Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coaching. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2015

Six Secrets to Starting a Good Habit... You know, that thing you've been putting off

First Create a Habit of Success

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | August 10, 2015

If you have any so-called "bad" habits. You might be amazed at how easy it was to pick them up. Have a little ice cream at 7 pm on hot summer day, next day at 7pm, right on time, mind says "ice cream would be nice!" I am not really against ice cream. Most of us have one or two things that we believe not to be in our best interest that we continue doing all the same. 

In addition, almost everyone can think of something that they know would be good for them ... that they just haven't gotten around to. Some of the common ones that I hear about are: go to bed or get up earlier, meditate every day, exercise every day, or eat fresh, healthy foods. Some people want to write every day, or sculpt, or play an instrument, or practice gratitude. 

Why don't we do those things for our wellbeing that we sincerely wish to do? 

Bad habits are easy to pick up. Maybe there are emotional and chemical responses we have to things such as processed sugars in the case of ice cream. Do you get a rush from going to bed on time? Sadly, no. We need to reinforce ourselves as we build our positive habits, because it does not come naturally. 

Another obstacle is something I call "the habit of failure." The habit of failure sounds like this: "I can start tomorrow. I deserve a break. I know I won't finish it, why start? Why be hard on myself? I am too stressed, and I am too busy. I don't have time. It's a holiday." The habit of failure is a repetitive mental chatter that is "getting us off the hook" of our higher ideals on a very regular basis. The thoughts that hold us back sound very reasonable, they sound fun, and even kind. We might even say, "I am practicing self acceptance." Or, "I am a free spirit." Sounds good, right? 

If we are not free to add healthy habits to our routine, is that really freedom? A habit of failure tells us that we can not trust ourselves. We say one thing, and we do another. We treat ourselves in a way that is two-faced. It's no fun at all to be treated like that. 

You can replace a habit of failure with a habit of success. 

One reason that we do not acquire positive habits is simply that we do not know how to do it. With a habit of success, one good habit will lead to many. 

In brief, what you are going to do is: start with something so small that you are absolutely sure you will succeed; get help from a professional coach or a friend; plan carefully; give yourself credit for your successes; learn from your mistakes and move on. 

1. Start with something so small that you are absolutely sure you will succeed. 

There is not going to be any compromise, so take this very seriously. For example, you might have a goal of exercising 20 minutes every day. Ask yourself if you will really follow through on this commitment. If the answer is "yes," commit to 10 minutes instead. If the answer is "I'm not sure," make it 5 minutes, or 2 minutes. Make it ridiculously easy. 

Don't worry, it will still be hard when the "habit of failure" voices start up. You are not going to listen to them this time.

2. Get help from a professional coach or a friend.

Consult with someone when you make your plan. Then, ask that person to hold you accountable on a daily basis. For example, I just completed a commitment to do a Wonder Woman pose for two minutes every day for forty days. I consulted with my friend Debz before I started. I chose a special emoji, and told her I was going to send her that emoji every day to show her that I had done my practice. I asked her to respond to celebrate my success with me. 

In my professional coaching practice, I offer 1 time, 1 hour consultations to establish a success plan. And I currently provide accountability at no additional charge. 

3. Plan carefully. 

Get out your calendar. It takes about 40 days to form a positive habit. You can beat your habit of failure with some careful planning. What is coming up in the next 40 days? A vacation? A birthday? Your spouse's evaluation at work, or something else that makes them cranky? Which days are going to be difficult. Based on your assessment of these days, do you need to return to #1 and make it smaller? On the most difficult day, what can you commit to?

Are there any days that you will absolutely have to take off? Plan those out ahead of time, and extend your practice to 41, 42, 43 days. 

Plan a regular time and place for your practice. Think about the flow of your day. When can you practice without interrupting anyone in your household? Hot tip: I did my Wonder Woman practice in the bathroom while my shower was heating up. People in my home are already accustomed to my habit of bathing. Adding another habit onto that one did not bother anyone. 

Are there days when you will have to practice in another place? Visualize yourself doing your practice there. Will it work? 

4. Give yourself credit for your successes. 

We get emotional about our bad habits and our failures. For that reason, our minds register them. But a lot of us shrug off or ignore our successes. Force yourself to celebrate. You need to make your successes a positive emotional experience. Look in the mirror and tell yourself "you rock!" Give your mirror image a high-five. It is very important to consciously acknowledge that you are doing something positive. 

