недеља, 6. април 2014.

How to Protect Your Health Against Toxic People

How to Protect Your Health Against Toxic People

April 1, 2014 | By  
Flickr - Fist - N. FeansDr. Ben Kim, Guest
Waking Times
Several years ago, I was fortunate to meet a lady named Deborah at a fasting clinic in northern California. I had several conversations with Deborah over the course of a year, and what I remember most is that her kindness was amazingly genuine – I sensed that she had done a lot of inner work to identify the life principles that she strove to live by.
One day, I asked Deborah why she chose to eat her meals alone rather than with other fasting guests. After a beat of silence, she told me that she was getting some negative vibes from another guest, and that she felt that it was best for her resting experience to stay away from that energy. I remember her using the word “toxic” to describe the other guest’s energy – not in a malicious way, but with a thoughtful and observational tone.
Deborah’s thoughts on avoiding unnecessary toxic energy have stayed with me over the years. I feel that this facet of living is a vastly underrated determinant of health and overall quality of life. We know that our emotional health status has constant influence over the health of every organ system in our bodies, particularly our nervous and endocrine systems. And clearly, our emotional health is largely affected by our daily interactions with others. So it stands to reason that learning how to identify and effectively deal with toxic influences are important skills to develop when looking to experience optimal health.

How to Identify Toxic Behavior

Generally speaking, I think it’s safe to say that a person is toxic to your health if his or her behavior makes you feel bad on a regular basis. Clearly, there are exceptions to this guideline. For example, if a close friend or family member shares a concern about your behavior with a spirit of wanting to improve your relationship, you may feel bad and your sense of emotional well-being may take a temporary hit, but it doesn’t make sense to label such friends or family members as being toxic.
What follows are specific patterns of behavior that I believe fall into the “toxic-to-your-health” category:
  1. Attempting to intimidate you by yelling or becoming violent in any manner (slamming a door is a violent act).
  2. Consistently talking down at you, sending the message that he or she is just plain better than you.
  3. Regularly telling you what he or she thinks is wrong with you.
  4. Slandering others behind their backs i.e. trying to engage you in gossip that is hurtful to others.
  5. Spending the bulk of your conversations complaining about his or her life and others.
  6. Discouraging you from pursuing your interests and dreams when you are capable of doing so without hurting or burdening others.
  7. Attempting to take advantage of your kindness and resources, and trying to make you feel guilty if you don’t do what he or she wants.

How to Deal With Toxic People and Behavior

So how do you preserve your health after you have identified a person as being toxic to your health? The answer depends on the role that the toxic person plays in your life. Although it is virtually impossible to categorize all such people into neat boxes, I tend to think of them as belonging to one of the following groups:
Group 1: H&G (Hi and Good Bye)
Examples of people who belong in this category:
Unkind customer service representatives
People who exhibit road rage
Strangers on the street
How to protect your health against such people:
     
