For those of you who follow my blog regularly, you may recall that I created a new feature during 2023 -- occasional blog posts that featured a short collection of my Daily Gummies of Wisdom -- with some expanded thoughts and reflections.
My Daily Gummies are nourishing food for thought to jumpstart your day and are intended as meaningful supplement for emotional health, self-awareness and self discovery. I launched the Daily Gummies of Wisdom email program in the spring of this year with the hope that the insight I shared might really resonate with every day life situations we all encounter.
The biggest surprise for me personally was hearing back from so many people all across the country who found the gummies to be worthwhile, thought-provoking, motivating and inspirational. Sometimes the Daily Gummy was printed and stuck on the refrigerator for the family to see; some were forwarded to a friend dealing with the very issue that the gummy addressed; some were incorporated into sermons, support group discussions or a counseling session. A few people have shared with me that reading the Daily Gummy is now an integral part of their regular morning routine. I was deeply touched and overjoyed by the stories I've heard about the impacts of my Daily Gummies of Wisdom. What a gift for me -- to be learning from others how they digested, metabolized and incorporated the insights into their own experiences.
What I am learning is that real life examples do a lot to help us integrate better skills and tools in our daily lives. What could be more beneficial than hearing a true story about showing up differently changed an old relationship dynamic, solved a parenting problem, empowered others to become more true to themselves? That's what I will be sharing more of in 2024 -- the exciting changes that occur when personal growth and self discovery are visibly in action in our daily lives.
To jumpstart 2024, here is a recent Daily Gummy of Wisdom and the backstory that inspired it:
We all have the power to create change. It is when we give away our power or deny that we even have any, that we stay stuck in a rut or unhealthy relationship patterns.
We have to get in the driver's seat and get into gear - we need to engage in change.
It's easy to stay stuck in the complaint department, victimhood or limiting beliefs. But we will just be spinning our wheels and making no forward progress.
Our agency, autonomy, choices and habits are the engines of change. Shift out of feeling stuck and into a new habit, a fresh perspective, begin holding a boundary instead of a grudge and speak up when you normally stay silent. These are the tools of change.
Don't give away your power. Climb into the cab of your life and start the engine. We can stay stuck being part of the problem or we can shift gears and be part of our solution.
This gummy about our personal power was shared on December 11, 2023. It was inspired by two fascinating podcast conversations that unpacked "power" in a whole new way. We hear a lot about "power" and we often have a negative association with it, such as power over, strong arming another or "disempowering" someone.
But what if we reframed it and saw power as our engine of change; how we shift from being stuck to making improvements?
The first podcast conversation that reframed my thinking about power was with Esther Perel, the renowned couples therapist and best selling author. Esther is such a compassionate. empathic and skillful couples counselor. She has a bedside manner that would be the envy of any medical professional. She possesses a rare, surgical precision to extract a couple's key issue and open them up to seeing the deeper, loving relationship that is possible for them. Her ability to pull this out without inflicting more pain while simultaneously guiding a couple to healing, healthy connection is astounding. In a single couples session, she can remove a long-standing impediment and shift a couple from fighting WITH each other to fighting together FOR their partnership.
Esther offers a unique perspective on power by reframing a common relationship power dynamic - the kind where one partner is strongly supported in pursuing their goals and the other partner makes a lot of sacrifice to accommodate them. Esther reminds the "accommodator" that he or she actually has tremendous power in the relationship. If the "accommodator" stopped offering support, picking up the slack or doing more to keep the home life balanced, the other person would likely struggle to meet their goals or pursue their dreams.
This reframing shifts the power dynamic perspective for both partners. Suddenly the accommodator clearly sees his or her own value, impact and contributions in a meaningful light. And the one who is the benefactor of all these accommodations gains a healthy awareness of all that is being offered on a daily basis to pursue a long term goal. Esther gives the accommodator the gift of seeing his or her "agency" and the benefactor the gift of "gratitude" for the other's contributions and sacrifices.
Charisse Cooke, author and attachment-based psychotherapist, recently offered this tool for accommodators who are growing resentful: "match the behavior". If you are hyper-functioning, overdoing and overextending but not getting anything in return, dial back on the energy, effort and contributions you are making to match the behavior and responses of your partner. This is a great way to correct an imbalance in the relationship dynamic.
We can restore a healthy balance in the "give and take" of our relationships when we recognize how we often give away our power and then feel unappreciated and resentful.
I learned even more about power from a recent Huberman Lab podcast featuring Robert Greene, author of six international bestsellers.
Robert Greene believes there is too much negative focus given to power, when in fact it has remarkable positive benefits. He shares that exercising self control is a SuperPower - especially when we are able to skillfully regulate our emotions and respond to life with calmness, clarity and objectivity.
We give away our power unintentionally when we have knee jerk emotional reactions. We are well aware of this -- often instantly regretting that we displayed such an immature response in front of our kids, friends, family or publicly. In a split second, we acted out of character and embarrassed ourselves.
Think about a time when you witnessed an adult having a childlike meltdown and you lost a little respect for that person or it tarnished the image you once held for that person. This is how we diminish our power.
Arthur Brooks, happiness expert and another great author, recently revealed that our grandmothers gave us really good advice when they told us to "count to 10" when we were little and emotionally out of control. But now, we have science-based evidence that we really need to count to 30 - because that is how long it takes to move us from the limbic system in our brains to the pre-frontal cortex. In other words, the limbic system is where the strong emotional reactions come from -- and using a 30 second pause moves us into our super-power of self-control and emotional regulation (the executive functions found in our pre-frontal cortex.)
Robert Greene urges us to not give away our personal power, but rather to own it as a super-power. Emotional self-control puts us in the driver's seat and facilitates us showing up in life with our character, integrity and values intact. We actually have greater negotiation and strategy skills at our disposable when we show up cool, calm and collected.
My hope is that the backstory to this Daily Gummy of Wisdom has felt a bit like a factory tour where you discover how the emotional health supplements are made. I love doing the research and distilling what I am learning into the creation of the gummy. What I am enjoying even more however is hearing how the Gummies are helping others. Keep those stories coming!
RECOMMENDED RESOURCES:
FIND THE HUBERMAN LAB PODCAST on your favorite platform, including YouTube, and scroll through the episodes for the latest science on a topic that interests you.
FIND ESTHER PEREL'S PODCAST on your favorite platform -- and listen in on counseling sessions to gain new insights on relationships
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