Dr. Gail Brenner

Sacred Space for Awakened Living

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12 Enlightening Ways to Find Peace in Any Moment

find-peace-1“Truth is by nature self-evident. As soon as you remove the cobwebs of ignorance that surround it, it shines clear.”
~Gandhi

As humans, we suffer when our attention is locked into painful thoughts and feelings. If you stop in any moment when you’re unhappy, you’ll be able to know exactly why you’re suffering.

You’ll notice that your attention is caught in thinking negative, agitating thoughts. You might be worrying about the future, ruminating about something that happened in the past, thinking about what you should have said or done, judging yourself or others in your mind.

You might be holding expectations about how you think things should be that aren’t being met. And you might be aware of emotions and tension in your body, feeling stressed, anxious, frustrated, or sad.

Waking Up to How We Suffer

We’re often unaware of where our attention goes unless we consciously take a look. And when we’re unaware, we mistakenly identify with limiting thoughts and emotions that just aren’t true.

They’re affecting our mood, how we show up in our lives and our relationships, and the decisions we make. Without our realizing it, these habits become our reality.

My experience of becoming aware of where my attention is focused makes it completely obvious why I’m not peaceful and happy in any moment. How could I possibly be happy if my experience is dominated by stress and negativity?

The first time I saw this, it was a huge and exciting revelation. If I knew how I was suffering, I knew that I could find my way to peace in any moment.

Ways to Peace

How to do that? Here are some of the ways I’ve found to be helpful. Try them out. Experiment. And know that it’s possible for you to be peaceful now…and now…and now…

  1. Develop a new way of relating to your experience. Make a U-turn with your attention away from the world. Tone down the drama and become curious about your in-the-moment experience instead.
  2. Become an expert in how you suffer. Notice what thoughts are consuming your attention. Realize how these thoughts affect your mood, how you show up with people, the life decisions you make. Now you’re motivated to find another way of being.
  3. These conditioned thought patterns don’t serve happiness. Shift your attention away from engaging with the content of the thoughts and instead just be aware that they’re present.
  4. Then get to know the experience of “being aware,” which itself is peaceful. Allowing thoughts to flow through you like clouds in the sky, you’re conscious and alive. Amazingly you realize that this “being aware” is not touched by the content of the thoughts. It remains peaceful no matter what thoughts and feelings are present. In the moments when you’re consciously aware, you’re not resisting your experience by believing it’s who you are.
  5. Use your breath and your senses to come alive to the present moment. What do you see, hear, and feel in your body?
  6. When you’re in the throes of a strong feeling, know that ruminating on the story about the feeling will only keep it locked into place. The experience of every feeling includes physical sensations. Instead of feeding thoughts, move your attention into your body. Notice the physical sensations and let them be present as they are without needing to get rid of them. This deep acceptance is a beautifully loving way to be with yourself. You stop resisting your experience, and you’re at peace.
  7. Our lives are way too busy, and our happiness is served when we slow down. Call it meditation or just sitting, but spend a little time every day being quiet.
  8. Reduce the mental and emotional noise around you. When we’re unconscious, we tend to move too fast and make decisions that don’t serve our peace and happiness. Becoming more aware, you might realize you want align your lifestyle to invite peace. This might mean you drink less, let go of people in your life who aren’t serving peace, watch less news and fewer violent movies, or reduce the drama in your life by gossiping less.
  9. Be on the lookout for spontaneous and natural experiences of joy, awe, wonder, tenderness, gratitude, heart-opening, and clarity—and experience them deeply.
  10. Relish in doing things you enjoy. Listen inside to how love, enthusiasm, aliveness, and creativity want to move you, then take action even if it’s scary.
  11. Have patience and compassion with yourself. It takes time to counteract decades of conditioning and unconsciousness. Stay committed to your desire for peace.
  12. Don’t feel frustrated when habits recur—that’s what habits do! Celebrate every sacred moment of waking up to the suffering so you can know peace.

Realize that you don’t have to be defined by unhappy thoughts and feelings. In any moment, let them go. And here you are, steeped in awareness, peaceful, and fully one with the unfolding of life.

What About You?

How do you find peace in any moment? Experiment with these suggestions and let us know in the comments how it goes. I’d love to hear… And if you’re reading by email, please click here to visit GailBrenner.com and to comment.