  1. First, think carefully about your own behavior to see if you may have done or said something to cause the other party’s behavior.
  2. If you can identify something that you did that likely offended the other party, if possible, offer a sincere apology. If he or she accepts your apology, things work out well for both parties. If your apology is not accepted, you can at least walk away with some peace of mind, knowing that you owned up to your behavior.
  3. If you cannot think of anything that you did that could have offended the other party, give him or her a silent “H&G” and walk away. Confronting the other party about unkind behavior is not likely to be fruitful. Since you don’t have to co-exist on a regular basis, you can take the mindset of “fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.” In other words, the other party’s unkind behavior is on him or her; he or she will reap natural consequences in due time.
Group 2: No real need to be close, but contact is frequent due to life circumstances
Examples of people who belong in this category:
Fellow students
Co-workers
Neighbors
Members of groups that you regularly meet with (church, book club, sports club, etc.)
How to protect your health against such people:
  1. As before, start by examining your own behavior to see if you can come up with a reasonable cause for the other person’s unacceptable behavior. If you cannot come up with a reason for the other party’s behavior, find someone who you can trust to be as objective and honest as possible, and explain the conflict as thoroughly and accurately as possible. Ask for honest feedback on how you might have triggered the other party’s behavior. Be sure to state that you aren’t looking for someone to take your side, but that you are looking to get an objective read of the situation.
  2. If appropriate, apologize for your behavior. If you and your adviser have thought long and hard about the conflict and cannot identify anything that you need to apologize for, work on developing compassion for the other party.Most will agree that people are not born to be mean-spirited and toxic to others. People can become mean-spirited and toxic to others for varying periods of time if they encounter enough hurt, disappointment, or anger in their own journeys. Maybe the other person is jealous of you and consumed by his own failures. Maybe she is just going through a really rough time due to a loss in the family. Maybe he has never truly felt cared about by another person. Maybe the other person has been treated so poorly by family members that sensitivity has been numbed and she has no idea that you feel like you have been mistreated. The idea is to generate enough compassion for the other person to overpower or at least quell your hurt feelings.This doesn’t mean that you need to be a martyr or a doormat and go asking for another three tight slaps to your other cheek. Developing some compassion for another person’s toxic behavior is meant to prevent said behavior from causing you to stew and stay emotionally unbalanced for a long time after the actual moment of conflict. And if the other party has or develops the courage to apologize to you, having some pre-made compassion available in your heart improves your chances of offering genuine forgiveness and experiencing that much more emotional harmony.
  3. After you have worked on developing compassion for the other person’s circumstances, if you haven’t received an apology, be kind, but don’t push for a make-up session. An important part of experiencing emotional balance is learning to teach others that you expect to be treated with kindness and respect. To seek out a make-up session when you have done nothing wrong and the other party has not mustered up the courage to apologize is to teach him or her that you can be walked on – not a good lesson to give.
Group 3: Ideal to be close
Examples of people who belong in this category:
Immediate family members
Relatives
Friends that you have good reason to respect
How to protect your health against such people:
  1. Go through the first two steps outlined above; try to figure out if you did something wrong, and apologize if you can think of something.
  2. While it’s important that you teach family members and close friends how you expect to be treated, in some cases, it may be necessary for you to seek out a make-up session even if the other party has not apologized for his or her behavior.For example, if it was your spouse who mistreated you, and he or she has not apologized, if you know from experience that he or she is not likely to initiate a conversation that can lead to healing, and a top priority for you is to have your children grow up in a mostly peaceful and love-filled environment, it may be best for you to reach out first. By reaching out first in such a scenario, the hope is that you inspire your partner to edge closer to taking more responsibility for his or her actions during the next conflict. Clearly, this proactive and almost martyr-like approach to increase understanding and intimacy is most appropriate in situations where you are deeply committed to the long term relationship at hand.If you are currently struggling in your relationship with someone who belongs in this category, I hope that you find one or more of the following articles to be helpful:Using Honesty to Build a Good RelationshipUnderstanding Your Partner’s Primary Love LanguageHow to Forgive Someone Who Has Hurt You
If you have any thoughts on how to effectively deal with people who may be toxic to your health, I encourage you to share them in the comments section below. Just as Deborah’s behavior encouraged me several years ago, I hope that these thoughts encourage you to embrace the journey of learning how to protect yourself against toxic behavior.
I also hope that these thoughts serve as a reminder that we all have the capacity to display behavior that can be toxic to others. Staying mindful of this fact can only help to minimize the potential that we have to bring others down.

