the way people who struggle to hold onto a change may experience life, as a set of steps that always return to the same point.

Climbing these stairs can bring feelings of cynicism, resentment, impotency, anxiety, paralysis, and the development of a pessimist’s attitude (“it’ll never work”) towards self change.

The final picture represents a third way of looking at life, as a set of stairs that spiral around a central point. The central axis in this set of stairs represents the central, ‘given’ aspects of a person’s character that are always there, no matter how far one may climb. On these stairs you are always you, just ‘further along’.

Setbacks, backsliding, and re-starts should be viewed as part of the process of solidifying change, and if you treat yourself with compassion in those moments of ‘not again…’, you will make it less difficult to take another step on the stairs. This is the realist’s attitude towards self-change.

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You won’t, without will

17 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by strength and resilience in Simple Reset for Adults

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Health, Spirituality, Stress

When you make the decision that you want to introduce something new that is ‘good for you’ into your life – will you be able to follow through? Your intent will work as the instigator of the process; but you’ll still need a method to help you integrate the new activity, to carry through and make real what has started as ‘just an idea’.

heavenJust because something may be good for you, like a particular diet, a fitness plan, a school course, or a stress reduction technique like the Simple Reset, does not mean that you will find a way to actually include it in your life.

Perceived value may have brought you to the initial decision to try something new, but the energy to carry on in this new direction is not a given, no matter how much you know that it would be good for you.

Though willpower is often thought of as an enviable psychological trait rooted in the invisible world of your mind, recent studies have shown it is governed by similar energetic processes that power your body’s other systems.

Early in the day, with proper rest, and nutrition, the maximum amount of your willpower will be available to you. However, as your day continues, and especially if you have made many decisions that involve compromises between ‘wants’, (i.e. I was nice to my friend/co-worker, though I really wanted to be angry, or, I didn’t take a second cookie at lunch), your willpower reserve drains like the energy in a battery.

Each time you made a choice or compromise of some sort during the day is the same as a ‘use’ of your battery. The more decisions, no matter how small, the more the battery drains.

A normally stressed day for most people sends them home with very little willpower left to concentrate on something new, like a meditation practice, a book, or a new eating regimen. This is why diets invariably fail at night, and the bag of snacks that you easily walk past at six, ends up in your hands at ten.

An interesting ‘trick’ to manage the inevitable drain of the willpower reserve, is to take the ‘decision’ making out of the daily process. Schedule your new activity at a time when you have willpower.

Want to practice a short, 3-minute stress reduction technique? Program your phone’s alarm to ring at a certain time during the day, and schedule your daily calendar so that you’ll be free at that time. The best times would be early in the day, immediately after coffee break or at the end of lunch.

If you wait till you ‘feel like it’, or until you ‘have time’, then you must rely on having enough willpower to make and hold onto the choice in the face of all distractions.

One time daily is enough to begin to build a lifetime health practice like the Simple Reset. Don’t wait till you have the time, till the evening, till all else is taken care of. Schedule it.

mountainFurther reading: Baumeister, R., & Tierney, J. (2011) Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength. New York: Penguin Press.

Walk this way

04 Sunday Jan 2015

Posted by strength and resilience in Thinking Self Defense for Adults

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Health, Martial Arts, Spirituality

streetLike the hunting lions described in our previous post, There are Lions out there, human social predators rely on their eyes to give them cues on choosing a potential victim.

An individual’s manner of moving can influence the perceptions of observers. Studies have shown that movement cues can reveal aspects of personality, life satisfaction, and sexual orientation. Body language is also symptomatic of an individual’s level of vulnerability – indicating dominance or submissiveness, powerfulness, self-confidence, vulnerability to assault, and history of physical and psychological injury.

As this applies to self-defense, research has directly tied specific movement cues found within an individual’s manner of walking to the likelihood of being victimized through assault.

If your way of walking includes the following ways of moving, you are likely to be seen as more vulnerable to attack.

