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Spidey

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Viewing 14 posts - 16 through 29 (of 29 total)
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  • in reply to: Anxiety… I need some support. #68948
    Spidey
    Participant

    Stefan,

    Any progress since you posted this? Let us know keep us updated, we’d like to help!

    All the best to you and my prayers reach out to you,

    Spidey.

    in reply to: Struggling getting my life together #68947
    Spidey
    Participant

    I just wrote a research paper on depression and physical activity. Allow me to shed some light on a paragraph I wrote in conjunction with Tony Robbins’ TED Talk speech: Why we do what we do. Probably one of the most moving and inspiring talks I watched:

    Emotion is a powerful tool that we use at our disposal regularly. In a TED Talk presentation, Tony Robbins (2006) describes emotion being “the force of life” (1:13), and without the right emotion, we are just simply existing with no intent or purpose. If emotion is harnessed accordingly, it is possible to find the courage to transform our intentions into actions, or in other words, it is “how [we] take the invisible and make it visible” (3:16). This transformative process requires us to make three crucial steps regularly that will guide our intentions to unfold: applying a focus towards something, finding meaning in what you’re focusing on, then taking the appropriate action (7:48). It is in that moment when we employ meaning onto something that emotion begins to unfold within. Furthermore, if we bring forth the right emotion, we can tackle any obstacle in life that lies in front of us, even if it means starting an exercise program to help lessen depressive symptoms. By focusing our minds on a goal, finding meaning behind it (producing an emotional response), and taking the necessary steps forward, we can unlock this “invisible force of internal drive” that has remained dormant for so long (1:07). I believe that by applying this three step process at a conscious level can help an individual overcome their depression and take the necessary action to change themselves.

    I hope this helps.

    All the best to you elliott. Feel free to message me if you want to read my entire piece. I cover physical activity and depression from a personal stand-point as well as from research material also.

    in reply to: Need help overcoming my anxiety, tips? #68892
    Spidey
    Participant

    Lauren,

    One thing you can practice daily, and at any moment of the day is mindfulness. By doing so, you are training to let go of your thoughts and feelings and just simply accepting and acknowledging “what is”. First thing is to be aware of your breathing. If you ever catch your mind drifting into panic and worry zone, just close your eyes and take a huge inhale and exhale. This will bring you right into the here and now and will put your mind at ease. If it keeps going back to that trigger that escalates your sympathetic nervous system, just take a huge breath in and out and reground yourself.

    Mindfulness is huge when overcoming anxiety. By shutting off your mind and taking that deep breath, you lose focus on what’s going on internally and shift your focus externally. I would use to get anxious a lot when introducing myself to new people (resulting to a stutter) and my mind would always be self-sabotaging me, and as a result I would have a huge block in saying my name. One thing I realized was that when I didn’t focus my mind on my speech impediment, I would be very fluent and would say my name with ease.

    Retrain your mind so you’re not living in your thoughts. Practice deep breathing and mindfulness, and you’ll be a success story.

    All the best to you Lauren,

    Spidey

    in reply to: Anxiety… I need some support. #68825
    Spidey
    Participant

    I did not, my tag is @spidey . I’m not quite sure how the format of this forum still works as I am use to other ones.

    If you want to specifically reply to me in response to my post just acknowledge me with a “To Brett” or “To Spidey” in this thread, or if you can send my profile a personal message or however. Using the “reply” button and “quote” button doesn’t seem to work properly.

    in reply to: Lost Sight #68824
    Spidey
    Participant

    David,

    When you wake up in the morning, how do you start your days? What are your rituals? Are they productive, or are they things you do that are non-essential? Perhaps changing your ritual in the morning and start off fresh and energized. Watch some clips off youtube, read, listen to positive music. Try external stimuli and expose yourself to positive and inspirational stuff. Surprisingly this will start to change your mental patterns.

    You need to start doing and less thinking. It sounds crazy, but sometimes our thoughts become our worst enemy. We need to learn to drop our thoughts, and by doing so we drop our expectations for others and fears; learning to live here and now consciously. Being in our thoughts we get consumed by the ego, and the ego isn’t you. It’s the other you that is holding you back. By acknowledging this and we begin to understand that it is thought that is the enemy. Learn to let go of those thoughts, and you will begin to let go of negativity/fear.

    Why do you drive people away with negativity? Why would you choose options out of fear when you can choose love? Sometimes what you choose to do and think reflects back to you. Think negative and act negative, you attract negative experiences and outcomes. Why would you want that? Instead choose love and positivity. It’s hard to adjust this mental pattern, but realize you always have two options: love or fear. Love being positive and fear being negative.

