Tuning in to Inner Peace: The Surprisingly Fun Way to Transform Your Life (11 page)

 

At first, I didn’t know what this meant. But after going to a few meetings, I quickly learned. If I have problems with my mom, I don’t need to get close to people who have problems with their mom. I need to find someone who
had problems with her mom, but now has a good relationship.

 

If I have a problem with complaining and arguing, I don’t need to spend time with someone who is experiencing this still. I need to find someone who had a problem with arguing and has grown past it to a more peaceful place.

 

If I want to lose weight, ease up on going out to dinner with my overweight friends. Hang out with someone who is fit and the right weight, instead. Let them suggest the meeting. Maybe it’s tea and a walk, when you were thinking ice cream.

 

Once you notice an area of your life where you have a problem, you can easily identify what it is that you don’t have.

 

In one of the first meetings I attended, I heard a more experienced member say, "I have found a pause button for the mental chatter in my head that keeps replaying things over and over. It has been such a blessing for me." I want that!, I decided instantly. Prior to this, I had never even acknowledged that my normal state was this mental chatter, so of course, had not even imagined that there was a way to pause it.

 

 

“Share your experience, strength and hope.”

- 12-Step Program Guidance for sharing in the group

 

Honestly Assess Current Friendships

If you’re going to add something to your life, you’re probably going to have to cut out something else.

 

Do an honest review of the value of your current friendships. Not only for yourself, but for your friend, honestly assess what the impact is of the time you spend together.

 

Do you regularly complain about the same topic over and over? Are you trying to save money, drink less and eat less, but inevitably you find yourselves meeting at a bar or buffet? If you can honestly see that you are not being positive influences on each other, consider limiting the time together for now.

 

Friendship should be a place where people help each other be their best. If you have relationships where this isn’t the case, consider limiting the time and energy you spend on the relationship for now. Once you have more skills and have developed more fully yourself, you may be able to come back and truly be friends.

 

This includes family members too. If you find yourself on a daily phone call that leaves you frustrated and angry,
consider a new pattern. Change to once a week. Try e-mail. Call at a different time of day. If the deeper meaning of the phone call is to improve your lives, do a reality check. If it isn’t doing that, back off. Go on a mission to figure out what skills you need so you can communicate regularly with family members in a way that actually does improve your lives.

 

For example, you may discover that your sister is a mentor, but not really a friend. Accept the best of a relationship, but don’t require it to be all things.

 

New Friends are the Key to Spiritual Evolution

Instead of being stuck at a certain point, you can find someone who was at this point and has found a way to move forward. When you study and learn from them, and you, too, move forward. At the same time, you move that starting point for your children and others you spend time with.

 

This is why the term evolution is fitting in terms of your own spiritual development, and why new friends are the key to getting unstuck.

 

This flips the view of yourself too. Instead of having a life sentence with a particular problem, it turns it into a research project, an adventure and actually fun!

 

Finding new ways to think about things and new solutions are the key to your spiritual evolution, and it is new friends that will take us by the hand and walk with us.

 

Hang Out with Authors You Admire

It is wonderful when you can find someone that you can spend time with, but it might not always be easy to find that person or be able to coordinate your schedules to immerse yourself in learning everything they have to offer.

 

But authors that have taken the time to write down their guidance, have done so with you in mind. They want to hang out with you for as long as it takes, and are available whenever, wherever you are!

 

Books in print or audio can be a source of healing in ways that your other friends can’t. These authors have developed materials so they can be part of your life anytime, anywhere:


        
Take the book along on audio for a Sunday morning walk, or listen on your way to work.


        
Play the audio as you soak in a long hot bath. (Careful!)


        
Reread or replay a chapter as many times as you want.


        
Immerse yourself in the works of an author that resonates with you. Work your way through one book after another.


        
Keep the book with you so you can randomly open to a page and glean a daily inspirational nugget.


        
Curl up with the book before you go to bed, or for a few minutes as you start your day.

