Archive for January, 2010

Is It Worth Getting Upset About?

Monday, January 25th, 2010

I grew up in a family with a rage-aholic father.  From him I learned that it’s normal to get upset and to rant and rave when something bothers you.

I became quite good at it myself, loudly expressing my displeasure at the smallest annoyance, ignoring the costs of this behavior to myself and others.  I couldn’t understand why I had so much trouble keeping friends.

I didn’t spare myself, either.  When upset with something I’d done, I’d beat myself up, only slightly less kindly than I did others.

I had the good fortune to marry a calmer man from whom I have learned the blessing of acceptance.  I can tell you from personal experience how much happier life is when you take things in stride.

The Costs of Getting Upset:

Getting upset impacts you physically.  Your muscles tense, your blood pressure rises, your stomach knots up. Becoming emotionally distraught is simply less comfortable than remaining calm and peaceful.

When you are upset you are affected mentally, as well.  You become less able to deal rationally and appropriately with the situation at hand.  You become less effective when you lose your temper.

Your angry rage impacts negatively on your relationships.  Friends and family may not say anything for fear of setting you off, but they are likely to resent your behavior.  Your upset creates fear, anger or embarrassment in the people you care about.  They may avoid you or try to get even in subtle ways.

I remember how embarrassed I used to feel after venting my rage.  Once the anger subsided, I often found it difficult to comprehend how I’d gotten so bent out of shape.  I felt sheepish about how I had acted and foolish about needing to apologize.

Many people inflict their rage, not on others, but on themselves.  It’s important to recognize and learn from your mistakes.  Overreacting to those errors, though, will only make you miserable and undermine your self-confidence.

Anger itself is not the problem.  Anger is a useful emotion signaling that something’s not right.  It’s the overreaction when you’re angry or annoyed that creates problems in your life.

You Can Change How You Act and Even How You Feel:

Awareness of the problems created by overreacting to the annoyances of life is the first step toward change.  Once you commit to making this change, it is entirely within your power to transform your reactions – both how you act and how you feel.

As you become more accepting of yourself, other people and the inevitable disappointments of life in general, you will become less upset and more able to appropriately handle annoyances when they arise.  What a relief!

How to Transform Upset into Calm:

Here are the steps you can use to transform upset into calm:

1.    Notice when you start getting upset about something.

Just having a part of yourself that is observing your enraged response, rather than fully participating in it creates a detachment you can work with.

2.    Ask yourself, “Is what just happened worth getting upset about?”

If you are like most people accustomed to becoming upset when annoyed, your immediate response will be a resounding and heart-felt “Yes!!”

If you take a closer look and are truly honest with yourself, chances are you’ll be able to acknowledge that it’s not that big a deal.  What’s more, though you might wish the situation were different, your getting upset isn’t going to improve anything.  It will only make matters worse.

3.    Notice how you feel as you let upset overtake you.

Pay careful attention to the impact of your upset on your body and your mind. Notice any tightness in your muscles or clenching in your gut.  Be aware of the unpleasant thoughts and feelings aroused by your outrage. If your criticism is directed at yourself, notice how undermining those attacks on yourself truly are.

4.      Ask yourself, “How would I be, if I weren’t reacting this way?”

If you are honest with yourself, you will note that you would be calmer and more peaceful, more comfortable and better able to deal with the situation if you were free of your upset.  From this perspective, you can see that your own upset is as much of a problem as whatever provoked your response.

Really allow yourself to imagine fully how it would feel to remain calm.  Invite the thoughts that would support a calm response, such as “This really isn’t all that important” or “Maybe s/he didn’t do that to hurt me.”  Visualize yourself responding appropriately when frustrated, disappointed or angry.

5.    Practice the calm you have visualized.

As you begin to visualize alternatives to overreacting, you become aware of the choices available to you.  When you feel your upset beginning to arise, take a deep breath and consider your options.  Ask yourself, “Would I rather be upset or calm in this situation?”

