Here's another sneak preview of the “The Caregiver Hour” April radio   show series entitled “The Intentional Caregiver” (see more info below).  Here, we're looking at   the weekly topics  through the  MindfulCaregiving lens. On Monday, 4/25, in this final show in the series, Kim and I will wrap up the month by sharing the most powerful key to a caregiver's peace of mind. Our guest will be Debra Young, Owner of Empowerability, LLC. See below details for tuning in or catching archived shows.
Part 4 — The Payoff of Intentional Acceptance
What you resist,
persists
— Carl Jung
Caregiving is littered with opportunities to practice the opposite of acceptance, resistance. It is normal to resist  the behavior of others, the aging of your loved one, your own feelings  of powerlessness, or the undeniable facts of aging and caregiving. That  grip of tension in the jaw or solar plexus can be a sure sign that  resistance to something is kicking in.
Resistance is one of the caregiver’s biggest energy drains.  When you’re angry, frustrated, or judgmental, you’re locked into  negative energy. The more you resist, the more time and energy you  waste, the more resistance there is, and so on in a self-perpetuating  drain cycle.
So, what to do with that? We start where we must  always start, by looking straight at it. Even as we’re groping for a  different action to take, it can be that the only right action is  inaction. Stop. Take a breath. Notice what is. You can’t get beyond resistance until you clearly see it. What do you resist in caregiving? Make a list. Just seeing the list in front of you can give you some power over it.
What  then? “What You Resist Persists” means also that “What you focus on is  what you get.” Focus too long on being angry and you experience more  anger. Focus on another’s annoying behaviors and you see only those  annoying behaviors. Or, as Abraham Maslow put it, “When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail”. So we don’t want to focus too long on our list.
Then what can we do? Steadily and intentionally question the source of the resistance  and then seek out opportunities for acceptance, or allowing. Your  greatest freedom rises from your power to intentionally choose to accept  as much as possible in this caregiving journey of change. As the  serenity prayer suggests, accept the things you cannot change, change the things you can, and be aware of the difference. I would add to that, then REfocus. When you see things you cannot change yet have a hard time accepting, refocus.
You can’t change other people, you can’t change many things in the course of caregiving, but you can wrest some peace from the grip of negativity, fear, and judgment. It takes no time at all. In fact, you can save precious moments, reclaiming them through acceptance and refocusing.
Check out “The Caregiver Hour” Radio Show
Throughout  April, the topic of “The Caregiver Hour” weekly radio show will be “The  Intentional Caregiver”. In four shows, Holly will join host Kim Linder  and her guests to empower caregivers to approach caregiving with mindful  intentionality.
“The Caregiver Hour” airs every Monday at 11:00  EST online at http://www.thecaregiverhour.com/ or on Tampa Bay radio  WHNZ Station 1250 AM.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment