Dr. Gail Brenner

Sacred Space for Awakened Living

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What Does It Mean to Accept Your Present Moment Experience?

“Transforming yourself is a means of giving light to the whole world.”
~Ramana Maharshi

I talk a lot about accepting your present moment experience. Someone recently asked what exactly I’m inviting you to accept, ​​​​​​​and I’m sure she isn’t the only one with this question.

  • Should you accept abusive situations?​​​​​​​
  • Should you accept that you don’t know how to stand up to others?​​​​​​​
  • Should you accept that you’re single when you don’t want to be?​​​​​​​

If you accept everything, does nothing ever change?

Accept and Welcome Everything

Acceptance is not about giving up and resigning yourself to staying stuck in painful situations. It’s not about putting up with anyone or anything and being miserable.

It’s a full-on welcoming of what is true right now that shows you where you’re stuck—and it paves the way forward to freedom.

Say you feel frustrated with yourself because you let people take advantage of you. If this is your experience, I imagine you’re suffering because of it. Do you just have to live with this way of being forever?

Here is what’s arising in your in-the-moment experience:

  • ​The feeling of frustration, and​​​​​​​
  • The belief about yourself that you can’t say no or set appropriate boundaries.​​​​​​​

Explore deeper into your present moment experience, and you’ll probably find a fear of rejection or of not being liked.

Putting any story about your feelings aside for the moment, the invitation is to fully accept the fear and frustration that are present. Without analyzing anything or trying to problem-solve, you simple open to the feelings that are here, sitting quietly and noticing the sensations present in your body.

If you offer this acceptance to your feelings for a little while, you’ll probably start to feel more peaceful.

Right away, you can see that the stressful feelings come from believing your thoughts. And when you put the thoughts aside for a moment and just be with the pure feelings, all is well.

Shining the Light on False Identities

If you’re suffering because you let others take advantage of you—or for any other reason—you’re living under a limiting and false identity that keeps you locked into relationships and patterns that aren’t working for you.

Deep acceptance of your present moment experience and the insights it brings is the opening you need. You start to recognize where your conditioning has taken hold—and how you can be more aligned with your true nature.

Wise Behavior Change

Accepting things as they are now, how can you shift to a more authentic way of being? You take bold and powerful steps infused with truth. This is wise behavior change.​​​

  • You can let the stories go and welcome your feelings.​​​​​​​
  • You can stay connected to your deepest desire to be free of conditioned habits that aren’t serving you.​​​​​​​
  • You can practice saying no to requests that make you uncomfortable.​​​​​​​
  • You can stay connected to yourself and what you really want rather than worrying about disappointing others.​​​​​​​

A Fresh Beginning

Acceptance isn’t a dead end—rather it’s a fresh beginning.

You may not like seeing how you’ve been stuck in programmed patterns or that you’ve made choices that don’t support your happiness. But when you accept, you are opening the path to a truth-based way of being.

Like an alcoholic getting sober, you get fed up with the pain of your conditioning and vow to find another way that feels better. And there always is one.

This path of truth is fierce. If we want to be happy, we need to be honest with ourselves.

​​​​​​​Acceptance of what is right now is the starting point to begin the realignment with truth.

Any comments or questions? I’d love to hear…

Finding Your Inner Coach

“At a certain point, we need to grow up; we need to look inside ourselves for our inner guidance.”
​​​​​​​~Adyashanti

I was speaking to a friend the other day who is often caught in a mindset of lack. His mind seems to love reciting all the things that are missing from his life, especially a relationship with a woman.
​​​
But this time something different happened. Instead of being taken down this sad and lonely road of lack, this golden phrase appeared: “Wait a minute!”

“Wait a minute”— it completely woke him out of the dream of lack and brought him into the reality of the present moment.

  • Then he began to question:
  • What is present?
  • Is everything okay right now?
  • Do I have to wait for a partner to do the things I want to do?

It was a spontaneous and fresh offering of universal intelligence showing him the way to freedom.

Accessing the Inner Coach

For a while on my journey, the phrase that arose was, “Go in.” To me, that meant to let go of all the thinking in my head and bring my attention down into the body to welcome sensations. Then I sat with great peace, just being this space.

