Tag: mindfulness

  • From Striving to Self-Compassion

    From Striving to Self-Compassion

    For most of my life, I prayed for strength; now I find myself praying for gentleness. I used to believe that if I just tried harder, life would finally work — and maybe I’d finally be thinner. But sooner or later, effort becomes its own kind of exhaustion.

    I have come to learn that our bodies are designed to help us survive challenge, not to live in constant pursuit of it. When we push hard for long periods, our stress hormone cortisol stays elevated. At first it fuels motivation and alertness, but over time it begins to work against us. High cortisol can disrupt other hormones such as insulin, thyroid, and estrogen. It tells the body to store fat and hold on to energy “just in case.”

    For those of us living with autoimmune conditions, this constant stress signal can confuse the immune system, intensifying inflammation and fatigue. I have come to see that this is not just theory. It is the very pattern I find myself caught in, and it only adds to the stress I am trying to escape.

    What begins as determination can quietly become depletion. The harder we try to control, the more our bodies interpret life as unsafe. Muscles tighten. Sleep fragments. Digestion slows. The healing systems start to switch off. It helps to remember that this is not a moral failure; it is simply biology asking for safety.

    When we begin to interrupt that loop by resting, breathing, and nourishing ourselves kindly, something sacred happens. Cortisol steadies. Hormones rebalance. The immune system begins to trust again. Compassion becomes chemistry. Gentleness becomes medicine.

    I am learning that growth doesn’t always come from pushing harder. It’s not easy, especially when you’ve spent a lifetime equating effort with worth. Yet the work now is asking me to be quieter; to listen more deeply to the wisdom of the body, the whispers of the Spirit, and the longing for peace and a non-hustling life.

    I have often called out to God when I am at the end of my rope. Lately I am discovering that He meets me within these limits, not just at the end of them. He is not the One who demands more, but the One who abides when we can’t do more.

    So the next time we catch ourselves looping, planning, pushing, or punishing ourselves for not changing fast enough, let’s pause instead.
    Take a breath.
    Ask softly, “What might kindness look like here?”

    What if the truest transformation doesn’t happen through force but through gentleness? And the work is the steady turning from self-criticism to self-companionship; from striving to trust.

    If we traded willpower for wonder, what might we change?

    Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

    Grace begins where striving ends.

  • Waiting to Live?

    Waiting to Live?

    When the occasional social media post tugs at something inside of me I make a note of it in my journal, and reflect on it a little further. One such post was titled ‘5 Reasons you might be waiting for your life to start’, by Elisabeth Corey. While Elisabeth’s focus is on recovery from trauma, there is some truth in this for all of us. Too often something in our past hold us back from living in the present.  Perhaps, not trauma from childhood; but, it may be something that happened last year or even yesterday that stops us truly living today. Meanwhile, we exist while we dwell on these things of the past. As Corey highlights, the problem is we wait for someone to apologise, someone to release us, someone to give us permission, for everything to be perfect or for peace to reign.  We are waiting to live.

    Of course, this doesn’t apply only to those living in the past. It can also apply to those living in the future.  We joke when I win the lotto, when I lose these surplus kilos, or find the perfect partner…then I will start living!  It’s like watching the clock for finish time and missing what is happening right now. Or, thinking about what you will say to someone else in the future and ignore the person chatting away beside you.  Crazy hey!

    Before we know it we have existed for most of our earthly lives, and never really lived it.  Sure, you were there in your body, but where was your mind or your soul, at the time?  I should know this as it required piecing together a photo collage, or album, to relive moments of my past; and realising I was present there in body only.  Where was I at the time?  No doubt wishing that something was different or better.  As the saying goes, ‘Be careful, less you wish your life away!’

    Living in the present is the mantra of modern-day mindfulness. There is growing evidence that practicing mindfulness reduces stress and anxiety; so, it is good for both body and soul. This practice involves consciously becoming aware of what is happening inside and outside of one self, without judgement.  While linked to Buddhism, mindfulness is not exclusive to this eastern religion. Nowadays, there is also a form devoid of all religion. Mindfulness, in the form of meditation and contemplation, is also found on the ancient Christian path.

    The Christian version looks a lot like, ‘Be still, and know I am God’ (Psalm 46:10). It is acknowledging that despite chaos and uncertainty, we can find a God given stillness and peace. By opening up we make space for God. In this space we have the ability to hear from Him and find the grace to obey His word.  Mindfulness is not an end in itself but a way forward. Living in the present is not to discount the past, or refuse to consider the future.  It is choosing to respond to the life that is in the here and now.

    The process of being still allows us to capture those swirling and anxious thoughts, and allow God’s mind – the mind of Christ, to bring forgiveness and truth, healing and wholeness – today.  As Richard Foster says, this is not about emptying our mind, but rather filling it.  Rather than detachment from our life, it is an attachment to God and a redirection of our lives. Of course, this is not always a comfortable space.  Keeping God at arm’s length, or leaving him out of the whole mindfulness exercise, is to live life on our own terms.   Some of us would much rather hold onto grudges, blame others for our failure to take responsibility, wait for a perfect tomorrow, or attempt to forget everything; rather than do what God is asking us to do now – living in His presence. As Richard Foster says in Celebration of Discipline, ‘the aim is to bring this living reality into all of life’.

    What if the difference between existing and living, is not emptying our minds of everything- past, present and future; but, rather filling our minds with the presence of the living God and allowing Him to transform us with His love?  Foster explains that we can do this several ways; attentiveness to God through stillness and silence, by meditating on Scripture, or by meditating on creation. It is in the ‘listening, sensing, (and) heeding the light and life of Christ’ that we find the ability to truly live our life today.  So, what are we waiting for?  Our yesterdays, nor our tomorrows, need not hold us back from living life today. We can do this with God’s help and in His presence.

    Photo by S Migaj on Unsplash

    References:

    Corey, Elisabeth. 5 Reasons You Might be Waiting for Your Life to Start. Jun 6, 2018. https://beatingtrauma.com/2018/06/06/5-reasons-you-might-be-waiting-for-your-life-to-start/?fbclid=IwAR0Ak49X5S0nij4hlz1gkxCtdtaVndl2fWORQwDYUafxEJWpQtd3tIwq9hE

    Foster, Richard J. Celebration of Discipline: The Path to Spiritual Growth. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1988.