How often do you say "I am too busy" or "I am so stressed"?
I really recommend listening to this series "Oliver Burkeman is Busy" on Radio 4. It's a fascinating insight into what may really be going on when we feel busy all the time.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07w1dpx/episodes/player
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Friday, 23 September 2016
All or Nothing Thinking
Have
you ever thought about what happens when we use words like always, never or everybody?
For
example:
“Everything has gone wrong today”
“Why
can’t I do this when everybody else
can?”
“Women
/ men always......”
Words
like these are often a sign that you are doing “all or nothing thinking”. They
imply “this is the way it is”. They make things absolute, definite. They
frequently leave you with a sense of getting it wrong, of criticising yourself
or others. And, they are almost never
true (Really? Everything has gone
wrong? What about breathing?!). Yet we can go on to base the rest of our day,
or life, on this statement that isn’t true.
For
example, a friend of mine decided to give up smoking. She didn’t smoke for 3
months, then had a cigarette after a difficult day. Immediately afterwards she
said to herself: “I knew I would never be able to give up, I always ruin things
for myself .......” If she had continued down that line of thought she would
have felt terrible, had another cigarette because she had already
failed........ and returned to smoking.
Fortunately
she noticed what she was saying and instead asked herself “Is that really
true?” She then noticed that for 3 whole months she hadn’t smoked, and that she
had only spent 5 minutes smoking. Instead she decided to say to herself “I know
I can give up smoking, I have done it for 3 months already so of course I can do it again!” She
stopped using her “always” and “never” sentences, chose to focus on the 3 months
rather than the 5 minutes, and decided to go back to being a non-smoker. Which
she still is!
All
or nothing thinking can get us into all kinds of problems. It has been shown to
be a key element in anxiety and depression, for example. So whenever you hear
yourself use one of these “all or nothing” words, just ask yourself “Is that
statement really true?” Most of the time (but not always, of course!!) you will find it is not. Then that frees you
up to look for other evidence, possibilities, or ways of understanding the
situation. And noticing that can change the rest of your day.... or even your
life.
All
or nothing thinking is a bit like living in a black and white world, rather
than enjoying the full range of beautiful colours around us. Which world would you rather live in?
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