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10 Life-Changing Facts About Forgiveness

forgiveness_10lcf“Discontent, blaming, complaining, self-pity cannot serve as a foundation for a good future, no matter how much effort you make.”
~Eckhart Tolle

I’m a big fan of forgiveness, but I understand if it feels difficult or isn’t the right time for you. In my personal experience, letting go of a grudge against my parents opened my whole experience of life and paved the way for our relationship to be much more loving.

I never got an apology, and we never had “the talk” I thought I needed. I was just tired of feeling angry and resentful and wanted freedom.

Looking back, I can see that this grudge consumed my energy for many years—and now I rarely think about what happened. It no longer occupies my mental and emotional space.

If you are struggling with forgiveness, then this article is for you. Absorb these 10 facts, contemplate them, and experiment with putting them into action in your own heart and mind.

1. Forgiveness is life-changing.

When you turn toward yourself, notice how holding a grudge seeps into your thoughts and dominates your emotions.

Once you’re serious about forgiveness and make peace your priority, your energy naturally begins to open. Instead of chewing on thoughts about the past, you’re available to be compassionate with yourself and way more open to the wonders of the present moment.

2. Forgiveness is about your peace and happiness.

If you are stuck in bitterness, you are the one suffering. And once the knot inside untangles, you’re no longer living in distressing stories and painful emotions.

In a flash of insight, I realized how much anger I carried that affected my daily life. That was enough for me to commit to letting it go. I just wanted to feel better. That it changed my relationships for the better was a happy side effect.

3. Forgiving doesn’t mean you approve of bad behavior.

Here’s the truth: people do nasty things, and what happens in life is not always fair.

Forgiving doesn’t mean you approve of anyone’s behavior. Whomever is the target of your grudge needs to walk their own path.

The path of forgiveness is your own. You can’t control what happened or other people’s behavior, but you can absolutely control how you meet your own experience.

If we persist in focusing on the story of blame, we’re hurting ourselves in our minds. Committing to making space for all that arises, including the joys and gifts present right now, we’re well on our way to opening our hearts.

4. If you’re having trouble forgiving, there is attachment to the belief that what happened shouldn’t have happened.

If you fight the facts of what happened, you’ll continue to stay stuck.

Instead, take a deep breath, and bring awareness to your inner experience. Realize how painful it’s been for you. Let the sadness, grief, and anger come. And when you’re ready, step away from the pain refreshed and ready to live again. Can you feel how kind this is?

5. Being caught in not forgiving affects you more than anyone else.

You’re holding a grudge when you feel locked into a story of what happened and you feed that story with your attention. Every definition of “grudge” that I found talks about “ill will and resentment.”

Not forgiving means you’re solidifying your experience of ill will and resentment.

6. You don’t need an apology.

If you can have a heartfelt conversation with whomever you feel wronged you, then go for it. But often that isn’t possible. The person may be unable to hear you, unavailable, or deceased. And you are likely to find that the apology isn’t satisfying anyway.

Forgiveness is an inner letting go. In the state of not forgiving, you’re plying the hurtful story with your attention so it keeps feeling very real for you.

When you forgive, you stop thinking about the story, and you welcome your feelings in your own space of awareness. This is the kind and loving thing you can do in your own quiet moments.

7. Forgiving supports the health of your body.

Chronic anger and stress takes its toll on the body.

Research has shown that forgiveness reduces stress, decreases blood pressure, cholesterol, and heart rate, and improves sleep and immune system functioning. It also reduces anxiety, depression, and anger, and promotes a sense of well being.

8. You’ll probably need to express your feelings.

When we’re caught up in the story of anger and resentment, we’re actually avoiding the intensity of our feelings. Let yourself feel whatever you feel—anger, rage, sadness, grief. Express these feelings with a therapist, trusted friend, in a letter you don’t send, or in front of an empty chair.

Then take a breath and breathe with the sensations you feel. Let these sensations rise up and pass on. You’re untangling your attachment to the story and being present with your experience in a deeply loving way.

9. You may not need what you think you need.

By now, you probably have some distinct ideas about what you need in order for you to forgive. But consider other possibilities as well. And here are two for you to experiment with.

Try giving yourself what you think you need from someone else. If you think you need love, give yourself love. If you think you need understanding, spend some time in deep compassion and understanding with yourself. If you think you need an apology, imagine getting it and feel the effects in your body, mind, and heart.