 

When you read their works, you’ll discover those limiting beliefs and habits that you have been immersed in, so never before noticed. Over time you’ll develop a whole new network of friends that can gradually pull you out of your existing quagmire of problems.

 

 

 

Finding Authors to Befriend

This is so easy. Google it. Go to your favorite online bookseller. Go to the library. Ask friends. Go to a support group and get their literature.

 

If you are an adult child of an alcoholic, search for “adult children of alcoholics” and you’ll find a whole body of research tailored to you. People who have devoted their lives to helping someone with your family history, have poured their heart and soul into books that are waiting for you to read or listen to.

 

Having problems with your four-year-old daughter’s tantrums? Noticing problems in your workplace communication style? Do you realize you have problems staying focused or being effective? Can’t seem to organize your desk?

 

You can easily find wonderful authors. Keep exploring and when you find one you like, stick with him or her. When you read their books, you’ll also be linked up with people they admire.

 

“One cannot open a book without learning something.”

- Confucius

 

And as you move past problems that your family has been passing down for generations, you may be able to be the true friend and trustworthy advisor your existing friends and family are also seeking.

 

Find a Support Group

If you’re ready to dive in and make serious progress quickly, join a support group.

 

Having a weekly, or more often, meeting that you plan to attend makes your personal healing process a priority in your busy life. Try one group. If it doesn’t suit you, try another.

 

When you find a group that’s right for you, you’ll know it. You’ll feel a tremendous sense of relief to be surrounded with people who have lifted the veil of deception long enough to admit, yep, I’ve got a problem.

 

You’re also allowing yourself to be immersed in a system designed specifically to facilitate healing and recovery for you. You’ll hear people say things that continually give you ‘aha’ moments. As people speak your truth, before you can put it together for yourself, you’ll feel a level of gratitude and awe that is life-changing.

 

There is a peculiar magic of a group.

 

You’ll feel inspiration from people that are ahead of you on this path, and marvel that they have moved through
your same problems -- problems that you’d never imagined you could be free of. And you’ll be blown away by their passion for sharing their skills and inspiration with you, so you can come along with them.

 

And after a very short time, you’ll see beginners show up who know a bit less than you do. You’ll be so excited they are there and you encourage them because you know the courage it takes to just walk through the door. And you are ready to share your experience, strength, and hope with them.

 

Take What You Like and Leave the Rest

Certainly, you will object to something you read in a book or something that is said in a meeting. That’s when you go straight to the 12-step wisdom of: “Take what you like, and leave the rest.”

 

What is true for me is a result of my experiences and perception. This may not always match what is true for you.

 

Maybe you’re more evolved in a certain aspect than those around you or than the author you’re reading. Or maybe your experiences are so different that the advice for one person, doesn’t ring true for another. That’s okay.

Avail yourself to the wisdom and healing available in a group or a book, but don’t feel that you have to agree with it 100 percent.

 

Recognize that your objections could be right on, or they could be a way to justify quitting this scary process of self-knowledge and growth. Keep an open mind, and check again. Does this person have what I want? If the answer is yes, lean in. If the answer is no, back off and seek out another teacher.

 

Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.

 

 

Exercises


        
Do a quick review of who you turn to for advice, and note which subjects you talk about with each friend or family member.


        
Honestly assess the level of helpfulness of each relationship. Do you tend to feel refreshed and uplifted, or are you negative and bitter after an interaction?


        
Are there some negative relationships you could spend less time on for now?


        
What solutions do you seek for your life? Do you want to:  stop drinking, get fit, or improve your relationship with your partner?


        
What areas do you feel stuck, and need inspiration or new friends?


        
Do you know someone that models a behavior you desire? Ask that person if they will talk to you about how they do it. If they mention a book or a support group, check it out.


        
Go to the library or bookstore and browse the section with books on this topic. Choose one and get started reading it.


        
Identify support groups for the solution you desire. Open your mind and heart, and learn more about the group. Do you know someone who has attended? Talk to them about it. Try going to one or two meetings and see how it feels.

 

 

 

 

 

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