Dr. Gail Brenner

Sacred Space for Awakened Living

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How (and Why) to Make Fear Your Friend

Helping Hands“It’s only fear, it’s only fear that keeps you locked in here.”
Songwriter Alexi Murdoch

Q: Make fear my friend? Why would I want to do that?
A: Because it’s the only way to be at peace with it.

Be at peace with fear? That might sound impossible, but I can guarantee that learning to be at peace with fear will completely transform your life. I’m not saying you’ll never feel fear again, as it is a natural part of the human experience. In fact, you will even discover that fear has something to offer you. When you do experience fear, however, you will know how to be with it so it doesn’t run your life. Until we know fear intimately, until we allow ourselves to welcome it in as a friend, fear is in control of our lives. And when we can relax with fear, it truly becomes our ally rather than our adversary.

“What You Resist Persists”

Speaking of adversary, many of the strategies we frequently use to deal with fear view it as an opposing force that needs to be reckoned with. We try to overcome it, push through it, fight it, conquer it, avoid it, cope with it, and manage it. Whew! Sounds like a lot of work. What is common to these strategies is resistance: we move against our experience of fear in an effort to eradicate or control it. Even gentle strategies, such as deep breathing and calming self-talk, although useful at times, create resistance through their intent to get rid of the fear. No matter how accomplished we are at using any of these strategies, the fear will undoubtedly rise up again, requiring more of our precious energy. As the saying goes, “what you resist persists.”

Moving with Fear

A clue to an alternative, freeing way to address fear comes from the martial art of aikido. The philosophy behind aikido is to blend with the motion of the attacker rather than opposing him head-on. We already know how to oppose fear head-on, but how to blend with the motion of it?

For some reason I have never quite understood, people find fear scary. All that’s needed is a subtle sign of fear, and our bodies and minds go into hyperdrive to try to eliminate it as if fear is an unwanted intruder, an enemy poised to destroy us. The only way to find out if this is actually true is to stop running and turn around to meet fear.

Avoiding or suppressing our inner experiences that are actually here perpetuates anxiety, separation, and dis-ease. It’s like taking an apple pie and throwing out one slice because we don’t want it to be there. Fear, like all of our experiences, is a tap on the shoulder that says, “Can I come in, please?” Why welcome it in as an old friend? To quote the Everest climber George Mallory, “Because it’s there.” When we know our experiences intimately, they cease having the power to control us. We are integrated and relaxed, and we can, finally, put down our vigilance and weapons of defense and separation.

The Process of Welcoming Experience

If I have piqued your interest, and you are willing to begin to sincerely know fear, turn your attention inside. It starts with a very simple greeting: “Hello, fear.” The meeting comes from a place of openness, curiosity, and not knowing. After all, this may be the first time you are actually welcoming the friend that may have been your companion for a very long time. Realize that as much as you may have strategized in the past, you don’t really know what fear is like.

In addition, tenderness is required. Fear may have been the excluded one, the friend who has been ignored, left out in the cold. It takes warm and loving attention for the ice to melt, for the fear to come out of hiding and be seen for what it is, which is actually much less scary than anything you might imagine.

As you begin with, “Hello, fear,” see how your body feels. You might notice tension, vibration, or fluttering. Resist the urge to avoid, and simply stay with the sensations, allowing them to be present without doing anything to them. Don’t freak out. All that’s happening is that you are feeling some physical changes in your body. Simply let them happen, and stay with it.

Notice your thoughts. As you are witnessing them, you will see that they don’t define who you are. The witness of the thoughts is kind and receptive, so you can just allow the thoughts to be. It doesn’t matter what they are saying, just allow them to come and go.

Listen

In welcoming fear (or any other experience), you are open, available, and non-judging. Spiritual teacher Jean Klein says, “You are in a state of listening.” There is no doing, strategizing, or manipulating, no wishing for the experience to stop, not limiting it in any way – simply a kind and loving noticing of what is true in the moment. This is a radical way of being with a seemingly difficult feeling and ends the suffering, resistance, and efforting.

As you are with the experience of fear, you may become aware of a story about it, as in, “I’m afraid of…” The true medicine of directly meeting fear is devoid of the story – it’s meeting the fear itself without any content. Experiment with letting the thoughts about it float away, and pay attention to what is actually appearing.

Inquire

Now, let’s go a little deeper by asking the fear questions. Here are some suggestions:

  • Why are you here? What are you trying to tell me or do for me?
    Hint: You may find that fear is trying to protect or motivate you.
  • How do you look at the world? What do you expect from people and situations?
    Hint: You may find caution, suspiciousness, doubt, or mistrust.
  • Anything else you would like to tell me?
    Hint: Simply be open.

Take some time to let what you’ve learned sink in. Let your heart open to honor that fear is present for a reason and has been influencing and controlling you based on its world view. You are doing something so amazing – you are allowing a rejected part of you to come out of the shadows to be seen and heard. It is no longer relegated to your unconsciousness where it irritates and pressures you. It is invited in warmly as a valid and true arising.

