How to Use
Stress to Improve
Your Life
I can’t change the traffic, I can’t change the Dow
Jones, I can’t predict the weather or the next
inconvenient emergency that shows up in my day,
but I can change my perception of everything.
W
hen we listen to the news there’s always a story about
shortages. You’ve heard the reports, jobs are in short
supply, affordable housing is in short supply, safety,
clean water, and even good men are hard to come by. But there
is one thing that you’ve never heard of being in short supply,
and that is stress. There is an abundance of stress. It’s
everywhere. When your alarm clock goes off in the morning,
you wake up to the traffic report, “It’s a parking lot on 95.” You
get in the car, turn on your radio and hear that the Dow Jones is
plummeting and the economy is in danger. The kids’ school
calls you at 10 am and you need to leave work. You arrived to
work late due the traffic on 95, but now you’re leaving early
because of a child emergency. You’re conflicted because job
security is in short supply. Stress and the guarantee of more
stress ranks up there with death and taxes; in other words, it’s
inevitable.
I know that sounds like bad news, but I have always believed in
using whatever shows up in my life to get what I want out of life.
And because stress seems to be the one supply item that I never
run short of, I decided that I would learn to use stress as a main
ingredient in creating the life of my dreams. Resisting stress
takes up too much of our valuable time (not to mention
the fact that the act of resisting creates more stress). We
are designed to be whole and complete. We get disturbed
and anxious when we believe that a situation will rob us of
our wholeness and leave us incomplete. Another way to
say this is to say that we are designed to live at peace, the
definition of peace being - wholeness, completeness,
nothing missing, nothing broken, totality. Anything or
anyone that we perceive as robbing us of our peace causes
us stress.
I can’t change the traffic, I can’t change the Dow Jones, I
can’t predict the weather or the next inconvenient
emergency that shows up in my day, but I can change my
perception of everything. This doesn’t mean that I plaster
a plastic smile on my face and deny the presence of these
unwanted circumstances in my life. Good for you if you
can do that and still be healthy, but I’ve tried that, and it
just led to suppressed emotions, which – you guessed it-
led to more stress. About 15 years ago I changed my
approach to stress, and it has made a world of difference.
Two simple steps: first I acknowledge the presence of
Apr./May 2019 www.yogicherald.com
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