source: http://www.wakingtimes.com/2014/04/01/protect-toxic-people/

Love Without Expectation

Love Without Expectation

July 16, 2013 | By | 
Flickr-love-SaraiRachelChristina Sarich, Staff Writer
Waking Times
A good traveler has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving.” ~ Lao Tzu 
On our paths we often encounter friends, lovers, even enemies that we want to offer affection or tenderness, but is it true love we really give them? Is it true compassion, acceptance of who they are in this moment without the desire to change them? Without expectation for what they ‘should’ be, or who they ‘ought’ to be for us? Do we give them a rope just long enough to hang themselves or a laundry list of secret requirements they must meet in order to be our friend, our lover, our mentor, or fellow human being? Love without expectation is true love. It is rare, and complex, just like the path into one’s own inner nature.
There are those who will climb mountains, forage in jungles and camp in forests looking for the thrill of the unknown. Others look inside themselves for the same heart-pounding discovery of the hidden facets of our consciousness. When we are truly awakened through this deep inner journey, we realize that there is no other. In the famous lines from John Donne:
No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of continent, a part of the main; if a clod be washed away by sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friends or of thy own were; any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for me.
Similarly the Chandogya Upanishad speaks a single word – advaita – meaning ‘not two’ and Tat tvam asi – Thou Art That. We are what we love, so when we have expectations for another, if they somehow fail us, then we have only failed ourselves.
“I’m not in this world to live up to your expectations and you are not in this world to live up to mine.” ~ Bruce Lee
How often do we make the bar too high to reach? Or the mountain too high to climb? And then use this as an excuse not to love completely? These are the tricks of an egoic mind keeping what is ‘out there’ separate from the overarching Love that connects us all. When we expect something from others, we don’t allow the true genius of the Universe to surprise us, or drop our jaws in awe with the infinitely more appropriate and beautiful ways it can work out ‘problems’ when we get out of our own way – and drop our expectations.
We all have our little fantasies about how things should be. How others should behave, what exactly our lives should look like. But this is all just a play – just maya – the physical only, the material circus of an infinitely greater Universe.
Once we let go of our expectations, we stop trying to force people into boxes, smash them into take-out containers that cannot contain even their fractional vastness, as representative of the Whole, we start to experience the world as it more truly exists.
It also means we don’t have to be frustrated or angry anymore. We can just allow. This doesn’t mean that we become spineless, but it does mean that we don’t consent to the actions of others – which are really just our own projections anyhow – disturbing the equanimity of our minds.
We can notice when we start to wish things were different – when we start to fantasize about some outcome. Instead, we can do good things, be kind to people, and have no expectation for any particular outcome. The Dalai Lama once said, “I am open to the guidance of synchronicity, and do not let expectations hinder my path.” 
“A wonderful gift may not be wrapped as you expect.” ~ Jonathan Lockwood Huie 
Set intentions, have goals, but then start allowing. Let everyone be completely who they are. Don’t try to change them. Just observe them. Don’t wish they were smarter or taller or kinder, but just see them in all their costumed glory. Chances are you haven’t really seen them in their truest light yet. Let them dazzle you with aspects of their personality that you haven’t even imagined before. Let circumstances effortlessly resolve into the most perfect outcome for all involved. Don’t force. Release your need to control all things, and instead allow the Genius of a benevolent Universe to gently usher you to the next exact right person you need to interact with or place you need to be.
“If men could see us as we really are, they would be a little amazed; but the cleverest, the acutest men are often under an illusion about women: they do not read them in a true light: they misapprehend them, both for good and evil: their good woman is a queer thing, half doll, half angel; their bad woman almost always a fiend.” ~ Charlotte Bronte 
People just might surprise us when we let go of our expectations and just love them – as they are – right now.
About the Author
Christina Sarich is a musician, yogi, humanitarian and freelance writer who channels many hours of studying Lao TzuParamahansa YoganandaRob Brezny,  Miles Davis, and Tom Robbins into interesting tidbits to help you Wake up Your Sleepy Little Head, and See the Big Picture. Her blog is Yoga for the New World. Her latest book is Pharma Sutra: Healing the Body And Mind Through the Art of Yoga.

source: http://www.wakingtimes.com/2013/07/16/love-without-expectation/