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bfree1216
Guest
Edwyn. Thank you for such an amazing and thorough response! Wow. This is seriously such a helpful breakdown. I read your post before I started the day today and I’ll be honest, it changed the entire tone of the day for me. I actually felt much more present, applying the methods you talked about versus trying to clear my mind. I felt full of hope and wonder and gratefulness, just accepting what was in front of me instead of rejecting it. And replacing negative thoughts with positive ones: I’ll admit I felt pretty skeptical about this, but whenever negative thoughts popped up throughout the day today, I decided I wasn’t going to “run away” (clear my head), or even to “fix them” (turn them into something positive), but simply replace them by introducing positive thoughts. It made the negative thoughts practically weightless and insignificant, at least in comparison to the positive ones. Of course I’m no pro at this by any means, but I felt so much more peace today with my mind than I’ve felt in a while. And I’m excited to keep working on this. Thank you so, so much.
Also, it exposed me to some deeply flawed beliefs I’ve held that I think are what’s driving me to believe that the best way to get away from them is to clear them from my mind rather than confront them and challenge them. This is a topic probably for a different post—a few questions about the faith that have really been consuming me lately—but regardless, replacing my thoughts with positive thoughts rather than running away or fixing them helped me understand what’s been bothering me.
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Also, it exposed me to some deeply flawed beliefs I’ve held that I think are what’s driving me to believe that the best way to get away from them is to clear them from my mind rather than confront them and challenge them. This is a topic probably for a different post—a few questions about the faith that have really been consuming me lately—but regardless, replacing my thoughts with positive thoughts rather than running away or fixing them helped me understand what’s been bothering me.
I love this idea as well. I’ve heard the phrase before “the past is depression, the future is anxiety, so might as well live in the moment” and at the time I thought “well that sounds just incredibly pessimistic” and after reading your comment, I love how the idea of the past being wisdom and the future being imagination (I think of it as hope) is almost exactly the opposite of the depression/anxiety phrase.Finally, we have to start using our mind rightly, and this we train our memories and imagination. The problem with most people is that memories are treated mainly as regrets and fears and sorrows. Our “bad” memories should never be used to determine what we should be doing, but how we should be doing things. In other words, memory should be our source not mainly of sorrow, regrets, nor fears, but wisdom .
Imagination, on the other hand, becomes for many people either a source of anxiety or a way to self indulgence, to escape reality. In fact, imagination is our faculty to peer onto the future, and thus it is our source of planning and initiative .
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