Then see if you can give out to others what you think you need. Can you open to others with love, acceptance, and understanding? Is there anyone you feel moved to apologize to?

10. It’s so freeing to forgive.

Not forgiving keeps you locked into feeling like a victim. You think that something was done to you, and you put the possibility of healing into someone else’s hands.

When you embark on the path of forgiveness, you’re reclaiming your power. You’re taking loving care of your own thoughts and feelings, and helping your own sense of peace to flourish.

When we bring our loving attention to the places inside that feel stuck, magic happens. Spaciousness…peace…intimacy…aliveness in the present moment…

Surrender Your Mind to Your Loving Heart

surrender“Surrender is faith that the power of Love can accomplish anything even when you cannot foresee the outcome.”
~Deepak Chopra

I love the act of surrender. When we’re holding on tight to something with so much effort, it means we can thankfully let go.

When we feel like we’re carrying the world on our shoulders, we can give it back, drop the weight, and trust that things will be okay.

The Ease of Surrender

I surrender a lot. When life presents me with a situation that I just can’t figure out, I stop trying. Instead of endlessly rolling it around in my mind, I wait, listening intently, fully receptive to the answers that might appear.

When there are too many things to do, I stop trying to do them and let myself be guided.

And when things just don’t feel right, I know I’ve taken a turn off my true path. And that’s the perfect time to stop, let go, and surrender.

From where I sit, surrendering makes life so much easier. You don’t need to stay stuck in the fog of confusion. You don’t need to know all the answers. The pressure’s off, so you can truly relax.

“Going with the flow” takes on a whole new meaning.

How Surrender Works

I recently found myself urgently trying to make a decision, and the way forward just wasn’t clear. I tested out a couple of different options, but each time I felt an inner “No.” I had no enthusiasm and felt forced to do something I didn’t really want to do.

There were red flags everywhere that I was looking in the wrong direction. So I decided to surrender.

Instead of choosing with my mind about what I thought should happen, I went to my heart. I asked:

  • What would I enjoy?
  • What am I enthusiastic about?
  • Where does my creativity want to express itself?
  • What would be fun to do?

And as soon as I started asking these questions, the answers flooded in. To my surprise, I realized I wasn’t confused or stuck. I just hadn’t created the space for these answers to emerge.

Here’s the lesson that came as clear as day. The mind creates struggle, and the heart knows. I can spin around in my mind with its desires, expectations, and judgments, or I can let all of that mental activity merrily float off into the ethers.

I can suffer and contract into an agitated little ball, or I am here, happy, clear, and free, with a smile on my face.  🙂

Your Turn to Surrender

Are you interested in surrendering? Here’s what to do.

  • Get to know that cranky, needy personal voice with its endless desires, requirements, and opinions. Recognize it, then let it go. Don’t give it your attention.
  • If it feels right, ask questions appropriate to your situation. How is your heart wanting to speak?
  • Now here’s the juicy part. Simply listen. Find that place of supreme openness beyond the thinking mind where you don’t need to know, and be available to what that openness has to tell you. Let yourself be visited by the grand intelligence that lies behind everything. And trust it no matter what your fears tell you.

Surrender your mind to your loving heart. It’s simple and courageous and the only sane thing to do.

What About You?

What keeps you from surrendering? What happens when you do? What do you surrender? I’d love to hear…and if you’re reading by email, please click here to visit GailBrenner.com and to comment.

Always in love,
Gail

Note: You are most welcome to attend our next live meeting of Living in Truth. Please click here for the info.

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The Must-Do Way to Heal from the Pain of Inadequacy

heal_inadequacy“Discontent, blaming, complaining, self-pity cannot serve as a foundation for a good future, no matter how much effort you make.”
~Eckhart Tolle

The problem of inadequacy is rampant in our society. Call it low self-esteem, need for approval, or the disease to please—if you believe that you are your conditioned habits, you’ll live with the sense that something’s missing.

The messages about lack are everywhere. Just watch ten minutes of commercials on TV. You’ll be told you aren’t young enough or thin enough, or that you don’t have the car or even cleaning product you need to be happy. We live in a culture of non-acceptance, which is supported by what many of us learn from our families of origin.

We’re taught that we’re not good enough, that we need exactly what we don’t have. It’s a legacy of lack.

