“If you correct your mind, the rest of your life will fall into place.” -Lao Tzu
You’re stuck.
We’ve all been there. Even the things that normally make you happy begin to bring you down. Worst of all, you can’t seem to understand why.
So you give it time, let it take its course, and just when you think you’ve escaped the funk, something drags you back in. You know it’s happening but you can’t stop from slipping back under.
What’s happening here is simple. Something—be it your job, peers, or general lifestyle—is contaminating your mind. You’ve lost track of the calmness you know you possess and it’s like your mind’s been tricked.
You’re stuck in a painful and decisive delusion that causes everything to be toxic.
It’s time to wake up. Seriously, the snooze button is off-limits.
You only come to find yourself in these types of negative situations because you’ve let your mind take control. It may seem like other people and circumstances are to blame, but everyone is responsible for their own mental state.
Life will never stop throwing you curve balls. The only solution is to change how you internalize and deal with them.
Since completely escaping your mind may seem a bit radical, at the very least, you must correct your thinking.
Our minds are like oceans. Like the tides, thoughts come in and then retreat back. When your mind is stuck, the ebb and flow of your thoughts are all negative. Each new thought process makes the negativity even stronger, creating a snowball effect.
Luckily there is a solution, and you innately have it.
Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras suggests that there is a jewel of pure consciousness within each of us that is waiting to shine through the clouded mind. By intentionally concentrating away from negativity, and instead focusing the flow of thought on something pure, that jewel will become apparent.
Even if you have to fake it at first, you can teach your mind to ignore negative thoughts. The mind works both ways; the flow of thought can be a snowball of positive energy too.
This being said, I invite you to give meditation a try, even if you think it’s not for you. Stretch a little first to loosen your muscles and connect with your body. Sit in a position that’s comfortable for you and take a few deep breaths—or as I like to say, reboot your mind.
When you reboot your mind, you are clear of the past, empty of regrets, and focused on something positive. You’re simply present, connected, and peaceful in the moment.
Don’t stress if your mind starts to wander while you’re meditating. Just notice it and pull yourself back to a place of awareness.
It helps to focus on a specific point or place so that your meditation practice is an active experience. This place, or the inner-jewel, varies between us all, so it is up to you to find your own. By focusing upon this inner-treasure, your mind will feel less inclined to go down a negative path.
If you find yourself struggling to find this place, meditate on the sun, moon, or water. Pretty soon this type of meditation will teach you your own unique meditative dance. You’ll feel less easily pulled into a funk when things go wrong outside you, and positive energy will seem more natural.
By learning to live in absorption of this meditative place, you’ll help your problems slowly dissipate. Your funk will fade into a sense of peace that you can nurture every day by connecting with body and your breath.
Photo by HePa_Gera

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I love this post. It's so simple, yet so true. When I was learning to meditate, I struggled with the outside “noise,” I found it distracting, until I learned to use it to my advantage. I had read somewhere to just concentrate on that noise, take in all that you were hearing. Soon, that became my way of meditating. I listen to the sounds and often akin them to something peaceful. For example, when I hear cars driving down the street, it sounds like waves coming in and out and if it's a particularly loud car, then it's a motor boat towing a water skier. Mind tricks but they work wonders for me.
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This is a very inspiring post, however I can't agree with soemthing you said:
“everyone is responsible for their own mental state”
Yes there is truth in this, but surely one cannot be 100% responsible for their own mental state can they?
One who is born into violence and grows up surrounded by negativity certainly cannot be responsible for his/her mental state. Nature/Nurture plays a huge role in developing one's mental state. Also, many people may not even realize their own mental state is disfunctional until someone or something open's their eyes and they are able to, even just for a moment, observe their own mind. One can only be responsible for their own actions if they are fully conciouss to begin with.
I believe society should play a much bigger role in helping folks out. Especially here in the west, we are so inclined to do everything independently and on our own. I'm not talking about governement help…but HUMAN help. Looking out for the humans around you, it can be as simple as a friendly smile to the person next to you or sharing your freshly baked cookies with the next-door-neighbour. It is these simple and easy things that we all can do that make a big deal.
( Little did you know, that stranger you're sitting next to on the bus is planning to run away from home where every waking hour his/her parents are fighting and that simple smile you flashed in their direction gave them a moment of clarity and strength to observe their own mental state. Because of that smile he/she decided not to run away but to go back home and take on their part of the responsibility).
It's time we shoulder some of the responsibility and “take a load off” =D
Thanks for the reminder!
Yes, we are all ultimately responsible for our own emotions and mental states; however, many must be made aware of this responsibility and taught how to recognize these states, and taught how to manage them.
Thank you Tiny Buddha!
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I’m all but sure Lao Tzu meant this “mind correction” in a very, very basic way… “People’s minds are not disturbed by events, but by their (own) judgments on events” [Epictetus, 101AD]. Thus, humanity is caught in a thought reversal problem, where nearly everyone is unconsciously conspired in it! We ARE 100% responsible for all of our feelings and all of our experiences and all of the time! The fact that hardly anyone knows or understand that, doesn’t change the Truth that we are causing ALL of our feelings and ALL of our experiences and ALL of the time! A Course in Miracles uses a quarter of a million words to explain this out. It’s just that most of ACIM’s students don’t catch onto the main purpose, which is… “To reverse the thinking of the world, so the thinking of the world finally starts lining up with cause and effect” [ACIM paraphrase] And so “attachment to the world” is the one and only real problem we could ever have.