LifeGrid Magazine August | Page 27

PRECIOUS WORRIES: HOW STRESS MAKES YOU BEAUTIFUL. S by Monica Karst tress is rampant in our busy modern lives. Every person I meet, when asked why she or he wants to meditate, replies, “to be less stressed.” Of the many helpful meditative approaches to stress reduc- tion, one powerful way to reduce our stress is to be beau- tiful. “Beauty” here does not mean physical beauty, as we normally asso- ciate with the word. Here, beauty means accepting one’s humanness. Acknowledging the joy and pain of being human, one is beautiful. One becomes both strong and tender, able to feel deeply and still partici- pate in life. How does this kind of beauty reduce stress? First of all, it is based on kindness. When one is kind toward the difficulties of being human, the symptoms of stress—a tense body, worry in the face, tightness in the voice—lose some of their strength. Try this. Bring to mind an image of yourself, with all your dreams and all your challenges. Imag- ine offering kindness, encouragement, and understanding to yourself, just as you would to someone else who you love dearly. Feel this kindness as mental images, pleasant emotions, and soothing physical sensations. Allow these experiences to soften your heart. This warmheartedness is kindness, which is beautiful. Secondly, this beauty is based on revealing our true heart. So many of us hide ourselves. We may suffer a lot, we may feel great joy, but we are too proud or too afraid to show anyone this side of us. When our inner pain and inner joy are kept secret, the heart becomes so heavy. On top of the everyday stresses of life, we carry this hidden stress. But every human being has struggles and successes, just like us. To show this side of ourselves lifts this weight from the heart. In the presence of someone you love and trust, try telling that person what you are really facing. If our pain is too personal to share, we can also imagine someone who cares for us unconditionally; let that person know all that we have been going through. Imagine that person comforting you, offering his or her love. The stress will lessen. We are beautiful because others can see our humanity, and by that, show their own humanity as well. Lastly, this beauty is based on being there for our life. This means to be willing to experience what life offers, including the range of human emotions and the situa- tions we find ourselves in. Though exter- nally we may need to be strong and in command of our life, inside, we can soften to life’s mystery and uncertainty. When we are there for life in this way, we are beautiful. We are less resistant. Too often we are just the opposite: we fight with our busy minds and wild emotions. But right within those thoughts and emotions is spacious relaxation. If we breathe deeply, become aware of our bodies, and focus our atten- tion on this inner quietude, our stress lifts. Try this right now and feel the space it creates. Life may not be perfectly the way we want it, but there are hopeful possibili- ties, hidden in plain sight, in ourselves and in the life around us. Stress has given us a precious opportunity to be kind, to show our true heart, and to be there for our beautiful lives once again. Jordan Leahy, MA, is a spiritual teacher ordained in the tradition of Anam Thubten, Rinpoche, (dharmata.org). He is the founder of The Living Mantra (the- livingmantra.com), a meditation training community in Santa Cruz, California. Based on twenty three years of medita- tion, study, and translation with numer- ous spiritual teachers, he teaches medita- tion as a way of seeing the poetic beauty and deep meaning in everyday life.