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Regret or Reflection? How to turn regret into a positive.

Sunrays on forest floors

I last wrote about regret. About how, for brief moments of time, I regret past moments in time. But then I learned that a baby doesn’t regret growing and reconfirmed my belief that these moments in time do not need to be times of regret, but rather can be times of growth.

You see, a regret is a feeling of loss, of disappointment, and dissatisfaction. When one regrets one would have feelings of sorrow, remorse, loss, or disappointment. A regret is a wound in the soul that causes pain. And just as pain in the body can be an early warning system of danger or disease, so are regrets to the soul. They are an early warning system to the soul that something needs healing. (more…)

Does the newborn baby regret growing?

Baby in Arms

If you have followed this blog since it’s beginning you’ve learned that I had been in survival mode for a couple of years. I was living my life fifteen minutes at a time. I was simply “in a state of being” a I tried to regroup after trauma and recover from depression.

It was a very strange place to be because I have always been one to have big plans, big goals, big dreams. I’ve always been the “type A” personality that is driven to succeed. And suddenly I found myself without any plans. I couldn’t see myself in the future because the future seemed to painful. It was a very scary place to be and one that can be dangerous for some people. I had lost hope. I survived because I’m not a quitter.

This morning I was looking back at the “lost years” with regret. I regretted the wasted time. I regretted the “quality time” I missed with my children. My years were wasted. Or so I thought.

(more…)

Coping With Trauma: How Would You Cope?

The Brave OneMy husband and I just watched the Jodie Foster movie, The Brave One. (Warning: This post may contain spoilers.) In the movie Jodie Foster’s character, Erica Bain, is traumatized when she is brutally beaten and her finance is murdered in a vicious attack. The movie was a little too depressing to watch more than once. But it originally caught my eye as it chronicled the life of a woman after trauma and told the story of how she strives to cope with the fears that arose. Her response to the trauma surprises herself. This is evidenced in the quote:

“I always believed that fear belonged to other people. Weaker people. It never touched me. And then it did. And when it touches you, you know… that it’s been there all along. Waiting beneath the surfaces of everything you loved. “

You can speculate and guess how you would cope with traumatic events. But I don’t believe that you can truly know how you would cope in any experience unless you are in it. Sure you can look at your character traits, you can look at your past experiences, you can speculate, but you can’t truly know.

In a million years I would have never thought that I would react to a series of events in my life the way I have(more…)

How to Speed Up the Healing Process

Pink RoseYesterday I talked about how I’ve recently been hit with what I termed a healing crisis. I’ve found that there are certain things that I can do that get me through the healing crisis faster and put me back into the sunlight. These are things I refer to as symbolic healing. The activity is symbolic of the healing that needs to be done.

So if you are feeling down, if you are a little on the sad side, or if you are coping with things like post traumatic stress disorder, like I am, then perhaps one of the following will be of help:

  • Sleep - Good old fashioned sleep often helps. An hour long nap can do wonders and jump start the healing process. Taking a nap usually isn’t possible though. Especially with kids in the house and deadlines looming.
  • Reading a book - it allows me time to put my mind elsewhere for a brief time while my soul repairs itself. A good uplifting book is the key, a depressing book simply wouldn’t work. I’ve found that I should stay away from books that have to do with hobbies and things I want to do because at times like this they just seem unrealistic. It makes me feel even more overwhelmed.
  • Cleaning the house - cleaning the house can be very symbolic. I use healing words when I am cleaning. For example, as I’m washing the floor I’ll say to myself over and over again I’ll say, “I’m wiping away the footprints of those that walked all over me.” When I’m cleaning up the cob-webs I’ll say, “I’m wiping away the webs of deception that clouded my judgment.” As I’m taking things I no longer need to the thrift store I’ll tell myself, “I’m making room for the new.” (This method actually seems to be one of the most effective and quickest methods. )
  • Writing it down - I’ve found now that simply the act of describing what is going on, and writing about solutions help ease me through the crisis. And the act of writing it on a blog seems to be more effective for me than writing about it in a journal. That’s because there is a part of me that simply can’t write about a problem without offering my readers a solution.
  • Create Art - Creating art is symbolic. It says, “I’m creating my future.”
  • Take a bath - washing away the pain of the past.
  • Food - this isn’t the same for me as it would be for some people. Some people eat to deaden the pain. That’s not me. At times like this I don’t eat. I can go a couple of days without eating and so for me simply that act of eating a good meal will tell me soul that I believe my life is worthy of being nourished and fed.
  • Prayer - turning to a higher power always helps.
  • Gardening - planting seeds for the future.

What things help you feel better when you are feeling down?

Create Your Own Happiness

Robin McGraw’s writes in her book Inside My Heart: Choosing to Live with Passion and Purpose There’s a huge difference between expecting happiness to come to you because you deserve it, and going out and getting the happiness you believe you deserve.” It got me thinking about what I do to create happiness for myself.

Perhaps you are at a time in your life where creating your own happiness seems overwhelming. I know because I’ve been there. Perhaps you are on “survival mode” like I was. There was a time when I just kept telling myself over and over again “you can make it through the next half hour.” And then again, “you can make it through the next half hour.” That’s how I made it through a couple of years of my life. I made it one half hour at a time. I couldn’t even see past that half-hour. If I tried it simply wasn’t there. My dreams for the future had disappeared.

There was plenty of things going on in my life that didn’t help; financial problems, health problems, relationship problems and more. This wasn’t the way I pictured my life would be like. This wasn’t me. And that is what bothered me so bad. This positive thinker was a mess. I felt broken. I felt defeated. I felt hopeless. I was no longer me. The me I knew was buried somewhere beneath the layers of pain, at least I thought I was in there somewhere.

How did I get to that point? I wondered. I believe in the power of positive thinking and the power of the mind to create one’s life. And that’s what bothered me so bad. What in the heck had I created? And why wasn’t I able to think my way out of it? Why did it seem so difficult to do things that I so enjoyed doing before?

I was explaining this to my counselor at the Rape Recovery Center (a much better name than Rape Crisis Center). I told her how it really bothered me, the fact that I couldn’t think my way out of the depression. Thankfully she pointed me on the right path when she said what I was feeling was totally normal for someone in my circumstances.

She went on to explain that I was on level one or two of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Perhaps you studied it in school. The basic premise is that one must fulfill the needs on the bottom level before they can move up to higher needs. Unless you have been there it is a little difficult to understand. She said I had been thrust down to the bottom two levels where I was worried about security and survival. Believe me it is difficult to see the top of the pyramid down there.

Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
It was on that day I realized that my positive thinking and my fighting spirit were paying off. That’s because she explained that she honestly felt that I was one of the most amazing people she had ever met. She said she was amazed by my strength, and I thought all strength was gone. She said that people who have gone through the things I had gone through would normally not be functioning at all, and that it was my no quit attitude, and my positive thinking attitude that made a difference. I need to tell her, “Thank you for helping me to see that there was some part of my normal self buried in there. ”

That day I came home and I looked up the pyramid online and thought, “OK, I want to be back on the top. What is up there that I can reach for?” There it was the word creativity. I knew how to be creative. I could do that. So I set out to do the things that I would do if I were at the top.

I made a list of things I liked to do and resolved to at least do something from the list every day. Some days it was as simple as listening to a CD or sitting in the sun. Other days I created paintings. I freed up my schedule some so I had a little more time for me. And I began to create. I began to create my own happiness. Just thinking it wasn’t enough. It was the physical act of creating that made all the difference in the world. It gave me hope.

What are you doing to create the life you dream of?

Robin said, “There’s a huge difference between expecting happiness to come to you because you deserve it, and going out and getting the happiness you believe you deserve.”

Create your list of things that make you happy and then go out there and create it. Simply do it.

Leisa Watkins

If This Blog Were a Song it Would Be…

Over at blog catalog someone asked the following question: If your blog was a song what would it be?

Since this blog is about raising above it all, and reading for the best within us and the world it was an easy decision. It would be You Raise Me Up, because there were many times in my life when I needed lifted up, an relied on faith. The song is beautiful in any language. The first is sung by Josh Groban and the second is sung in Spanish by my favorite musical group Il Divo. (The Josh Groban video wouldn’t embed for some reason - sorry).

Enjoy!


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