    What is it in that first step in taking that you are afraid of? Exposing your “you” to others? You need to learn to embrace this, and also know that it’s okay to mess up and make mistakes. I think a lot of us are scared to act on new things because we are afraid to to do something wrong because it shows us that we are incapable. But truly, this is where we learn and grow, is by making mistakes. So if you’re afraid to take that first step for this reason, you need to move past that and know that in order to grow and try new things, you need to face the fact that failure is going to happen. But how do you bounce back is the bigger question.

    I think, to start, is to adjust your mental schematics and consciously be aware of the negativity that floats in your head; the self-talk. Expose yourself to positive and influential forms of media that will bring you up instead of bringing you down. This is a start at least.

    Hope you get progress with this buddy, and all the best to you.

    Cheers,

    Spidey

    in reply to: Anxiety… I need some support. #68822
    Spidey
    Participant

    Reply button doesn’t work. Tried it in a previous thread and no go.

    If you want to specifically reply to someone Stefan, try “@________” before you write a paragraph or two. So we know who you’re directing your post to.

    in reply to: I have no idea what I'm doing with my life #68821
    Spidey
    Participant

    I’ve been in this exact same vote. In fact, I think we all have at one time and been caught in this vicious cycle inside our heads.

    If it’s one thing I did that really started my self-exploration process was the fact that I went traveling for quite some time. I went on my own, backpacked around, and by doing this I really got a sense of who I am and what makes me me. It wasn’t really until last year where I finally finalized on what it is I want to do with myself and pursue.

    One of the bigger questions I asked myself was essentially “what is it that I want to do for the rest of my life if money were no object?” What would I be willing to do and provide for work if I wasn’t getting paid. What it came down to for me was that I want to help others, inspire, motivate, and assist people get back on their feet and move again. I want them to become their best self both at a physical level and mental level. Really ask yourself this question, and you might break down here and there, but doing this you can uncover a lot.

    Secondly, what is it that you do on a daily basis that you love to do. What are your knacks? What are you good at? What are some things you find yourself lost in conversation with or reading about daily? These things can help focus you in on what it is that really makes up and embodies you. This is where knowing yourself really pays off. You can develop self-confidence once you understand yourself and love the things you do. Because you engage in these activities daily, you want to become better and better in this field, increasing that confidence ten fold to help carry you forward with your goals (hopefully that is doing something in the field that you engage yourself in daily).

    I have also spent a lot of time with myself doing “me” things. I ponder on life a lot, and what it means to be successful, happy, living, being alive, etc. Spending a lot of time with yourself you can discover the endless potential within and the possibilities, but eventually tuning in into that one thing that makes you feel alive.

    Little coconut, I have no doubt that you will find what it is that you want to do. Just, really try and explore yourself some more, whether it means spending alone time, going traveling, trying new experiences, and so forth. Just know and believe that everything is happening for a reason, and that you are on YOUR OWN LIFE PATH. Know that, and stay true to it!

    Cheers,

    Brett.

    in reply to: Lost and paralysed… #68808
    Spidey
    Participant

    You can’t solely rely on medication to overcome depression. I literally just did a research paper on physical activity and mental health, and one of the studies explored the effects of pharmacological substances and exercise in treating depression. The control group just took the drug treatment whereas the test group was prescribed an aerobic activity plan while taking drug treatment. The group that was both taking medication and exercising had a substantial decrease in their depressive symptoms as opposed to the group just taking the drugs.

    Point I’m making: you need to be proactive! You can’t sit around and just hope things will work, and by taking a pill you will feel better. Be proactive, make the change, get up and start moving! Sitting around and feeling sorry for yourself isn’t going to do you any favours. I know this through experience, and it isn’t fun. But you have to be willing to change yourself. If you don’t do so, then what are you doing? Just existing and relying on hope to bring you out of the rut? No, you need to act! First step is acknowledging there is a problem, second step is putting a meaning behind and producing an emotional response, and thirdly it’s acting on the emotional response (the “now what?”). By doing this accordingly, you can get out of any situation or circumstance you’re in.

    But it has to start with you!

    in reply to: Lost and paralysed… #68767
    Spidey
    Participant

    Mermaid (and to you also Stefan),

    One thing I strongly suggest and recommend you both doing is literally put on your walkers/running shoes and get outside in nature. Don’t bring any electronics, no distractions. Just you, and nature. This won’t solve anything huge nor give you any big answers, but it will allow you to find peace and serenity in the moment, and hopefully allow you to reflect deep within. By doing this, you may come with newer insights with things, but I urge you guys to connect with nature. It literally does wonders to your well-being. In my lowest time in my life, this is exactly what I did, and I never regretted it. And I still do this a lot to ground myself and find peace within, which also might shed a new light on things for you via self-reflection.