Short strides
Lifting or shuffling steps
Constrained (tight) shoulder and arm movement
Constrained hip movement
Hesitant or slow pace
Confusion or distraction
Impaired walk (by injury or clothing)
 

However, if your way of walking includes the following ways of moving, you will be seen as less vulnerable to attack.

Lengthened stride
Swinging foot placement
Swinging arm movement
Unconstrained torso/hip movement
Direct pace
Attentive
Unimpaired (full body) movement

In a study by Book, Costello and Camiller (2013) this second set of movement cues is found to be effective in conveying a perception of assertion and less vulnerability to a group of criminals who were serving time for crimes involving physical assault.

Like animals in ‘nature’, human social predators seek signs that signal vulnerability in a potential target in order to increase the likelihood of a successful attack. Movement cues that signal you are less vulnerable, mean you are less likely to be a potential victim.

We teach these easily learned movement cues in our workshop Thinking Self Defense as an essential element of the second level of the three level pyramid described in the post: The Pyramid of Self Defense

Sources and further reading:
Book, Costello, Camiller (2013)
Grayson & Stein, 1981
Gunns, Johnston, & Hudson, 2002
Sakaguchi & Hasegawa, 2006

No Blame

28 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Advanced Reset technique, Simple Reset for Adults

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Brain, Health, Spirituality

walkWhen we try something new, and fail, we often blame ourselves. I should have more willpower, I can’t focus, my life is too stressful. Or we blame others, my boss, my teacher, my spouse, my family, my past, my partner; they aren’t helping, they’re too demanding, there’s not enough time.

As it turns out, failure is part of the learning process for almost everyone. People who can do something instantly to an expert level are so rarely found, that they have their own word to describe them; prodigy.

 For the rest of all of us, there should be no blame in failing.

Blame hijacks the learning process, sidetracking it away from consolidation, reflection, and response, into a reactive-predictive cycle of ‘I can’t do it, because….’. Blame works as an anchor to the past, and change can only happen in the present.  Failure to get it right, and examining why without blame, is the way it is done, all the way to mastery.

Don’t blame yourself for practicing the blame game; just realize that it is not an effective tool for building a future you.

With something that is as self initiated as the Simple Reset Technique, there will be many times that you have to ‘start over’, because something came up that took your attention, your time, …no blame.

runOne hundred times starting over is still one hundred repetitions, and in the act of repetition, you will change your brain, and your self.

Fight, Flight, or Freeze

11 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Thinking Self Defense for Adults

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Health, Martial Arts

dog

The self-defense situations that you watch in the movies and television will be no help to you in figuring out what to do in a real life situation.  No matter what you may imagine you will do if you find yourself in a difficult situation, there will be one major difference between the movie and reality. This difference will occur on a cellular level, as a sudden flash of feeling, and how you will deal with it has already been set by evolution.

it all comes down to adrenaline. In a threatening situation the sudden ‘flash’ of adrenaline into your bloodstream causes a reaction that was put there eons ago through the evolutionary process. This reaction manifests as a three way choice, you either Fight, take Flight, or Freeze.

Fight

Fight

Flight

Flight

Freeze

Freeze

Freezing may work well for animals in the wild that become aware of a predator before it sees them. Predators are alert to motion, and freezing may allow their prey to remain unseen. Predators also know not to eat already dead animals, and animals that ‘freeze’ in order to appear dead (playing Possum) will be often left alone to survive.

Unfortunately, freezing is exactly the wrong thing to do when a human means you harm. Action, either Fight or Flight, or a combination of the two, will be what is required for self-preservation.

In the cinema, everyone always acts, dishing out rough justice to perpetrators of all kinds. Women weighing 50 Kilos regularly destroy bad guys weighing twice as much. In real life?…not so much.

In the real world, the outcome will be based on Fight, Flight, or Freeze.

Nice, or Not?

11 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Thinking Self Defense for Adults

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Health, Martial Arts

dogAmenability is a character trait that is useful in everyday life. It means that you are easy to get along with, flexible and responsive. People with this character trait will be popular, approachable, and helpful. They are ‘nice’ people, and most people have a desire to appear nice, as it is a helpful characteristic as one makes their way in the social world. Being amenable is a way of being lucky, as it allows the world and circumstances to bring things towards you. It is a great characteristic to have, as long as it is not your only option of how to behave in social situations.

Gavin de Becker has an excellent book, The Gift of Fear. In this book, he describes the Elevator scenario:

“A woman is waiting for an elevator, and when the doors open she sees a man inside who causes her apprehension. Since she is not usually afraid, it may be the late hour, his size, the way he looks at her, the rate of attacks in the neighborhood, an article she read a year ago—it doesn’t matter why. The point is, she gets a feeling of fear. How does she respond to nature’s strongest survival signal? She suppresses it, telling herself: “I’m not going to live like that, I’m not going to insult this guy by letting the door close in his face.” When the fear doesn’t go away, she tells herself not to be so silly, and she gets into the elevator. Now, which is sillier: waiting a moment for the next elevator, or getting into a soundproofed steel chamber with a stranger she is afraid of?”      http://gavindebecker.com/resources/book/the_gift_of_fear/

elevatorIn de Becker’s example, the woman is amenable, and places herself in a potentailly dangerous position because she is being ‘nice’. If one is naturally amenable, one has to develop a non-amenable self for self-defense situations where it is important to be wary and able to set clear physical and social boundaries.

Nice is easy…and not nice is difficult, especially for nice people.

Prepare > Repair…and takes less long

11 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Thinking Self Defense for Adults

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Health, Martial Arts

turn tableEffective self -defense training helps one develop options. More options allow more versatility in self-defense situations, and more versatility means a greater chance of staying safe.

Without options people tend to fall back on their particular evolutionary reaction, with its four basic paths; flight, fight, freeze, or faint. Though your body’s innate reaction may work to keep you safe, chances are it may not, and it is always best to have a trained option when it is time to respond to a threat to your personal safety.

Training creates ‘space and time’ to evaluate the situation before deciding on a response. Where does the space and time come from? It comes from practice, from having already found yourself in a ‘pretend’ threatening situation, where it is possible to try out techniques and responses, to gauge their effectiveness.

In this way you can eliminate the responses that won’t work for you based on body type and physical strength, (i.e.. A 60 kilo woman cannot hit like a 90 kilo man), and you can practice adjusting your outward behavior in order to stop potential threatening situations from escalating into physical confrontation. (see post: Nice, or Not?)

Preparation for things that may never happen isn’t a waste of time. If a self-defense situation does occur your preparation may make the difference between just another day in your life, and the day your life changed irrevocably.

Another reason to keep your mouth closed

12 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Simple Reset for Adults

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Brain, Evolution, Health, Martial Arts, Spirituality, Stress

A baby’s life force energy is fresh, unstressed, and free. Still unaffected by the world we live in, the baby rolls around, kicking and waving at the air, making all sorts of sounds, uninhibited by nature. The ‘force is strong’ with them. They sleep with their mouths closed and their tongues touching the roofs of their mouths.

 The life force of an old person approaching their last days is weak, hesitant, and thin. Worn down by the years, they move slowly, limbs stiff, voices soft, inhibited by age itself. They sleep with their mouths open and their tongues lying flat in the bottom of their mouths. 

The strong life force of the sleeping baby ‘pulls’ the tongue up against the roof of the mouth, making a connection between the energy that runs up the spine and over the top of the head, and the energy that runs up the front through the chest and neck to the tip of the tongue. The ‘strong force’ works like a magnet, drawing up the tongue and closing the mouth.

In the old person the energy isn’t strong anymore, and the mouth falls open when they aren’t keeping it closed consciously.