5. Learn from your mistakes.

Don't let any failure go by without learning something from it. Be firm. Be kind. Did you commit to too much time? Did you overlook a challenging day when you were planning? 

Be very specific in working out how you will take this failure and turn it into a success. Will you do two practice periods the next day? Will you add a day to the end of your 40 day period? Do you need to begin your forty days again from the beginning? Think it through, because your habit of failure is just waiting to say, "you didn't REALLY do what you set out to do," and you can not let this happen. 

6. Move on.

It is important to return to the practice, as scheduled, after making a mistake. You must succeed to make success a habit. That is the underlying purpose here. 

One good habit follows another. 

I have a friend who started with a morning Tai Chi practice. Once she knew how to establish a good habit, she thought about the other things she wanted in her life, and she created positive habits for creative writing, healthy eating, and meditation. 

Empower yourself! Build a habit of success! 

Start With a 2-Minute Meditation Practice

You can build your habit of success with a 2-minute meditation practice. I developed these meditation cards that systematically build a deep practice in just two minutes per day. Make a commitment to try them for 40 days. Call or email me to schedule a consultation, and we will get you started. 




Monday, March 30, 2015

The Alternative to Failure and Success Lies Within YOU

Introspection Is Looking Within

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | March 30, 2015


The Journey

You close your eyes. You are in an unfamiliar room that is pitch black dark. You know there is a light switch somewhere. So, you place your hand on the wall and take small, reluctant steps. You are afraid you will stub your toe. Gingerly you are feeling your way, testing each inch of progress with your hands and feet before committing yourself. 

Suddenly, where you were hoping to feel the light switch, the wall gives way to empty space instead. There is a surge of feeling that could be fear or excitement. You have to choose between staying in the room and stepping into the passageway. Excitement wins out, and you turn the corner.

Having encountered no obstacles so far, your steps have become less cautious. After some time in the dark passage, you sense that your eyes are becoming more accustomed to the dark, or maybe some vague light is visible in the distance. Your confidence and excitement are growing together. 

That vague, distant light is becoming more certain, and you are picking up speed. You can see your way clear. You take your hand off the wall. Soon, the passageway opens to a field of lush green beyond which stands an abandoned castle. Having left fear behind, you are thrilling now to the adventure.

With a feeling of wonder you wind up a spiral staircase. At the top, a room that feels at once known and unknown welcomes you. You walk to a desk, and open the drawer. Scarves of color arise spontaneously from the drawer endlessly, and you feel the drawer as your heart. There is a moment that is perfect in its delight, beauty, and wonder, and you feel yourself smile in contentment. 

'Who has created this wonderful journey?' you ask yourself. 'It cannot be me,' you conclude. And you conclude, 'it cannot be anyone but me.'

The Coincidence: Wonder Within Becomes Wonder Without

Your eyes are open now, it is morning, and you are walking. But now you are walking in wonder, holding your own knowing, remembering your journey within. From the edge of your vision, a large bird swoops into view. Your eye follows it over the street where it crosses the path of an unknown woman who is walking with two coffee cups in her two hands. She wonders allowed to herself, and you see her eye begin to follow the bird, just as you had done, too. 

You sense a kindred spirit. You have both seen this bird. You call out to her. "What was that?"

"A hawk!" 

"It was a small one," speaking loudly across the city intersection.

"A small hawk, and it had a bird in its grip. A black one. It is an omen. I don't know of what."

"Hawks have great vision, and they are strong," you give her the fist that means power.

"Yes."

And by that time, your paths have crossed and this moment is giving way to another.

"Have a great day." 

"You too. Thank you for being a witness." 

"You are welcome." 

And what happens next happens with its own wonder, too. 

Better Existence

No matter what we do together, you and I, it will be in this spirit. 

If we do a Skype yoga class, I offer it in this spirit: that you have a journey to wonder and contentment that you can reveal to yourself, and I can support. 

If we do a Strengths-focused coaching series, we will witness together that two minds together, set to one goal, your goal, are exponentially empowered to stay the course and achieve the best result. 

If we undertake an introspective series of conversations, techniques, or journal writing, I will bring you time-tested pathways to follow to your heart. 

Or we can meditate. I will teach you how.

Your journey. Your modality. Your starting point. All I want is for you to be in wonder with yourself. There is no doubt of the wonder within you. For many people, I am a very good guide. Let's get started. 