    Cheers,

    Spidey.

    in reply to: Anxiety… I need some support. #68765
    Spidey
    Participant

    Stefan,

    You haven’t hit rock bottom. Have a shelter over your head? Have food in front of you? Have clothes? Have a bed? Mate, a lot of people in this world don’t even have anything like this. One thing I’d strongly suggest you doing (which btw I’ve started doing and I’ve been feeling eons better) is writing gratitude lists. Every day for the next week write a list of what you are thankful and grateful for. From the smallest things in life, to the simplest, to the most complex. I guarantee you that by doing this and reflecting on these lists you will begin to feel much better.

    In terms of your anxiety, I can strongly say that it is possible to overcome it. Coming from someone who suffered stuttering over my early school years and developed anxiety when speaking up in front of people, I have managed to down-grade my anxiety to be very minimal now. I even catch myself in moments where I am fluent, and can introduce myself fully without a thought of doubt. This is tricky, but it requires a lot of discipline to overcome. And it starts off training your subconscious mind. It’s hard to understand and explain, but one of the bigger things I’ve did was just not think about it. When I would focus my mind on my anxiety, my fears, my stresses, my body would adapt accordingly and before I knew it, I would be in full anxiety mode, and it sucks. What I did, however, was that I acknowledged my anxiety attack happen one time, and I literally had an out of body experience where I looked down on myself in the scenario I was in, and realized my triggers. By doing so, I was able to catch that transition point between calm and tranquil, to heightened/alert/anxiety state. In that transition point, it is there where you need to harness your physiology and calm your body. But you can’t avoid scenarios that will trigger anxiety. To overcome it you need to expose yourself to these scenarios and try to adapt every time. It is scary, I know, I’ve been there, but it is possible.

    Stefan, I literally made this account in response this thread because I want to help you to overcome this scenario. I couldn’t ignore reading your opening post knowing someone is going through this and here I am not acting to help out, especially being in this same scenario at one point.

    I wish you all the best, and if you want to keep in touch message me, and I’d be more than happy to help you overcome this.

    Cheers,

    Brett.

    in reply to: Is it him or me? #68761
    Spidey
    Participant

    Essentially his humour didn’t match yours. I would say it’s more on his end really. He probably read too much into it.

    in reply to: Friends with Benefits? #68737
    Spidey
    Participant

    He was wrong in just going for it and not telling you up front what he wanted, but instead, he did it after the fact playing a mind game with you, and that isn’t cool.

    He should have been straight up with you right from the start before getting physical. This would have dropped any expectations and mixed emotions right from the beginning.

    In your scenario though Anyone, it sounds like you’re uneasy with having FWB and he isn’t. That being said, tell him up front and be honest. If you don’t want it, say it. And if he wanted something more with you he will hang around and respect that decision. If he didn’t, well he will probably just end up stop talking to you. Ultimately, do what your inner voice is telling you to do. And stand by it.

    in reply to: Confidence in speaking #68735
    Spidey
    Participant

    Have a conversation with yourself. Observe how you speak and talk to yourself both out loud and internally. No one will be influencing you at that time, only you.

    Try and reciprocate that next time you enter a conversation with someone. Hold true to that voice you had in your own self-talk. Own it. Find that voice, and hold on to it.

    in reply to: Who are you? #51490
    Spidey
    Participant

    Hey everyone. I’m Brett. Recently just signed up and looking to be a part of a like-minded community. Frequenting tinybuddha for quite some time now, and always found good reads on here. Anyways:

    1. Describe yourself in three sentences.

    I am compassionate and caring. I am honest. I am determined and ambitious.

    2. How did you first come across Tiny Buddha?

    Reading insightful articles via google searches and having this site being the most common one that popped up all the time. Recently just shared an article on Facebook and began browsing through the community.

    3. What makes you laugh?

    Geek and nerd humour especially! Witty puns, lame jokes, all these things make me laugh in hysterics.

    4. If you had to show one place where you live to a tourist, where would it be?

    Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Great outdoors, amazing scenic parks, small, quaint communities up and down the island. An outdoor enthusiast would love it here.

    5. What do you like to learn about?

    I am very passionate about health, fitness, and wellness. I love to read material on bettering yourself whether it’s psychologically or physically, and I love learning and discovering all that there is to know about the human potential, knowing the knitty-gritty stuff on how the body works both psychologically and physically.

Viewing 14 posts - 16 through 29 (of 29 total)