Want to hold onto the strong effects of the ‘force’? Develop the habit of keeping your tongue gently pressed to the roof of your mouth whenever you aren’t talking. Where, exactly? Right where your tongue would be if you were about to create the sound for the letter L. This is also the position used for the Breathing Technique.

What Evolution S.A.I.D.

12 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Simple Reset for Adults

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Evolution, Health, Spirituality, Stress

Beneath your personal beliefs, cultural constructs, and things you hold dear, is the human body you were born into, a biologically adaptive organism, hardwired to survive in an unpredictable environment.

This hardwired aspect deals only in real data it gathers from your interaction with your environment, things like body temperature, breathing rate, pulse, metabolic rate, muscular strain, and hormone flow.

Using this data stream your body and brain are always trying to ‘guess’ what may be about to occur, based on the last thing that just did occur. It does this by making adjustments to your physical self in case what had occurred will occur again.  It adapts, and over time , evolves.

But it makes the adaptations in a specific manner only, and only in relation to the demand you and the environment placed on it.

Run up one flight of stairs and your body will respond by elevating your heart rate and increasing your respiration rate, anticipating another flight while recovering from the past one.

Run up 25 flights of stairs, daily, and your body will increase your metabolic rate, shuffle nutrients into the muscles involved in the effort, increase the pumping volume of the left ventricle of your heart, and produce more endorphins, a group of hormones that interact with the opiate receptors in your  brain to reduce your perception of pain and stress.

stair

Your body will not adapt by increasing the size of your stomach, sharpen your eyesight, strengthen your shoulder muscles, or develop calluses on your hands. It only makes specific adaptations to the specific inputs you cause or allow.

You body is doing this all the time, awake and asleep, at work, at play, and especially at rest. It is one of the fundamental physical processes that is always occurring inside you, without your permission or control.

It is the S.A.I.D. Principle.

Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demand

Gone, but not Forgotten

12 Wednesday Nov 2014

Posted by strength and resilience in Simple Reset for Adults

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Evolution, Health, Spirituality, Stress

timeWe Came from Here

Our bodies have been created by evolution at an analog pace, by environmental factors that ebbed and flowed on our planet slowly through years, through eons. Consequently, our species has a nervous system specifically developed from interaction with our planet’s history, one that has helped us flee from predators, hunt as predators ourselves, and deliver bursts of energy during times of stress.

This energy producing aspect of our nervous system has been wired alongside a quieter part, one that functions as the conductor of our body’s processes during periods of rest, digest, and recovery from stress. Both sides evolved together as a whole, complementarily interacting with a slowly evolving world, seeking and maintaining balance behind the curtain of our day-to-day activities.

As a species we now find ourselves here, in our modern, no-longer-analog world, where the rest periods that used to be set by the years and seasons, and re-enforced by constraints of time, distance and traditions, are now shortened, the pauses devalued and almost entirely submerged under a tidal wave of cultural ‘multi-tasking’.

As our outside world has digitalized, it has moved beyond the old boundaries that were set by work hours, home life, landline telephones, and time zones. Things used to take ‘more time’…think of a relationship by snail mail, when one would receive a letter, compose a reply, send a return letter, and wait. In this process there was a whole lot of space and time, thinking time, feeling time, time alone in the middle of your life.

Modern technology has changed all that, has compressed the time, shrunk the space, and the quickened the tempo by which most people live their lives. Any debate about whether the change is for better or worse must respect the main point, that the world has moved on, and there is no going back.

It is a stimulating time to be alive, and quite possibly for our nervous systems, over stimulating. The physical wait times that still exist in our more populated world, time spent in traffic, or lines of people, can now be used as an opportunity to connect to the flow of information that is delivered directly to your psyche through your own personal communications device.

The ‘down’ time that used to be composed of sitting, sleeping, breathing, and just resting, disconnected from external stressors, is gone, and with it that old way of ‘naturally’ regulating our nervous systems. Gone, but in a physical sense, not forgotten.

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