646-831-2675
Jennifer Rose
Better Existence
I am inviting you to come in.



Tuesday, February 3, 2015

As You Think, So Shall You Become --Bruce Lee

"The Words You THINK Become the HOUSE you live in." 
--Nishit Patel 

Join me in conversation with the author of this title quote, Nishit Patel, the first Wednesday of every month. Tomorrow our topic will be Mantra Initiation: Mastering Your Second Birth. Subscribe for the monthly teleconference here: Better Existence Events 


by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | February 3, 2015

You are what your deep, driving desire is. 
As your desire is, so is your will. 
As your will is, so is your deed. 
As your deed is, so is your destiny. --Brihadaranyaka Upanishad IV.4.5

Introspective people have a tendency to bring cautionary attention to our thinking. 

We are what we think. 
All that we are arises with our thoughts. 
With our thoughts we make the world. 
Speak or act with an impure mind 
And trouble will follow you 
As the wheel follows the ox that draws the cart.  --The Buddha, from The Dhamapada

When wisdom appears similar across different traditions, that really gets my attention. 

Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life. --Proverbs 4:23

There is a battle of two wolves inside us all. One is evil. It is anger, jealousy, greed, resentment, lies, inferiority, and ego. The other is good. It is joy, peace, love, hope, humility, kindness, empathy, and truth. Which wolf wins? The one you feed. --Cherokee Proverb

You can take their word for it, or you can find out for yourself. 

I guess I am the do-it-yourself kid. I want to run my own tests. I don't want to know it's true, want to experience this truth. I want to empower you to run your own tests, too. 

One concept in all of these quotations is that our thoughts have a creative effect. Mr. Patel is very concise and contrasts the subtle, interior "words you THINK" with a tangible, exterior "HOUSE."

What will you do with this wisdom?

When we set out to work on our "words" we are on in internal mission.

Meditation may be the most useful practice to empower a person who wants to change their thinking. Meditation introduces you to your interior life, of which your thoughts are a part. Many of the words we think are completely unconscious. And the "house" we find ourselves living in may seem alien, and not of our making. Meditation can make the unconscious conscious, and we can take responsibility not only for ourselves, but for our circumstances. (Read more about not being a victim of circumstances.) 

Meditation takes attention from the outside world and turns it inward. We become attuned to our bodies. And we benefit. We become more aware of how the food we eat affects us physically and mentally. We notice the effects of how much we sleep. We make better choices. 

People who meditate notice their emotions and the effects of emotions. They know how long they stay mad once they get started, for example. And there are glimmers of peace and joy that might otherwise have been missed. 

Meditators become more aware of their thoughts, the words they think. Then, they are ready to answer the question for themselves, Do the words I think build the house I live in? That is a question that is worthwhile to ask. If you could build a better house, would you build it? Next week I will give you a method. 

For now, let's get you started meditating. You can call me, 646-831-2675, or order my 2-Minutes to Meditate Cards on Etsy. These cards are beautiful and friendly. Their handmade, jewel-tone envelopes are a sacred space where you can keep your cards.

Especially good for beginners and experienced meditators who have lost track of their daily practice somewhere along the way, these cards provide support for your practice. In just two minutes a day you can lay a reliable foundation that you can build on. 

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Measuring Up Got You Down? Here Is Your New Yardstick

Reclaim Your Journey

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | January 28, 2015


We are born into a cluster of identities that may or may not suit us. 

We are born into a family, a nation, a culture, a religion. We are immediately the son or daughter of this one and that one, and possibly also the brother or sister of these and those ones. In this tiny societal microcosm called the family people may tell us we are smart or stupid, attractive or not, interesting or not, relevant or not. And we believe them. 

As time goes by we identify with the local school, a group of friends, and maybe the popular culture. We learn the dos and don'ts of our city, state, and country. 

Who Is an Expert on What Is Right for Us?

Then it gets messy. My country tells me I can marry my same sex partner. My church tells me I will go to hell if I do. My state tells me I can smoke weed; my country tells me I had better not. My Muslim grandmother wears a burka. My Balinese grandmother does not wear a shirt. My television tells me I had better save for retirement. Then it tells me to spend my money on a car.  Or should I give it to charity? My doctor tells me coffee is good for my sluggish metabolism. I read an article by an expert that says that is wrong. 

There is no possibility of finding agreement among the diverse judgments that come with human identifications, affiliations, and the endless game of who is "in" and who is "out." 

Now what?

Follow My Bliss?

"Do what you love and the money will follow." --Marsha Sinetar

No wait. Here is an article in Forbes that tells you not to do what you love! Five Reasons to Ignore the Advice to Do What You Love.

“If you do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. Follow your bliss and don't be afraid, and doors will open where you didn't know they were going to be.” --Joseph Campbell

"I feel like being into the beat of your own drum has become too prominent in the culture." Mos Def

It would be funny if it were not so painful.

Get Ready for the Nay-Saying Choir. They Are Definitely Going to Sing to You.

When you do what you love, you will be surrounded by people who will tell you you are wrong. 

Forbes and Mos Def will most definitely be in line to tell you you are wrong. 

The happiest, the most transcendent people I know are constantly being criticized. They are called idiots. They are called narrow-minded. They are called snooty know-it-alls. They are called misguided, ignorant, and even heartless. They do not care much about that. They are people who have come to a certain point in their lives, and they have risen above the cacophony and the confusion. 

When you cannot take another minute of failing to measure up to conflicting, external expectations of how to be good enough, call me. That is when you will be ready to stand up to the nay sayers. 

You Can Trust Yourself

There is a path back to self-reliance that will foil even the earliest suggestions from others of who you are. There is a You in you that is untouched by judgments and labels waiting to live a life enriched by Your values and meanings. You may have a goal and purpose for your life that has been derailed by the judgmental noise all around you. Honestly, I have no idea what it is. But You know. And that is what strength-focused coaching is about. It is about handing you back your power, and being an ally in reaching Your goals. 

There is a Yoga story about an orphan lion who is adopted by a flock of sheep. Thank goodness the orphan baby was adopted! That is a good thing! The baby lion drank sheep's milk, then learned to eat grass, and learned to run away from danger. The orphan lion got along well in his sheep society. One day, danger came as a pride of hungry lions. "Baaaa. Noooo." The lion, who had grown quite large, said as he ran away with the other frightened sheep. One of the lions stopped to speak with the orphan lion. "Why are you afraid?" the lion asked, and he walked the orphan lion to the edge of a pool and showed him his reflection. "That is who you are," the lion said. 

You Are a Lion

Reclaim your journey. Reclaim your life, not by sifting through the conflicting chatter of the experts, but by testing, and then trusting your own experience. Learn to pay attention to how you feel. Set aside the conflicting thoughts that have promised and failed to deliver insight into what makes Your life worth living. 

Center yourself in the feelings You want to feel, and the experiences that make You proud. Notice what you are contributing when you are experiencing those feelings. Those are Your strengths. Those are Your best attributes. They will always be there for you. You can trust yourself. 

Okay. Go!

Jennifer Rose is a Meditation and Stress-Reduction Skills Instructor as well as a Strengths-focused Coach. She is available to teach classes and workshops to groups and individuals both in person and online. 646-831-2675
"Valor" by Jennifer Rose

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Victim of Circumstances? There is a fix for that.

Every Moment Is an Opportunity to Choose Your Action

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | January 21, 2015


In a strengths-focused coaching meeting you will be asked to identify good experiences and positive moments. After you identify a good experience from the story of your life, or a positive moment that you noticed one day, you will be asked, What did you do that brought that about? (You can read the rationale for focusing on strengths in last week's blog post.) 

Identifying what you already do that brings about positive moments in your life and adds good experiences to your life story is a powerful tool that transforms the notion that we are victims of circumstances. 

Passivity is a Deeply Ingrained Idea

It takes repeated practice to transform the idea that our circumstances or environment dictate our experience of who we are. Oft repeated identities, such as "I am Chloe and Henry's daughter," "I am a Hudson (family identifications), "I am a Christian" (born into a religious or cultural identity) "I am an American," or "I am a survivor of a traumatic childhood," seem to tell us who we are in very real ways. However, for some people, these identifications become burdensome. 

When identifications become painful, when they do not serve us well, we can detach from our passive acceptance of mainstream ways of self-identification. We can forge our own path. It is a renegade move. It shatters the mold. But it really is not all that difficult. 

Two Ways to Feel Good

A lot of times we are on a roller coaster of emotional highs and lows. When we look for positive moments in our lives, we notice two kinds. If we ride the roller coaster, we identify with the highs and lows. Now I am happy. Now I am sad. Things went well for me. Nothing is going my way. One way to feel great is to be on that roller coaster and have things go your way, to get what you want, to experience the highs. There is nothing wrong with being happy when your team wins. Or when your spouse smiles and tells you you are great. Or when they like your post on Facebook. But over-investing in this type of feeling great does not empower us. Even when we are on the high, we are still victims of circumstances.

It is more useful to gain insight into the actions we take that result in good experiences and positive moments. This is empowering because we can repeat these actions. We step out of our habit patterns when we choose our actions. We are empowered to improve the quality of our lives when we choose actions that have our preferred outcomes. No one needs to tell us what outcomes are good for us. Whether we want to feel peaceful, purposeful, blissful, or some other feeling is our own business. We can observe our own lives, our own feelings, and come up with our own answers. 

Having a strengths-focused coach can help. A strengths-focused coach will always hand you your power. 

To Surrender or to Act? 

To put it simply: surrender after you act. 

When we look for the outcomes of our actions, we again hand our power over to the environment or circumstances outside ourselves. Instead, retain your power. Refocus on the new moment, the new opportunity to choose an action. This is not to suggest that you should avoid feeling the sense of peace, purpose, bliss, or whatever else may flow from skillful action. Just do not allow that to become victimhood to the highs and lows of roller coaster living.

Karma

If you do not recognize the principle of karma here, it is because the meaning of karma has been turned inside out. Popular notions of "good karma" and "bad karma" have everything to do with the payback one expects from the environment for "good" or "bad" deeds. That is just the opposite of what is useful. To take responsibility, to become the architect of our lives, as great Yoga teachers like Swami Rama suggest, we need to shift our focus from the external results to the internal causes. Choosing useful actions in each moment is masterful application of the principle of karma. 

Responsibility

Victor Frankl, the author of Man's Search for Meaning suggested that a Statue of Responsibility be built on the West Coast of the United States to balance the Statue of Liberty on the east coast. He did not suggest that the Statue of Liberty be removed, rather he recognized the connection between responsible, skillful action and thinking, and feeling unburdened from external conditions. Frankl achieved this insight when he was a prisoner in a Nazi concentration camp. I try to remember this when I am tempted to hand over control of my feeling state to "circumstances beyond my control." 

It Is a New Skill 

Be patient with yourself as you develop a new sense of yourself. Ask for help, if you need it. It all starts; it all ends with ATTENTION. Notice when you feel good or positive. Reflect on what you are proud of or satisfied with in your life. Notice what has worked. Learn from it. Build on it. 

Okay. Go. 

I am a meditation teacher and a strengths-focused coach.  Get an introduction to meditation from my beautiful 2-Minutes to Meditate cards. They are perfect for people with busy lives, and will help you establish a daily practice that you can then build on. Each card has my contact information in case you have questions.


Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Why Focus on Strengths?

A Subjective Appreciation of Our Best Attributes Creates a Stable Foundation for Our Evolution

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | January 14, 2015


Sometimes survival, whether it is physical survival or the survival of our sense of being an okay person, pits us against others. Often it pits us against those with whom we are the most intimate. This survival struggle can leave us feeling isolated and lonely. In many, if not all of us, there is a longing to overcome this isolation. 

Name and fame do not bring happiness

How can we overcome the isolation inherent in natural competition? The most obvious thing to try is to achieve recognition from others, power over others, wealth, or some other kind of so-called success. It looks like that is working for others, when looking from the outside. However, just like Siddhartha, we eventually must encounter old age, illness, and death.  

Survival is not always a great investment

It is a grim thought, but "survival" may not be a great investment. Competition that pits us against others as we shore up defenses against inescapable fears makes us more isolated and alone. After establishing a healthy identity that helps us function in the world, it is possible to continue to grow. The next stage of development that a fortunate few undertake is to become strong and adaptable in the face of changing circumstances. Everything that is born will die. We are afloat on a sea of change. 

We need to learn to trust ourselves

The stability that will help us establish this adaptability will never be found in the shifting, diverse, and often contradictory values and opinions of other people or institutions no matter how highly esteemed. We find that strength and versatility only when we value our own subjective experience. We need to learn to trust ourselves. We need to do experiments to learn about ourselves. 

Learning about our strengths changes how we perceive the world around us

Over the years we have internalized the opinions others hold of us. Especially in childhood we internalize the opinions of our family members. We need to make our way deep into the heart of our own knowing. It is essential. The opinions we hold of ourselves shape how we perceive the world around us. Being strengths-focused makes the world friendlier and more supportive because we perceive the world differently based on our opinion of who we are. 

