I wonder what the difference is between reality and mental well being? Is there a direct correlation between being allowed to live in reality or being forced to ignore what is.
Doesn't it seem impossible to not to be able to be in reality.
However, we little by little slip away each time we pretend to pretend, that someone is different than they acted.
Reality living can seem harsh after being forced to not be there.
We, more often than not, force the pretend world.
For it requires nothing of us.
It is a lazy way to live and one that messes with your head.
My mind is most at peace when it aligns with what is.
And, my soul loves the authenticity we live with.
The harmony doesn't allow for much pretending.
"Loving What Is" by Byron Katie helped me so much as I learned to be accepting to what is. To live with the consequences of what is, and to not ignore life's signs along the way.
Loving what is, doesn't require you to like it or approve of it, it just matters that you accept it.
Often, my struggle is with accepting and wanting it to be different.
Wanting something different is Hell.
It is impossible, and yet the mind can go on for hours wishing, bargaining and hoping, and it is all for naught.
Reality wins, only but 100% of the time.
Once you get into the routine of accepting, it actually allows you choices.
You can't make a choice on a wish; but you can on something that actually exists.
It is easier on your mind and mental state of being, when you accept the unacceptable.
I believe that once you bring your mind to where your body lives, it is easier on all parts of you.
Having a mind that refuses to be where you are, and dealing with the realities of your life, has to be a very confusing state to be living from.
If it always wants what is not.
The thoughts of non-accepting feel horrible in my body.
I can feel when my mind leaves reality.
Just as it was intensely horrific when my mind entered into reality for the first time.
To see what I had been categorizing all wrong in my mind and then to be in a reality that was tragically brilliant.
Our inability to be with truths, takes a toll on our minds and our mental well being.
We didn't choose to leave reality.
Our minds did us a favor, as children, in order to survive some scary home situations.
In our heads, our minds were able to not see reality in order for us to be okay while living with abusive adults.
It became a way of life, to not see when things are not right.
Sometimes, our minds are not able to see until we are in a safe place.
A relationship or when we are capable to living on our own.
And, even when we are the adult and have a child who needs us to step up.
My mind was my savior and my enemy.
It blocked out the abuse, but then allowed me to be in situations that were not good for me.
When reality could no longer be denied, I was able to see. And, it was a blessing and a curse.
It was as if I grew up and became an adult at 46.
I then had the choice, sorta to either do what my mother did and try and create a pretend life around a truth that was too awkward to hide.
In fact, I am astounded that we were able to live as a 'normal' family for all those years.
It boggles my mind.
The only way it worked is that our minds all created a coverup.
Malcolm Gladwell's new book "Talking to Strangers" mentions the "Default to Truth".
Where in our minds default to truth, regardless of what is.
It clearly sees only what it wants to see and disregards the rest.
His book is very interesting, when you see this playing out on the worlds stage today.
Defaulting to truth is not often about the truth, but what you think is the truth.
Or, what you have been conditioned to think.
How we have preconceived ideas before we ever meet someone.
Our minds have made up our minds ahead of time.
And, it is really hard to go against our Default to Truth, that we had in place for years.
Malcolm found it incredible how families were able to not see the abuser among them. How they couldn't change their default to truth.
What his book shows is that there are so many of us, who live a few steps from reality due to various conditioning of our minds.
Just as so many Christians were taught to believe a truth about Gays, that have nothing to do with the real human beings.
Or we have been conditioned that white skin is better than another color.
This church is better than that church.
Or my way is the right way.
All of that kind of programming, leaves us out of reality.
It was mind blowing to me, to see my programs running.
In a loop outside of reality.
Where reality was literally blind to me.
How can this programming and conditioning, not mess with our mental state of being?
Or, have us feeling at war, if you will against reality.
How can we even trust ourselves.
Let alone trust who we believe the other person is.
We believe in a world that doesn't even exist, and pre-judge others due to our own programming.
I was a mess at 46.
I didn't know what was up and who was who.
All of my conditioning and programming, seemed to favor abusive people and a cult like religion. It was like their mind viruses lived out as me.
I don't know how you can challenge your Default to Truth that was set by your parents/religion/schools/communities/people of the same kind as you. But, maybe we can at least admit we don't know all that we think we know.
I love the don't know mind.
How can I really know.
Or as Maya Angelou says, "People teach you who they are, believe them the first time."
My life for the past many years has been a dual between reality and my mind.
Where I literally had to touch the arm of my chair to keep me in the here and now.
And, to enter into new friendships with a don't know mind.
This feels to me like mental wellness.
I have a great appreciation of the mind and its ability to weave a story with the least amount of information, as Dr. Jill Bolte-Taylor writes in her book - "My Stroke of Insight."
Our mental illnesses may be greatly relieved by our ability to challenge our minds with what is, accepting it fully.
"A mind convinced against its will is of the same opinion still." Benjamin Franklin