Gradually, as you practice new patterns of thought and behavior, you will replace the habit of upset with the habit of calm.

The Power of Calm:

Calm is enormously empowering.  When you react calmly you can rationally assess how to best handle the situation:

•    You can identify those circumstances you cannot change and come to better accept them.
•    You can act more effectively in those situations that you can change.
•    You can learn from your mistakes and move on.


In this way you become less adversely affected by the challenges in your life, a sure way to make your good life better!

Refer to Byron Katie:

You cannot change those around you and you cannot change external circumstances.  What you can change is yourself.

When you find the behavior of those around you unacceptable, you will be much more effective at influencing them if you approach them calmly.  They are more likely to listen and consider your perspective when you present it rationally, rather than angrily insisting that they comply with your demands.

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.

A Simple, Handy Way to Access Your Inner Wisdom

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

When you are looking for a quick yes or no answer and are uncertain which way to go, muscle testing offers easy access to your inner wisdom. By identifying your inner truth you gain the clarity to guide your decision.  You can trust the decisions you make when they are based on your own inner truth.

Muscle testing works on the principle that your muscles respond to the energy in your body.

When something is true or right for you, your muscles remain strong.
This is a yes.
When something is not right for you, your muscles give way. This is a no.

How do you muscle test?

You muscle test by exerting gentle pressure on a muscle.  If the muscle resists, the answer is yes.  If it gives way, the answer is no.  It’s as simple as that.

Another person can help you muscle test by pressing down on your outstretched arm.  If your arm holds firm, you are getting a “yes” signal.  When the arm releases, a “no” is indicated.

You can muscle test yourself using your hands. Make a circle by touching the tips of the thumb and pinkie of your left hand together.  Then slip the thumb and index fingers of your right hand up through the circle from below.  Open up the fingers of your right hand to press gently but firmly on the circle.  If the circle holds, the answer is “yes”.  If the circle breaks, the answer is “no.”

Avoid rigidly resisting, as that can provide a false positive.  Instead, allow a suppleness that is responsive to the message coming to you from within.

To get a feel for a yes and a no, simply state something that you know to be true of yourself and muscle test it.  Then state something you know to be false for yourself and muscle test that statement.

Let’s say that you are a married man named John, living in Chicago.  You can say “I’m a man,” and then muscle test.  You’ll be able to feel what a firm “yes” response feels like.  Then say “I am a woman.”  You’ll notice the difference when the circle of your fingers breaks open under the pressure you are exerting.  Try again with “My name is John,” and “My name is Mildred,” or “I live in Chicago,” then, “I live in Tahiti,” or “I’m married,” then “I’m single.”  As you practice with a series of statements such as these, you will become more tuned in to how “yes” feels and how you experience “no”.

Once familiar with this technique, you can use it to replace uncertainty with clarity in any yes/no decision you need to make .

When I was working on controlling my weight, I would enter a bakery, an old habit of mine.  Instead of immediately buying myself a treat, as I was accustomed to doing, I’d stand there and silently ask myself, “Should I get that yummy cruller?” Then I would muscle test.  When I came up with a “no”, I’d ask about the brownie.  “No” again.  Thinking that the bran muffin might be somewhat more virtuous, I’d muscle test about a bran muffin, only to receive “no” one last time. Ultimately, I’d walk out without buying anything. I knew that choosing to be guided by my inner wisdom was the best option.  In this way I was able to resist temptation and, ultimately, achieve my weight-loss goals.

This technique will provide clarity about what is right for you in any yes/no decision you are facing.  Consistently align your decisions with your inner wisdom and you will certainly make your good life better.

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.

Improve Your Relationships: “Watch Your Buts”

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

‘But’ is a small word, but it is very powerful.

The power of ‘but’ is amply demonstrated in the sentence you just read.  The message you come away with is, “‘But’ is powerful”.  ‘But’s’ small size is negated by the fact of its power.

The word ‘but’ dismisses whatever comes before it.    ‘But’ lets you know that what you need to pay attention to, what is true and what really counts is what follows.

‘But’s’ a Fightin’ Word:

Though it may be subtle, in conversation ‘but’ becomes a form of disagreement.  Since ‘but’ signals that whatever came before it doesn’t really matter, when you begin your sentences with ‘but’, you are implying that whatever the other person just said is less important or less true than what you are about to say.

This is important in relationships because the more you ‘but’ the people in your life, the less they will feel respected.  Like any implication of right vs. wrong, ‘but’ creates an adversarial mood.  It creates the impression that people are more interested in making their point than they are in listening and understanding the other’s perspective.

People resent being dismissed.  They become less inclined to consider your point of view when they feel that you are disregarding their position.

You Probably Don’t Notice Your ‘Buts’:

When your discussions become adversarial and you can’t figure out how that happened, chances are there’s ‘butting’ going on. ‘Butting’ is such a habit, most people aren’t even aware that they’re doing it.

Tune in to the times when people begin their sentences with ‘but,’ or ‘but’s’ twin sister, ‘yes, but’.   Pay attention.  Chances are you’ll feel somewhat disregarded or rebuffed, even offended.

Then recognize when you ‘Yes, but’ and notice how others respond.  The tone of the interaction will probably become a little more strained. Voices may rise in tone or volume.  Antagonism may grow with each exchange.

Replace Your ‘Buts’ With Acknowledgment:

As you sensitize yourself to this behavior, you will be more aware when it’s happening.  Then you can replace your ‘but’s’ with some form of acknowledgement before making your point.  You don’t have to agree with what the other person is saying, but if you validate their position before responding, they will feel more affirmed and will be more likely to consider your point of view.  Things will stay calmer.

Validation means letting the other person know you understand their perspective.  You may endorse some part of what they are saying, or you can let them know you recognize how they see things, even if you disagree.

The more others feel listened to and respected by you, the more inclined they will be to offer you respect in return. The more conscious you are of your ‘buts’, the more you replace them with validation of the other person’s position, even if you disagree, the more your discussions will remain constructive and cooperative.  This will improve your relationships, which will make your good life better.

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.

Three Ways to Relax and Restore Life Balance

Monday, January 11th, 2010

We are all hard wired to work hard and then to recuperate from our exertions. Just watch a young child to observe this natural cycle so essential to life balance.  They run around like crazy and then conk out.  While taking a nap may not be practical for you, there are ways to relax that take only a few moments.  You will return to work refreshed, with renewed ability to accomplish what you need to do.

Failure to honor this rhythm is a major source of stress.  When you drive yourself hard throughout your day, going from one activity to the next with no respite, you put demands on your body and your mind that they were not designed to handle. Over time this stress can lead to burnout.  Yet reestablishing your necessary life balance is easy to do.

In an earlier post, we discussed the benefits of taking a short walk.  Here are three additional ways you can relax and restore balance to your life.  Each of these exercises takes less than 10 minutes to do.

To gain maximum benefit, make sure you will not be interrupted.  Turn off your cell phone and let those around you know that you are not to be disturbed.  You may need to leave your office or work station to find a quiet spot.  You will be able to relax more deeply confident that nothing will bother you.

1.    Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR):

PMR entails tensing and relaxing various muscle groups in turn.  It doesn’t matter whether you start at your head and work down or your feet and work up.

For each muscle group – your eyes, your jaw, your neck and shoulders – you tense the muscles you are focusing on as hard as you can, hold that tension for a moment and then release it.   Repeat this process with each muscle group in turn.  The power of PMR comes from the rebound effect that enables muscles which have been tensed to relax more deeply.

An additional benefit of PMR is increased awareness.  PMR teaches you notice muscular tension when it occurs in your body.  You will recognize those muscle groups where you habitually hold tension.

Check out these muscle groups throughout the day.  If you notice tension tighten those muscles even further, and then relax them deeply.  Over time you will train your muscles to remain relaxed even when you are under stress.

2.    Imagine Relaxation Throughout Your Body:

You can achieve relaxation by simply imagining calm and peace reaching every part of your body.  Imagine yourself breathing in calm and peace.  Imagine that tranquility circulating throughout your body, the way the oxygen you breathe finds its way to every cell in your body, with no effort whatsoever on your part.  Then, with each exhalation, imagine yourself breathing out any stress or tension.

Or you can imagine relaxation like a warm liquid that flows gently down over your head, bringing calm and peace as it reaches every part of your body.

3.    Calm Scene:

Imagine a scene that for you is very calming. For many people this is a beach scene. Others find themselves in a beautiful meadow, or in bed on a lazy morning with nothing to do and no where to go.

Carefully observe everything you see and hear and smell and feel in your calm scene.  Really relax into the comfort you find here.

By imagining your calm scene at the conclusion of practicing PMR, you will come to associate the scene with the deep feeling of relaxation you achieve.  Then, when you do not have the time to go through the entire PMR exercise, you will be able to experience deep calm simply by immersing yourself for a moment or two in your calm scene.

Practicing these relaxation techniques repeatedly – at least once and preferably twice or three times a day – will help you improve your life balance.  Relaxation is like any physical skill.  The more you practice it, the better you will be at it and the easier it will become.

You will find that you are better able to deal with stress.  You will be more focused and productive when you return to your work.  All of this will make your good life better.

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.

5 Secrets For A Happy Life

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

In my work as a life coach, I find that there are five basic ingredients that lead to sustained happiness.  Cultivate these deceptively simple behaviors and you will make your good life better.

1. Give and Receive Love
:

Your relationships are what nourish you the most, whether with family, friends or pets.  Be kind to those around you.  Be willing to give and receive support, encouragement, hugs.  Make time for those you care about.

Research has shown that kindness to others provides more lasting satisfaction than having fun.

2.    Do Meaningful Work:

Meaningful work may be a job you care about, whether it’s work you get paid for, or taking care of your family. Meaningful work might be volunteering at a local hospice or teaching Sunday school.

Meaningful work can also be a hobby or interest you pursue, such as singing in a choir, collecting rare coins or quilting.

Meaningful work gives purpose and joy to your life.

3.    Nourish Your Body Properly:

You need a healthy body to enjoy life.  When you take the time to eat nutritious foods, you provide your body with what it needs to function properly.

You feel better when you eat with awareness.  Stop eating when you are full. Listen to your body and choose the foods your body loves.  These may be different from the foods you crave.  Really notice how the foods you eat affect you and make your food choices accordingly.

4.    Exercise and Rest:

Exercise provides your body with the activity it needs to remain healthy.  It also produces endorphins, those hormones that create a natural high.

Ample rest is as important as exercise.  People who get ample sleep do better on every measure of physical and psychological health.

Watch a young child or a pet and you will notice vigorous activity immediately followed by rest.  They run around like crazy and then conk out.  We are hard-wired to do this.  Make sure you get enough of both.

5.    Cultivate a Practice of Reflection:

Provide yourself with regular opportunity to reflect on your life.  You can take a walk during your lunch hour or turn off the radio in your car on the way home.  You might keep a daily journal or spend time in church focusing on the past week and the one ahead.

This is time to take stock of what is working in your life and what you would like to see different and better. You will gain awareness that enables you to be more in control of your life.

Taking time for quiet reflection will also help you to calm and center yourself.  This is a great way to manage the stress in your life.

You can think of these elements as a beautiful flower with five petals.  When you practice all of them, you will definitely make your good life better!

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.

Focus on the Solutions, Not the Problems

Monday, January 4th, 2010

I sometimes begin my coaching sessions with the question, “What is different and better since the last time we met?”

At the outset of our work together, most of my clients declare that there isn’t anything different and better in their lives since our last meeting. Even under pressure from me – “Come on, there must be something!” – they insist that nothing has changed for the better. Then, 17 or 26 minutes or even 49 minutes into the session they mention some small thing they did differently – remaining calm in a difficult situation, or handling a challenge more effectively, or treating themselves or others more kindly . They simply hadn’t noticed it.

We all tend to focus on what isn’t working in our lives. We tend to take what’s going well for granted. After all, it doesn’t need our attention if it’s working fine, so we don’t give it much thought.

It is truly empowering to expand your focus beyond the problems to the small things you do that tend to make things better in your life.

When You Focus on the Solution, You Become Expert in What Works:

When you focus on the problems, you become an expert on your ineffectiveness and unhappiness. Focus on what isn’t working creates discouragement and undermines your confidence and self-esteem. Paying attention to what isn’t working leaves you clueless about what you could be doing differently to transform your situation for the better.

When you switch your focus to your small successes, you become an expert on the choices you make that can improve your life. You are looking here for tiny changes and then noticing the effect these positive choices create.

Think Small:

I suspect that one reason my clients initially have difficulty responding to my ‘different and better’ question is that they are looking for massive change, which rarely occurs. When big changes do happen they’re hard to maintain. Sudden major transformation just doesn’t sustain. It’s too great a departure from the norm, which can feel strange or even scary.

True lasting change occurs in tiny increments practiced over time until they become new habits. Slightly larger successes build on previous wins. Gradually, winning habits of thought and behavior get established and become the new norm.

Life is made of little things. You make thousands of choices throughout the day – choices about how you act or react, choices about how you think or view the circumstances of your life. Most of us are not aware of the choices we make. We just act.

How To Become an Expert on the Solutions:

First identify problem areas in your life that you’d like to change:

• It drives you crazy when your spouse does those same things you’ve been complaining about for years.
• You’d like to shed a few pounds.
• Sometimes you’re late paying your bills because they get lost in those mountains of mail on your dining room table.

The first step toward becoming an expert on the solutions is becoming curious about alternative choices you may never have considered before. Consider what you might do differently to impact on these situations.

You empower yourself when you begin to consider what you could do differently to achieve better outcome:

• You could react more calmly when your spouse does the things that annoy you.
• When you notice yourself going for that midnight snack, you could remind yourself of your weight loss goals and drink a glass of water instead.
• You could sort through the mail right away, throwing away the junk mail and putting your bills in a special place.
The next step is to begin the experiment of putting your alternative choices into practice. On the basis of these experiments you’ll learn what works by noticing the outcome of your new choices, compared with the way things used to be:
• You realize that your day doesn’t need to be ruined just because your spouse did something you don’t like. You might even notice that your spouse becomes friendlier in response to your greater calm, and begins to act more according to your preferences.
• You notice how proud you feel the next morning for making a healthy choice. Over time your weight loss shows you how damaging those late night cookies really were.
• You recognize how much better you feel, secure that you’re not missing a bill and free of mail clutter.

Lasting transformation occurs through the aggregate of these small actions repeated over time. By focusing on the solutions – choices you can make to improve the situation – rather than getting stuck on what isn’t working in your life, you bring about lasting positive change.
By the third or fourth session, my clients become expert at answering the ‘different and better’ question. Then I know that they have shifted their focus from what isn’t working in their lives to what they can do to transform their situation for the better. You, too, can make that transition. When you do, you will achieve your goals and make your good life better.

Jeannette Samanen, Ph.D.
Jeannette’s professional development began with graduate school at the University of Oregon.  Her first post-doctoral position was at the Boston University School of Medicine where, as an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry (Psychology), where she specialized in stress management and behavioral medicine.  Jeannette has had over 30 years of experience as a life coach and psychologist and derives great pleasure from helping clients transform their lives for the better.