The Mystery of Not Knowing

What happens at this point is part of the mystery. When we end the inner war and put down our arms by embracing fear, we are in a place we’ve never been before. Make the space for clarity to come to you in the space of not knowing, and continue listening. If the spark to make some changes appears, have the courage to follow it, as this is your natural life path, not one based on fear and limitation.

This last point I cannot stress enough, and that is to always open your heart to meet fear fully. Just as good health requires a lifestyle of attention to diet and exercise, being at ease with fear requires an ongoing willingness to meet it directly. If you are welcoming your experience so it will go away, it probably won’t, as you are still resisting. But if you are receptive to whatever arises, as it is, you will find it does not matter if fear is present or not. Life is so rich. Every experience that arises is a friend, a gift, an invitation to break down your inner boundaries. Allow everything in always, and you will discover the peace beyond peace.

I’d love to hear your questions and insights. What role has fear played in your life? What have you learned from it?

A Revolutionary Look at Changing Habits

changehabitHave you heard this one?

A Buddhist monk walks up to a hot dog vendor, hands him a twenty dollar bill, and says, “Make me one with everything.” The vendor prepares the hot dog and gives it to the monk. The monk, after waiting for a moment, asks for his change. The vendor looks at him and says, “Change only comes from within.”

How people make changes in their lives is a topic that has fascinated me for years. I was always interested in being happier, more popular, and more successful. I felt like there was something better for me out there that I hadn’t yet discovered, and I wanted to know what needed to change for me to find it.

Happiness experts tell us to want what we have, and I don’t disagree. However, if what we have isn’t working for us, then it’s time to consider a change. And as we now know, change only comes from within.

Lasting change requires attention and self-reflection. It is a rich process that can lead us to discover fulfillment way beyond anything we could have dreamed up. It asks us to wake up to our lives, moment by moment, to be aware of what is actually happening.

If you can read a list of 10 tips for a better life and implement them, then you have my full support. However, if you struggle with habits that take you away from happiness, good health, and peace, then experiment with the following process and open to a more natural, intelligent way of being.

The Process for Lasting Change

  1. First, and most importantly, take a look at what you want to change, at what is no longer serving you. Whatever it is, it is a habit, something you have probably been doing for a long time. What I have found is that banishing parts of ourselves that we don’t like simply doesn’t work. Unless we befriend them and understand them intimately, they will continue to spring up and undermine our good efforts. It’s like putting in earplugs to silence a baby’s cry. The real solution comes only when the source of the problem is tended to with care.
  2. Investigate to see what this habit has been doing for you, as it is there for a reason. Does it give you some comfort or solace? A sense of power? Does it keep you on familiar territory so you don’t have to experience something new? Does it give you a thrill? Take an honest look, and honor the creative, albeit misguided, ways we come up with to get our needs met.
  3. A smoker might see how smoking is used to relax or socialize. An aggressive type might realize he is really scared and trying to keep control. A woman who burns herself out by giving to others might determine that she is assuaging her guilt or thriving on approval. A procrastinator may be avoiding success or creativity. Every habit we want to change has a hidden payoff that needs to be uncovered.

  4. Discover the limiting thoughts that keep the habit going; for example: I will fail, I won’t be loved, I’ll fall apart, I’ll explode, I’ll be overwhelmed. See the truth, which is: I don’t know what is going to happen if I let go of this habit. Consider the possibility of stepping into the unknown and letting nature take its course.
  5. Why study habits in such detail? Lasting change requires that we acknowledge what we are losing by letting them go. This step is essential. Change to something different always implies a loss. With some habits, we might be more than ready to move on, and the loss is inconsequential. But for others, we may need to mourn what we are letting go, recognizing the benefit of the habit and feeling the sadness and sorrow as we walk away from it. It’s like ending a relationship with an old friend who you know you have outgrown. If you find that you cannot sustain a change you have been working on, you may have some feelings related to the loss that haven’t yet surfaced.
  6. Appreciate that changing a habit means making the space for something new and unfamiliar. For some people, this might be scary, for others quite exciting. It sounds so obvious: if you’re going to stop the habit, you won’t be engaging in the behavior anymore. If you are a smoker, you won’t be smoking. If you are a procrastinator, you will be getting more done. Be open to all possibilities.
  7. Sometimes it’s not only “one day at a time,” but “one moment at a time.” Cravings and urges to continue the old behavior can be very strong. Like the most seductive lover, they beckon us shamelessly. Prepare yourself to say “no” and turn away, as many times as it takes. Renew your connection with your deepest desire. Have a list available of wonderfully distracting activities. Bring oceans of compassion to your struggling self.
  8. Ultimately, Nike got it. It boils down to, “Just Do It.” Put down the cookie, start to take care of yourself, clean up your room and get going. Live the life you want to live – it’s there waiting for you with open arms. And when you do, feel the freedom, and rejoice from the inside out.
  9. Change generally happens over time. Our job is to set up the ideal conditions for the grip of an unwanted habit to release. And remember, every moment offers the opportunity for renewal.

How about you? How have you released old habits? What have been the results?

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