As I've grown older, I live life with Plans--not just A, but deep into the alphabet these days. The South Bay Daily Breeze
is the hometown newspaper for the South Bay area of Los Angeles. I have read it
faithfully since I was a young wife and mother. Like all newspapers in this day
and age, it is suffering downsizing and layoffs; they are actually moving this week to more compact quarters. Sigh.
This newspaper, and particularly its columnists, are part of my daily routine. On Saturdays, however, a
columnist who always touches my heart, posts as a free-lancer.
Her name is Adell Shay and
this column appeared in the Daily Breeze on Dec. 26, 2008 . I cut and pasted it into my journal as inner wisdom guidance for 2009.
Don't panic - just choose
Plan B for a change
by Adell Shay
There is much talk of the
world's problems these days, though there always seems to be. If the ceaseless
wail is not about financial disaster, it is about suffering from some other
lack, or about the ever-looming threat of terror.
What were once sound bytes
now endlessly scroll at the bottom of every television screen. The adjectives
seldom change; the message never does: Be afraid and remain afraid. Prepare yourself
for imminent disaster.
I am not suggesting that
people do not suffer - I know they do. I know I have and that others have done
so more intensely. I'm simply offering this suggestion:
Suffering, as opposed to
pain, is an activity of the mind, and therefore is composed of what it
consumes. The mind, like everything else, follows a rule of nature: What you
feed grows.
To prove that principle, I
devised an experiment.
That's a lie. I didn't
devise anything. I was bound and thrashed by the Plan A of the experiment. Plan
B became possible by a glimpse of Grace, but required years of practice to
become habit.
Plan A:
1. Awaken startled by talk
radio and become so seized by terror, you are unable to move.
2. Hit the snooze.
3. Wake up late and run
screaming into the day.
4. Turn on CNN or Fox News
and drink a double espresso while thinking about your investments and every
financial mistake you've ever made, your mortgage or rent, and/or your job.
5. Get dressed. Pause frequently to catch an urgent
news update. Make sure you compare your body to that of the surgically
disfigured news anchor.
6. Skip breakfast and hit
Starbucks for coffee and sugar.
7. Turn the news on in the car.
If you feel spiritually superior, turn on NPR.
8. Fill your head with
fear-inducing ideas about things that are not happening to you at that moment.
9. Throughout the day, seek out
people who will talk to you about what makes them afraid. Repeat a disastrous
event you overheard at Starbucks. Wonder why your stomach hurts. Eat a roll of
Tums.
10. Go to sleep with the
television on.
Plan B:
1. Wake up gently and turn on
uplifting music or a spiritual teacher while getting ready for the day. A
spiritual teacher tends to remind you that everything is perfect in this moment
and that only this moment exists.
2. Sit down with your coffee or
tea in a place you have designated for meditation and read a short piece of
spiritual literature.
3. Write a gratitude list. Make
sure there are at least 10 things on it. Breathing and animals count. Then
write a list of what you are afraid of.
4. Get quiet. Ask for awareness
of gratitude throughout the day. Ask for awareness that all your needs have
already been met. Ask the Power that created everything to reveal itself and
remove your fears.
5. Notice your mind chatter as
if it were a popular high school clique to which you once pined to belong.
Notice how silly it looks now. Do not engage. Wait for a moment when you are
aware that everything is absolutely OK. Practice pausing throughout the day to
do the same.
6. Eat a good breakfast.
7. Listen to a spiritual teacher
on the way to work.
8. During the day, gently remove
yourself from negative conversations.
9. Call someone who needs to
hear from a friend.
10. Go to sleep after reading
something that induces peaceful awareness and a thankful heart.
I like the effects of Plan B,
but it is amazing how long and rigorously I clung to Plan A.
I got a statement recently of my
teachers 403(b) investment balance. It indicated that I lost $40,000 in two months,
which represented four years of $1,000 per paycheck withdrawals. I gasped and
shot an e-mail to my financial adviser. I don't know about you, but that's a
lot of money to me.
Then, suddenly, as I looked at
the statement, I realized that what appeared before me was merely tree bark
with spots of dye on it and that my life was no different at that moment than
it was the moment before I read it.
I had a choice of how I would
respond. I had a choice to remain at peace or be afraid. I threw the paper away.
My life has never been so good.
I can't be certain, but I
suspect it has something to do with Plan B.
Adell Shay's can be reached by e-mail at gorilladance@roadrunner.com
or by mail at the Daily Breeze, 5215 Torrance Blvd., Torrance, CA 90503-4077.
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