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#cushould #cupod
Challenge: do this 10 minutes of yoga led by Sandy or do something to get to know YOU better this week. Chair version available.
Sandy has an expression “stop shoulding yourself!”. When you stop and listen to how we talk to each other and ourselves... I should go to bed now, I should get the kids ready for school tomorrow, I should already have a successful career. It takes away this mindfulness and being present and all the research shows that the more mindful and present you can be the happier you are, the more joy you have, peace, less anxiety & depression. The biggest should- social media. How it pulls us away from our present and makes us think about what we think we should be or do. Having a kid made Sandy realize how un-present she can be. She and Stella go on run/scooter rides and Stella will stop to look at a squirrel or do something along the way. The immediate reaction tends to be, we should be getting somewhere, we should keep moving but instead let’s realize when (it’s not always an option) we could just sit and watch the squirrel.
Alex struggles with that as well, as the kids get older they have additional awareness that you are on your phone and not paying attention to them. That has been a physical reminder to put it away, to be present. She tries to be intentional about her schedule and calendar to set up work and family blocks so that she can be very present. But you need to ACTUALLY be present and not run through the to do list of things she should be doing. Would myself in 5 years tell me wow, you really should have gotten that podcast launched 2 weeks earlier! No, it’s not going to matter at all. We are doing it and enjoying it. There are so many external tools to help us be present and mindful of where we are today. Alex wanted to integrate two 5 minute meditations into her week. She can’t just sit and breathe yet though, she needs to listen to someone tell her. It’s also hard to dedicate time to these practices, like exercise, during the pandemic, 60 minutes probably isn’t realistic, but getting 10 or 12 minutes could be doable. It’s something you can give to yourself, be mindful and aware and re-energize.
Sandy encourages you to think back to your favorite exercise class, cup of coffee, meal and why was that so significant - because you were THERE and nothing else mattered. When we should ourselves we take ourselves out of the ability to be present. Sandy likes to say ridiculous things while teaching a class to make people laugh, stop thinking about how many calories they have to burn, if they look silly, or what they have to do that day and just be there. I should be stronger by now, I should be more flexible by now. If you can reduce the number of times you “should” on yourself then you get more of the “yummy” stuff.
It’s not the yoga helping you be mindful, it’s the mindful intention of being no where else. This can be a really uncomfortable feeling. Physically uncomfortable with a rise in cortisol levels, your sympathetic nervous system, heart racing, but you can practice this anywhere. This idea links to goals as well, should reach the lofty goal but not seeing the little habits that are going to get you there. On the flip side, if you aren’t shoulding on yourself, maybe you aren’t thinking about the next big milestone. Just acknowledge and be with the should, understand the insecurity or the real reason. We have both learned to be intentional, today is where you should be, and chip away at the goal. Practice and make it a habit, can I rescript the should and understand why one keeps coming up?
Sandy led Alex in a 10 minute morning yoga practice for a moving meditation and be with yourself, link here to watch!
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#cushould #cupod
Challenge: do this 10 minutes of yoga led by Sandy or do something to get to know YOU better this week. Chair version available.
Sandy has an expression “stop shoulding yourself!”. When you stop and listen to how we talk to each other and ourselves... I should go to bed now, I should get the kids ready for school tomorrow, I should already have a successful career. It takes away this mindfulness and being present and all the research shows that the more mindful and present you can be the happier you are, the more joy you have, peace, less anxiety & depression. The biggest should- social media. How it pulls us away from our present and makes us think about what we think we should be or do. Having a kid made Sandy realize how un-present she can be. She and Stella go on run/scooter rides and Stella will stop to look at a squirrel or do something along the way. The immediate reaction tends to be, we should be getting somewhere, we should keep moving but instead let’s realize when (it’s not always an option) we could just sit and watch the squirrel.
Alex struggles with that as well, as the kids get older they have additional awareness that you are on your phone and not paying attention to them. That has been a physical reminder to put it away, to be present. She tries to be intentional about her schedule and calendar to set up work and family blocks so that she can be very present. But you need to ACTUALLY be present and not run through the to do list of things she should be doing. Would myself in 5 years tell me wow, you really should have gotten that podcast launched 2 weeks earlier! No, it’s not going to matter at all. We are doing it and enjoying it. There are so many external tools to help us be present and mindful of where we are today. Alex wanted to integrate two 5 minute meditations into her week. She can’t just sit and breathe yet though, she needs to listen to someone tell her. It’s also hard to dedicate time to these practices, like exercise, during the pandemic, 60 minutes probably isn’t realistic, but getting 10 or 12 minutes could be doable. It’s something you can give to yourself, be mindful and aware and re-energize.
Sandy encourages you to think back to your favorite exercise class, cup of coffee, meal and why was that so significant - because you were THERE and nothing else mattered. When we should ourselves we take ourselves out of the ability to be present. Sandy likes to say ridiculous things while teaching a class to make people laugh, stop thinking about how many calories they have to burn, if they look silly, or what they have to do that day and just be there. I should be stronger by now, I should be more flexible by now. If you can reduce the number of times you “should” on yourself then you get more of the “yummy” stuff.
It’s not the yoga helping you be mindful, it’s the mindful intention of being no where else. This can be a really uncomfortable feeling. Physically uncomfortable with a rise in cortisol levels, your sympathetic nervous system, heart racing, but you can practice this anywhere. This idea links to goals as well, should reach the lofty goal but not seeing the little habits that are going to get you there. On the flip side, if you aren’t shoulding on yourself, maybe you aren’t thinking about the next big milestone. Just acknowledge and be with the should, understand the insecurity or the real reason. We have both learned to be intentional, today is where you should be, and chip away at the goal. Practice and make it a habit, can I rescript the should and understand why one keeps coming up?
Sandy led Alex in a 10 minute morning yoga practice for a moving meditation and be with yourself, link here to watch!