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How to Find Peace and Balance When Dealing with Change

“Change is the only constant.” ~Heraclitus

Have you ever noticed how many transitions we go through all day?

The transition from waking up to getting out of bed, from PJs (or au natural) to clothes, from red light to green light, from inhale to exhale. Every waking moment is a transition.

Why, then, are we, as humans, so uncomfortable with change?

We want everything to stay the same, but at the same time, crave variety. We grasp so tightly to how we think things should be (did she not hear that I wanted extra foam on my latte?) and, simultaneously, admire and want innovation.

We are walking transitions. We chase the next thing, trying to fill this underlying void of “not enough.” We so desperately grasp at everything to stay the same, and when change comes, we are scared.

Fear exists with change. When we can accept that fear is there, though, we can also ask at the same time “What do I have to do to get to where I need to be? How do I create the life I want?”

If change is the only thing we can count on as guaranteed, the question presents itself: How can we use it to our advantage to grow, transform, and evolve?

One major lesson I’ve learned through the experience of going from the severe imbalance of Stage IV cancer at age twenty-nine, to feeling an ongoing (yet fluid) state of balance, not only in body but also mind and spirit, is that taking care of ourselves in the midst of change is as crucial to our health as breathing.

Cancer, or any other life-threatening illness, leaves its survivors different. The entire experience is life-altering change and an extraordinary opportunity to find healing.

While there is not a cure for every disease out there, everyone can find healing. Whether survivor or not, we can nurture ourselves through any change at the soul level by asking the following five questions.

1. What am I feeding the mind?

By becoming aware of what we tell our body, and choosing nourishing thoughts and food and granting it stillness, we can sustain any change that may arise. And then, truly, whatever arises in life becomes the right material for our growth and the growth of those around us, as Marcus Aurelius said.

2. How can I find balance in every part of my life?

When I would have a jam-packed go-go-go day as a headhunter in the corporate world, my transition strategy to “calm down and balance out” was to do a fast-paced sweaty vinyasa class.

Yet, I’d get out of yoga and someone would cut me off and I’d blow up, yell something, and (maybe) flip the bird! Where is the zen in that?!

I did not realize at that point in my life that the antidote to the stress of my day job would’ve been a balanced yoga flow or, even a slower, gentle yin class. Balancing out our lives in each area is necessary.

3. Am I following my desires?

This is an area that our souls long for, but most of us experience resistance. The ego, driven to survive, is always telling us that what we truly want is not something we should go after for whatever reason, usually the money. But the money is not the core reason. When we really want something, we find ways to get it.

Danielle LaPorte says that we’re not chasing a goal, we’re chasing a feeling we think the goal will give us. In knowing this, we can get in touch with our core desired feelings. I thought for so long that the anxiety is what drove me to get what I want. But our core desired feelings are our true navigator and anxiety is just a “witless liar,” as Martha Beck says.

4. Are the people I am surrounded by bringing me light?

Being around people who uplift and support us makes us uplifting and supporting.

When I was going through my cancer healing program, I had only about three hours where I had energy to engage with people. The rest of the time, I would be extremely fatigued and exhausted.

I found that when I was around others who were negative or complained, the three hour block of energy turned into one. It literally sucked the vitality and life out of me, making a life-altering situation that much more difficult. Choosing to surround ourselves with life-giving, uplifting people feeds and heals the soul.

5. Do I spend time every day in stillness?

I would skip stillness, thinking, I’ll just pray as I send emails. (Yes, I was this crazy). Then I would get so burnt out, sick of working, and indulge in junk food and alcohol to make myself feel better.

These days, when I feel the tension coming, I stop, breathe deeply, and stay still (for at least five minutes). Each and every time, I feel clearer, and am much more productive than when I’d push through. Stillness is the consistent anchor to sustain any kind of change life can throw at you.

This is the paradox of transition—that although we are always changing (in circumstance around us, in emotion, even our cells are constantly regenerating), who we really are never changes. Who we are houses the divine and this powerful universal energy, which is a place we can call upon at any time. It is home.

About Leah Slagenwhite

Leah Slagenwhite is a mama, wifey, yogi and cancer survivor. Check out her stories, tips, and inspiration on life, yoga, and healing at www.leahslags.com.

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Lovely post Leah and I agree with a lot of your points particularly when you mention Danielle LaPorte and her core desired feelings. I am currently chasing several goals which are fairly big and it’s hard not to chase feelings alongside those goals but I’m trying; constantly reassessing why I’m working so hard toward them.

Thank you for this 🙂

Kelli Cooper

Hi Leah
Excellent post with so many great tips. I really resonated with two of your points in particular. The first about what we are feeding our mind is crucial. When we are going through difficult times, it is important we feed it stuff that empowers us, makes us adopt a more positive perspective and doesn’t make us feel badly or worry even more. I don’t think we realize how much of an effect our ‘mind diet’ has on us, and it is full of stuff that feeds our fears and negative beliefs.

The second about who we surround ourselves with is so important too–for better or worse, we are affected by other people’s energy, and we want to choose our company wisely. Life is all about perspective, and we want to let people in that help us adopt a better one, not fill us with more negativity.

Great stuff here!

Peace Within

Hi Leah, thanks for sharing. You brought up great points. Sometimes life shows us what matters in the craziest ways. Glad you are doing better and sharing your wisdom with us! <3

Sean Guindon

Very beautiful post Leah. This spoke very deeply as I’ve currently been
dealing with changes that I know will create more positivity in my life,
yet strangely finding myself at times with so much resistance against
them. Will definitely come back to this in those times of resistance to
remind me that I must continue to evolve and change for the better. I
hope that you are in good health and take care.

danielhutchins

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danielhutchins

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Leah Slags

Your welcome and thank you for reading, glad I could help

Leah Slags

I love it! “Mind food” so important! Keep spreading the light Kelli : )

We’re so programmed to strive, chase, and are told struggle is necessary. It’s not. When you tap into all that you have- unlimited creativity, intelligence, and heck, even courage- all that you want will come easily. I’ve tried it, and it’s worked ; ) It’s an every day moment-to-moment remembering of the Divine that we house. Thanks Toni, love and ease to you

Don Dressel

Thank you so much for this! I am heading for some big changes in my life after two decades and needed this very much! Again Thank you

Tim Sain

Great post Leah… especially love the actionable questions we can ask ourselves to help further and enhance the process along. We’ve been touching upon the process of dealing with change on our blog a lot lately in this new year and I shared this post with our readers. Take care.