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Main Page –› Self Help –› Managing Stress
 

How To Unload Your Worries In Under 5 Minutes A Day

 
Author: Carla Rieger

I've lived a long life and had many troubles, most of which never happened. - Mark Twain

I am an expert on worry. Like many people, I come from a long line of professional worriers. We called my father the Beacon of Doom. Worry was his favorite retirement activity. He put bars up on every window of his house. He took thousands of vitamins a day. Worried that he might fall, he stapled 2-inch thick underlay to every floor of his house. The house looked like the MacDonald's playroom. I was over having coffee, I dropped my cup and it bounced right back up into my hand.

Worrying Is Sensible?

My father convinced me that I needed to worry or bad things would happen. I came to believe that worry was a sign of intellectualism, realism and "being sensible". It only makes sense then, that being positive meant you were naive or in denial. Sally Armstrong, an award-winning journalist once noted, "If you write negative news, nobody asks you to prove it. If you write positive news, people want a jury."

Great Thinkers Think Worrying is a Waste of Time

However, the more I studied the great thinkers in history, the more I questioned those beliefs. Recently John-Roger wrote "Worry is paying interest on a debt you may not owe". Sixty years ago Mark Twain said, "I've lived a long life and had many troubles, most of which never happened." Four hundred years ago Molire said, "People spend most of their lives worrying about things that never happen". And finally over two thousand years ago Plato said, "Not one shred of evidence supports the notion that life is serious."

Store them in the Worry Jar

One day I decided to do an experiment. I got an old cookie jar and cut up strips of paper. At the beginning of the week I wrote down one worry thought per week onto the strips of paper. I put the strips in the jar as a symbolic way of "letting them go", knowing I could come get them again at any time. At the end of the week I pulled the strips out, and put them in four piles. One was "bad things that never happened", the second was "bad things that happened but the consequences were good", the third was "bad things that happened and the consequences were manageable", and the final pile was "bad things that happened and the consequences were just as bad as I imagined". Guess which pile was biggest? The first pile contained 80% of the strips, the second pile contained 12%, the third pile contained 7%, and the fourth pile contained 1%. I did this for seven more weeks and the percentages remained similar. I proved Molire's theory.

The Difference Between "Taking Care Of" And "Worrying"

How do you know when you've crossed the line from "taking care of" your priorities and unnecessary worry? Ask yourself this question "Is this something I can take action on right now? If not, let it go for now. For example, I gave a presentation at a conference and after driving for 30 minutes, realized I left my purse in a public washroom at the conference. At first my thoughts were constructive. "I better turn around and go back. I better call the conference organizer". These were actions I could take at that moment. However, when I discovered the organizer had gone home, and when I found myself locked in rush hour traffic, my thoughts began to darken. I watched my mind create increasingly worse scenarios. "I won't find my purse, I'll have to get new ID, I won't be able to go on my trip tomorrow, someone will buy a Winnabago with my VISA card". I became very bad tempered and anxious. At one point, I realized that it made no sense to ruminate about "what if's" because there was no action I could take yet. I started listening to Stuart MacLean's Vinyl Caf. After laughing through a story or two, the adrenaline eased off. I arrived at the conference center 30 minutes later to find the janitor had picked up my bag and was holding it for me, everything intact.

Worry Is A Parasite

I believe that worry thoughts are like parasites that want you as their host. They convince you they are your friend, that without them you would die or be a sickly pauper with no legs, one eye, and a stock portfolio worth 2% of it's original value. Worry thoughts fly through the stratosphere at millions of bytes per second. You can download them any time, anywhere, at no cost. All you have to do is choose. If you cannot make an easy connection, simply turn on the nightly news, talk to an insurance salesperson, or attend a Yahoo shareholder's meeting.

The Law of Attraction

This Law states that our negative thoughts attract negativity, and our positive thoughts attract positives to us. Therefore, if you spend time worrying about not having enough money, over time you are training your mind to not have enough money. In other words, what you resist persists. It makes more sense to spend your thought time in joyful, positive ways. After all, life is short.

Joy Thoughts

You can also download joy thoughts, but they are more elusive. They are like flower seeds that must push up through all the dark matter and sticky stuff in order to thrive. The proportion of worry thoughts to joy thoughts floating around at our present time in history is probably about ten to two. That is why it is so easy to get caught, like an innocent fly in a spider's web, or a Hwy 1 commuter at quarter past five. Ridding yourself of the worry parasite requires decisive action. Let's look at some remedies and preventative techniques you can take.

1. Refuse to download
Have you ever received an email with an attachment, or while surfing have you been assaulted by a pop-up window asking you to download something? Worry thoughts are like attachments or pop-ups. You can simply decide NOT to open them. Keep surfing or just hit DELETE.

2. Observe and Label
Okay. You got sucked in. You opened the attachment and the worry parasite has taken hold. Notice that you let it happen. Watch yourself in the process. This "observer" state can sometimes help you detach.

3. Do a Reversal
What is the opposite of the worry thought? "What if my work isn't good enough?" becomes "What if my work is excellent?" Or, "I might be late" becomes "I might be on time." Just like trying on clothes in a store, decide to take off the worry thought, and try on a positive one instead. See how it feels.

4. Laugh About It
Laughter is THE cerebral laxative. It can purge you of unwanted fecal thought matter. I remember racing through Vancouver Airport barely holding onto my wardrobe bag, computer bag and boarding pass. I came whizzing around the corner and saw a bronze statue of a man racing through the airport barely holding onto a wardrobe bag, computer bag and boarding pass. I suddenly saw myself from the outside and had to laugh. I walked the rest of the way to my gate resigned to whatever fate awaited me. Once there I discovered my flight was delayed 20 minutes.

Take 5 Minutes A Day

Just as we brush our teeth daily, we need to regularly remove "thought plaque" that builds up. Take 5 minutes a day to delete any worry thoughts that have crept into your consciousness. Put them in a worry jar, imagine hitting the delete button, do a reversal, or simply stand outside yourself and see how funny it looks. As John Milton once said "The mind can make a heaven of hell or a hell of heaven." Life is probably one big virtual reality experience anyway, so choose your mind games carefully.

Author Bio:

Carla Rieger

Carla Rieger is an award-winning writer, change management trainer, humorist, and speech coach for over 17 years. She has written five plays, two screenplays, hundreds of short stories and articles, three manuals, and has performed in a hit one-woman show. She is the author of The Heart of Presenting: The Essential Presenter?s Toolkit, The Instructor?s Guide to Storytelling and Speaking on the Funny Side of the Brain.

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