Saying, “Go in,” short-circuited the swirling thoughts every time, and eventually they stopped taking hold.

Someone else I know says, “Go back.” This phrase tells her to let her attention fall away from the world of people and situations—and the world of her own thoughts and feelings. She stops feeding her anxiety and trying to figure out what others need.

She comes back to herself…to the space behind her eyes…to the breath…to being grounded in this now moment.

Help for Discovering Your True Nature

These phrases are a sign that your inner coach is alive and well. It’s the voice in you that knows your personal “I” thoughts don’t serve peace and happiness. It’s the one who is already awake to the magnificent aliveness of your true nature—beckoning you home.

Your inner coach guides you from contraction to creativity. Another friend was stuck in a grabby, fear-based thought pattern. All she could see were scary outcomes with no satisfying solution.

Then, “Hey, wait!” appeared. She took some moments in stillness, and then became aware of a number of practical solutions to the problem she was wrestling with, and the fear disappeared.

Programmed habits often hold on tightly because they’re highly reinforced. We’ve been thinking them and acting on them for most of our lives.

This is why we need skillful means to awaken out of them. And your inner coach is one ally in this process.

What About You?

What is your inner coach saying? How is it helping you? And if you’re reading this by email, please click here to go to GailBrenner.com and to comment.

The Exhausting Story of “Me”

“How long will you think about this painful life?
How long will you think about this harmful world?
The only thing it can take from you is your body.
Don’t say all this rubbish and stop thinking.”
~Rumi

An unexamined mind is a self-centered mind. If you’re unconsciously taking the content of your thoughts to be true, then you’re fully engaged in the story of me…me…me.

If you’re stuck in the machine of conditioning, without realizing it, you’re constantly thinking about what you need, what you want, and what you should or shouldn’t be feeling.

Your Personal Agenda

The “I” that you define yourself as is the reference point for everything, and all your thoughts are about your personal agenda.

  • Am I okay?
  • Am I getting what I need?
  • Am I doing the right thing?
  • Am I safe?
  • I want more.
  • I think he shouldn’t have said that.
  • In my opinion, she should be doing it differently.
  • It’s her fault, not mine.

Not only is this inner self-talk exhausting, it creates an agitated, unhappy mind.

If you identify with the contents of that mind and it becomes the sole focus of your attention, you will undoubtedly feel agitated and unhappy. Instead of engaging with a mind filled to the brim with personal thoughts of fear and dissatisfaction, consider the radical proposition of being empty.

Empty of the Story of “Me”

What if you were to empty out these personal thoughts? How? Take them in a big heap and put them aside because they’re not serving.

And here you are, pure and pristine. A mind infinitely open like the sky. Breath breathing itself. You might think you need a personal self with all of its preferences and opinions. But here’s the truth: you don’t.

Life goes along just fine whether or not the mind is chattering. And when you’re empty of the personal self, your experience will be so much more peaceful.

But don’t take my word for it. Find out in your own experience. Next time you’re lost in suffering, realize how much your attention is supporting the story of me…me…me. Subtract the “me” and all that goes with it, and you’re one with the seamless flow of life.

An Experiment

Try this experiment: become very familiar with the story of the separate self and how it wends its way into your mind and body. Then empty it out. Pour out the personal needs and strategies that aren’t serving. Throw away the needless opinions, demands, and expectations. Then experience yourself as fully here and available to life’s unfolding.

What About You?

I’d love to hear your reports and insights. And if you’re reading this by email, please click here to go to GailBrenner.com and to comment.

Love to you…

Gail

PS: This passage is Chapter 33 from my book entitled, At the Core of Every Heart: Reflections, Insights, and Practices for Waking Up and Living Free. For more and to purchase the book, please click here.

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Body, Awareness, and our True Nature with Ellen Emmet

ellen“There 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 you’re one of those people who is stuck in your mind a lot, then you’re going to love this.

I’m so pleased to introduce you to my friend, Ellen Emmet. Ellen has a beautiful way of creating the space for the separate self to dissolve through guided body awareness. She is an expert in welcoming people into the direct experience of emotions.