The Pain Is Personal

Of course, this sense of lack seeps into our personal psyches. It might appear like this:

  • Living steeped in thoughts about what you should do or be to be acceptable and complete;
  • Needing others’ approval to feel okay about yourself;
  • Constant self-criticism;
  • Feeling that there must be something more to life;
  • Compulsive behavior that tries to fill your emotional void.

It’s like the bucket is always leaking. You rarely feel full, relaxed, and at ease.

Lack and desire are at the root of unhappiness. And feelings of personal inadequacy keep you searching, struggling to fulfill your needs and desires.

In Buddhism, it’s called the hungry ghost— that gnawing hunger to seek what you think you’re missing but which can never really satisfy.

You Are Already Whole

The invitation I’m offering to you here, right now, is to stop living in the false identity of “not enough,” to stop searching to get what you think you need in order to finally be adequate.

Instead, turn your into into the core of inadequacy to find out if it’s true. (Hint: It’s not.) Realize the possibility that, outside of the sad stories and hopeless feelings, the truth has always been here, waiting to be discovered.

You have always been all that you were looking for.

You are whole and complete, more than enough, full and overflowing—just as you are. You can wake up from the dream of personal lack, which is precisely the healing you’ve been looking for.

The Path to Heal from the Pain of Inadequacy

How to do that? Don’t believe the thoughts that try to convince you that you’re inadequate. Question these thoughts, and they’ll start to lose their power.

  • You observe them rather than believe them.
  • You realize you don’t have to take them as true.

When you stop and question your thoughts, you’ve put on the brakes to this painful habit. And that changes everything.

You realize that these thoughts appear, but they are not who you are.

Beautiful You

And who are you? Naturally kind and open-hearted…pristine…unaffected by anything that might have happened to you.

We’ve all heard the saying that you can see the glass as half empty or half full. I say, don’t just see the glass as half full.

Stop trying to fix what’s not actually broken in you and realize that your glass is already completely full and overflowing. Recognize that your fulfillment is already here, available right now, then go out there and enjoy your life.

Are you troubled by inadequacy? Have you found the way to heal from it? I’d love to hear…And if you’re reading by email, please click here to visit GailBrenner.com and to comment.

You may have noticed that there was a problem with posting comments on the site for the past few weeks, but this is now fixed. Feel free to stop by. I’d love to hear about your challenges and insights!

Always in love,
Gail

PS: This post is inspired by Chapter 7 of my book, The End of Self-Help: Discovering Peace and Happiness Right at the Heart of Your Messy, Scary, Brilliant Life. To purchase the book for yourself or a friend, please click here.

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Peace—It’s a Nanosecond Away

peace_nanosecondThere is a life-force within your soul, seek that life.
There is a gem in the mountain of your body, seek that mine.
O traveler, if you are in search of That
Don’t look outside, look inside yourself and seek That.

~Rumi

If there’s one thing I love, it’s this: that peace is always a nanosecond away.

It takes no time at all to take a breath, to step our attention away from the dramas and worries that consume us, to notice and be rather than engage.

It’s the sacred stopping of the momentum of programmed habits and the relief that comes from expanding into pure alive being. Can you feel it?

In the moment of being aware, obsessive thoughts float by like clouds in the sky. The pressure to change or improve melts away. All the doing to become something better gives way to simply receiving things as they are.

And what’s left? Effortlessly flowing with what is. Feeling the “Thank you” emerge from the stillness. Recognizing the sense that things are okay.

Tasting the palpable aliveness that’s masked when our minds are in charge.

It’s so simple. How to do it?

  • Stop. Notice that you’re suffering, and stop.
  • Take a cleansing breath.
  • Be alert to the aliveness that’s present and let the thoughts go.
  • Enjoy the moment of peace.

Then go deeper and explore this peace. Discover its vastness. Notice that it’s always here when your attention isn’t caught in thoughts. Realize the sense of union with everything as your mind and heart open endlessly.

These are not special moments reserved for the blessed few. This is what’s available in your everyday reality.

Let peace fill your body. Let love inform your actions. Inhabit the space where your true fire burns brightly.

What About You?

What happens when you access these moments of peace? What gets in the way? I’d love to hear, and if you’re reading by email, please click here to visit GailBrenner.com and to comment.

Always in love,
Gail

Note: Please tune in for my radio interview on Patricia Raskin’s Positive Living Show. It’s Monday, June 8 at 2:30 pm Eastern time, 11:30 am Pacific. Click here for the info.

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