Doing our best with the strengths we have helps us find satisfaction in life

Being strengths-focused helps people to be resilient in the face of all kinds of change. We find we can flow from one role to the next like a masterful actor enjoying the playing of each part. We can rise above the pain of conflicting desires within us. For example, a man who is both a father and an employee might have conflicting desires to spend more time with his children and spend more time on an important project at work. We find that each moment, each life experience, holds its own satisfaction when we do our best, focusing on our strengths. 

We are equipped to find our own truth

We all have the capacity to turn our attention to our own core. We can all notice times when we feel deeply gratified, when we feel aligned with our own sense of meaning and purpose. Taking the time to do this is indispensable on our journey to evolve into a resilient sense of self. A resilient sense of self is beyond an identity based on a career or lifestyle, or an identity that depends on relationships. 

We develop empathy and enjoy life's adventure

Stabilized in our own strengths, we are free to empathize with others instead of competing with them. We can embrace changing circumstances as opportunities to learn more of the myriad possibilities within human life. We become more adventurous when confronted with the unknown, secure in our enjoyment of relating to ourselves. 

"Wherever I go, there I am." Have you heard that one? When I first heard that I thought I was being scolded. My bad habits were following me everywhere. With a strengths focus I feel that wherever I go I am in good company. 

These are reflections related to a book I am currently writing with my stepfather, Jerald Forster, Phd. on the subject of having a strengths focus 

A mantra can be a wonderful way to build self-reliance. We will talk about mantra on February 4th as part of the Conversations With Walking Yogi Nishit Patel monthly series of teleconferences. You can subscribe for the Conversations here: Better Existence Events


Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Letting Go. A Little Dab'll Do Ya

Start Letting Go of Small, Painful Things, and Pay Attention

by Jennifer Rose & Better Existence | December 10, 2014

I love talking to people about meditation and living a meditative lifestyle. Often, those conversations are about letting go. 

Sometimes I talk to people and they tell me that letting go is just too hard, and that they can't do it. I usually say something like, "That's fine then. Don't worry about it." 

I know they are worried because they want to get the benefits of meditation. They have invested a lot of time and attention, and they might be thinking, well, if I don't get it about this "letting go" thing, maybe I will miss out on Peace of Mind or something else abstract but cool sounding. 

I don't worry about them at that point, because this is just the beginning of the conversation, and I have done this before. We talk more, and somehow it comes out that they are thinking of letting go of something HUGE, such as a cherished identity like being a drummer, or an intimate relationship such as loving their children, or something that is part of the social contract like having money. They talk about letting go of something that is pleasing for them or something that helps them get along in life. "Don't let go. Don't worry about it." I say. I reassure them that they can still be an awesome meditator.

"Arise" by Jennifer Rose
At that point, I try to steer the conversation to something small that they could let go of. I might say something like, "Are there any small things you could let go of? Things that don't make you feel good, or even make you feel bad? For example, do you have a pair of socks with holes in them that you never wear, but keep in your drawer because your grandparents were raised during the depression and never got new socks? Do you have something that you would be better off without? Why not start with that? I have never met a person who couldn't think of something they had that they didn't really want or need. 

We talk about getting rid of those holey socks. And it turns out that those socks might be pretty difficult to let go of. The rational mind may be ready to let go of the socks, but something else is holding on. I don't tell them to get rid of the socks. I ask them whether they think they might be able to mindfully move in the direction of letting go of the socks. I tell them I want them to notice every single feeling and thought that arises around letting go of those socks. I tell them to study and learn as much as they can about letting go from those socks. 

They leave the conversation challenged, courageous, excited. "Maybe I can let go," they think. 

I love talking to people about meditation. Everything about it has a natural evolution. Letting go of some unused socks can become a profound understanding of attachment. It can lead to useful insights into the nature of attachment and identity. We let go of socks, and we get interested in the process. We move onto the baking dish that is perfectly good, but hasn't been used in fifteen years. We find ourselves giving more thought to acquiring things, and whether they will bring pleasure or pain. Paying attention to the nature of our own attachments can show us our unique path to ease and freedom. 

"Letting Go" is one of the images on the 2-Minute Practice Cards which introduce the chakras. They are available in the Better Existence Etsy store in physical and digital formats.