I invited Ellen to join in a conversation with me. We’re both therapists, and we share a passion for meeting each moment with full aliveness.

You can listen to or download the audio or listen on YouTube. I hope you enjoy it.

To learn more about Ellen, please visit her website, EllenEmmet.com. And be sure to listen to her guided explorations available here.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/gailbrenner/body_awareness.mp3

 

To download, click Download. The audio will open in a new window. Then for Mac’s, control-click, then “Save video as…”. For PC’s, right click.

Here are some of the topics we covered:

5:00 Body awareness vs. being consumed by thinking
8:15 Body awareness and knowing our true nature
13:05 Deeply welcoming the experience of the body
14.45 Trauma, the story, and the body
21:10 Being alive in our lives
25:30 Healing and knowing your true nature
29:00 Giving yourself over to your life
34:00 Attunement to emotions
35:00 The welcoming space of therapy
42:00  Ellen’s offerings—EllenEmmet.com

What About You?

Please feel free to leave a comment or question below. If you are reading by email, please click here to go to GailBrenner.com and comment.

 

A Practical Guide to Working with the Pesky Mind

pesky-mind“All the things that truly matter—beauty, love, creativity, joy, inner peace—arise from beyond the mind.”
~Eckhart Tolle

“If only my mind would give me a break.” “I’m constantly bombarded by thoughts.”

These are some of the frustrated statements I hear from people every day who are trying to find peace from their thoughts. And most of the time, they hold onto the wish that their thoughts would just stop.

Well, I’ll let you in on a little secret—you can’t make your thoughts stop. And the more you try to do that, the more you are actually focusing on the fact that you’re thinking.

It’s like trying not to think about a pink elephant. The more you try not to do something, the more you’re resisting the urge to do it. And the net effect for you is certainly not the peace that you’re looking for.

Freedom from the Pesky Mind

But don’t lose hope…because freedom from the power of your thinking is possible. I know because I speak from my own experience. I used to be tied up in knots with worry and anxiety. I spent so much time in my head trying to figure out how to navigate my life that I missed many opportunities.

And now I hardly worry at all, and I’m so much more at ease as I go with the flow. I see life as a precious gift instead of one gigantic threat that robs me of my happiness.

The key to this shift has been how I relate to my mind.

A Friendly Relationship with Your Thoughts

Forming a friendly relationship with your thoughts asks you to develop insights and have tools in your back pocket. You need to deeply understand how thinking works, and you need tools to work with your thoughts and the feelings that drive them.

Changing how you relate to thoughts takes focus and effort on your part, especially in the beginning. So abandon wishful thinking and the vague hope that things will improve.

Buckle down, commit, and make your peace your highest priority. And if you think that’s a selfish goal, think again (pun intended 🙂 ). Because once you’re less consumed in your mind, you’re more available to listen, engage, and fully live your lovely life.

Insights

We’ll start with four insights about thoughts.

#1: You are not your thoughts.

You existed long before you started thinking. There’s an innocent, original part of you that is truly alive, and this part has nothing to do with your thoughts. If you don’t know this, experiment. Pretend that you’re not your thoughts, and see if you’re still here. Get to know this “you” who is alive prior to your thoughts.

This insight means that your thoughts don’t define you. This might sound like a revolutionary statement, but it’s true. Your thoughts may tell you that you’re unworthy and limited, and they may tell you that you’ll be lost if you don’t worry incessantly. But without these beliefs, you’re still here—and you’re way more at peace.

#2: You can choose how you relate to your thoughts.

Since your thoughts are not who you are, you can choose how much attention you give them. You can live in the stories they tell you, or you can see them as mental chatter that has no meaning.

#3: You don’t have to buy into the content of your thoughts.

Really take a look at the content of your thoughts. If thinking is a problem for you, you will find that your thoughts are quite negative. They tell you to constantly be on guard so you can’t enjoy life. They fill you with doubt and concern. They make you believe you’re a fraction of your true magnificence. And they judge everyone and everything, including yourself, concluding that the reality of things as they are is not good enough.

