Monthly Archives: February 2013

Relax…”don’t” relax…What???

Thinking about  the word “don’t”  When someone says to you “don’t “, like don’t relax, you “try” to relax and that creates tension in the body.  It could work for you as you see the opposite of that and “relax”, however, that is seeing or responding in the abstract, and not all of us can do it.  There could be an enormous number of “instead of’s” that cancel out the “don’ts”.

However, according to Denise McCluggage (The Centered Skier), and former race car driver, she says “when an exploring two year old is told “don’t touch the flowers”; he immediately puts his hand out to touch the flowers, it is not because he is rebellious or stubborn.  A sensory basis for such a polarity response to instruction exists.

The reason:  we experience our world through direct contact of our senses, see, hear, taste, smell, touch. We feel fur on our face, we smell bacon cooking, we hear a flute playing, we see trees swaying in the wind.  These are all concrete experiences.  One the other hand the absence of something is an “abstraction”.  To perceive the absences of something (negative presence), we first have to think of the “position”…its presence.

“What happens in your head when you hear, “the dog didn’t chase the car”. Think about it.  Interesting how people respond.  Ask your friends.  Some will see the dog sitting on the curb (an alternative action). Or I see a dog chasing a car with a diagonal line across the whole scene, like a highway sign – don’t turn with a diagonal red line across it.  The highway signs refer to an action and then they negate it with the diagonal red line.”

So, in all cases the forbidden act has to be acknowledged before it can be negated. For some folks the abstract of negation isn’t available, therefore “don’t touch the flowers” and touch the flowers are the same thing.  Or “don’t think of a green monkey” and “think of a green monkey” has the same outcome.

As you go through your week, see what “don’ts” you hear in your head or are told.  Have you ever been walking down a steep hill, and thought “don’t fall down”, and you “fall down”

“Coming back to “don’t relax” with some more insights, “don’t relax” on two levels, accessing what “relax” means and then relieving you of the tension of “trying to relax”

Don’t relax is in a sense “relaxing”….”

 

 

Seeing with Soft eyes…have a seat and ….

Look at an object across the room, look hard and fiercely at it.  Notice how you are seeing peripherally.  How is your breathing?Now  another way…notice your breathing as you are looking, feel the chair under you, your feet on the foor and the chair’s connection to the floor.  This time look at the object with “soft” eyes, not sharp or hard gaze…allow the image to come to you, don’t go get it or “try” to see it.  Feel your Whole Body receiving the image.  Now be aware of the other objects around you.

Go back and forth using these two different ways of receiving sight.  How is your breathing with each one? Are you tensing your muscles anywhere?

What can you discover about this exercise in seeing?

Tighteyes

Tense eyes!

softeyes

Soft eyes….ahhhh

 

 

“Trying” to play my violin….screeching sounds! Yikes!!

I noticed another place I was trying…in performance, have you noticed that when you are “performing”, and as we know: performance happens everyday, not just with a theatrical play or musical instrument that you tighten your neck and shoulders, “trying” to do it right?

When you are talking with someone, and you have the floor to speak, you are “performing”. Are you “trying” to get the message you are speaking about “right”. Remember “trying” and “getting it right” (is there a “right?”) equals tension in your body!

So with the violin, the instrument lets me know right away when I “try” to get the right note by tensing my jaw, my feet grab and pull away from the floor, and my shoulders, elbows and wrist lock up.  Oh my, what a screech comes out of the instrument….hello, you are “trying” too hard!

Check out your performances this week and see when you are tensing around your performance; speaking, singing, playing tennis, golf, even when you are doing something by yourself, your “self-critical” thoughts will be judging your “performance”.

We are such amazing beings…why not take away from some of the “doing” and bask in “being”!