Bringing in insight #2, you can choose how you relate to these thoughts. Do you want to magnify this content and make it the veil through which you see life? Or do you want to drop the veil and see things as they truly are?

#4: You can function very well in life without paying attention to thinking.

Most thinking is negative and useless. It’s just not needed. Sure you need thoughts to follow directions or plan a trip. But it is not your birthright to be stuck in ruminating thoughts that spin around and make you feel anxious.

When you don’t pay attention to thinking, you’re open to life as it is. You relate to others with your heart open instead of with fear of abandonment or disapproval. And you take things as they come without resisting them. Sound good?

Tools

Insights are often not enough to change your relationship with your thoughts. Thinking has a strong momentum to it because it has been reinforced for decades, so you need tools to apply in the moment when you realize you’ve been lost in thought.

As you commit to working with thoughts, you will get lost in them. Expect that to happen many times, and don’t think you’ve failed when you realize it.

See each realization that you’ve been thinking as an opportunity to do something different. Really, see it as a celebration, a “Yes,” a moment when the veil of thinking drops away and you have choices available to you.

Stop and breathe.

When you become aware that you’ve been thinking, stop and breathe. Take a big expansive inhale and breathe out. You’re home!

Shift attention away from thinking.

Notice that your attention has been glued to thoughts. Shift your attention away from the content of the thoughts. Lose interest in what they’re telling you because they’re probably not helping you be happy and at peace in the moment.

Instead, take a few conscious breaths, look around you and reconnect with your surroundings, feel your body, and notice that you’re present and alive. Your whole energy will shift.

Feel the sensations in your body.

While you’re completely in your head, it feels like you’re cut off from what’s happening in your body. One of the ways to short circuit thinking is to move your attention into your body to feel the sensations that are present in the moment.

If this practice is new to you, you’ll probably notice a lot of tension. When I speak with people who are caught in their minds and ask them how their body feels, across the board they tell me they feel tense and contracted.

These unexplored bodily sensations are the fuel for thinking. They are interpreted as signs of threat and fear. Leave them unnoticed, and the anxious stories will run amok. Breathe with these sensations and let them be, and your experience in the moment will be one of ease and peace.

Expand into presence.

The awareness that is always here in the background of any experience is free of thinking. Being aware is the steady, stable, ever-present space that exists whether thoughts are present or not. You can be aware of things such as thoughts, physical sensations, objects in a room, or other people. And you can be aware of the experience of being aware.

When you expand into presence, which is the experience of being aware, you’ll get a taste of this space that is free of thought. Rest your attention here, and you’ll notice great peace and relaxation.

Be open to fresh and new options.

You don’t need to rely on thinking to live. And if this insight is new to you, you may wonder what to do next. Here are some possibilities:

  • Trust the truth of the moment and not your thoughts.
  • Be open to what the moment brings to you.
  • Instead of being motivated by fear and anxiety, ask, “What would love do?” or “How does life want to move me right now?”
  • Be in wonder and “don’t know” mind, and see what feels right to you.

Persistence and Dedication

Often people will say to me that they’ve done what I suggest, but it hasn’t worked. This tells me that they are still harboring an expectation that the thoughts will disappear and they’ll never get hooked again.

Expect to get hooked by your thoughts! And take each moment as an opportunity for finding your way to peace. Be persistent and dedicated—because your happiness is at stake.

I eventually got to the point of not believing any of those pesky thoughts. They could come and visit me—and they do—but I’m not bothered by them. Literally, they float across the background of my awareness, and I don’t pay attention to them.

And now there’s space for so much joy, peace, and ease.

What About You?

Are you bothered by thoughts? Have you found freedom from them? I’d love to hear… And if you’re reading this by email, please click here to visit GailBrenner.com and to comment.

And if this post resonates with you, please share it with someone who needs to hear these words.

Love always,
Gail

PS: This is the last week for the introductory special of Guided Meditation for Wholeness, Clarity, and Freedom. You’ll get three volumes for the price of two, which includes 32 different meditations. Please click here for all the details!

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