How to Stay in the Present Moment in Everyday Life: 5 Simple Habits

“Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment.”Buddha

There is only one time and place where you can be and have any control over.
The present moment.
But most of us still spend a lot of our regular days lost in memories, reliving a sunny vacation or maybe more commonly repeating an old conflict or negative situation over and over in our thoughts.
Or we get lost in scenarios about what could happen in the future. Maybe through wishful daydreams. Or maybe by building monsters in our minds as thoughts go round and and round and create scary and dangerous mountains out of molehills or just air.
Or your thoughts may become split and unfocused between several different things and tasks.
If you spend a lot of your everyday moments and time in the future or the past or you have difficulty focusing and you feel this may have a negative effect on your life then maybe you want to learn to live more in the present moment.
Here’s what works for me to do that. Just a few simple things that I use in my normal day.
1. Single-task not only your work.
I and many others have often written and talked about the importance of single-tasking your work to get it done more effectively.
I have found that it becomes easier for me to stay present for more time throughout my day if I single-task everything as best I can.
That means to not use tabs when I browse the internet but to just be fully engaged with one thing online at a time. It means to not use my smartphone or my computer as I also try to watch the TV. Or to use any of those internet-devices during a conversation.
Get a good start to your day and set the tone for it by doing one thing at a time as soon as you wake up.
If you have to multitask, then try to set off some specific time for it during your day. Maybe an hour or so in the afternoon.
2. Do it slowly.
When you wake up and starting doing your first thing of the day, then slow it down a bit.
Do it and the next few things at a relaxed and calm pace. It will probably not take that much longer than if you do it quickly. And you’ll be able to stay present more easily, to focus on each thing you do and to find a simple joy or stillness in it.
Do that instead of increasing your stress right away and getting stuck in worries or though loops about what may happen today before you even have had your breakfast.
And as you move through your day, try to do it slowly when you can.
3. Tell yourself: now I am…
As I do something I simply tell myself this in my mind: Now I am X.
For example, if I am brushing my teeth, then I tell myself: Now I am brushing my teeth.
This habit is maybe most important when doing things where it is easy to drift away to the future or past. It could be when you brush your hair or teeth or when you are taking a walk to the supermarket.
I don’t tell myself this line all the time, but I pepper it in a couple of times throughout my day.
4. Minimize what you let into your head early in the day.
If I check the email, Facebook and other websites online early in the day then I have found that I will have more thoughts bouncing around in my head. And so it becomes a lot harder to concentrate on anything, to stay present and to not be dragged away into some negative thought loop.
So the kind option towards myself has become to not check anything early in the day. And to check things as few times as I can.
If I minimize such things then my day becomes lighter and simpler and I not only stay present more easily but I also tend to get more things of importance done.

5. No, no, no + reconnect with the here and now.
The four tips above make it easier to stay in the present moment and to use it and enjoy it fully. But each day I still drift into the past or the future. Or my thoughts become split between different things.
If you have read any of my stuff on self-esteem then you know that I often use a stop-word or phrase to quickly disrupt and stop the inner critic or a self-esteem damaging train of thought. I do the same thing here.
As quickly as I notice that my thoughts have drifted away I say to myself: No, no, no.
Then I quickly follow that up with focusing on just my breathing or just on what is happening around me right now with all my senses for a minute or two to draw myself back into this present moment.

Stop The Heartbreak Cycle: 7 Dos and Don’ts For Handling a Breakup


“When something bad happens you have three choices. You can let it define you, let it destroy you, or you can let it strengthen you.” ~Unknown
I’ve learned to be thankful for my first heartbreak.
Of course, at the time of the crime I struggled to see anything positive in it. My mind could see the good, but my heart struggled against it.
It was literally as if someone stabbed my heart; there was a problem that caused my body to stop working properly. I couldn’t cry. I didn’t eat for a week. I didn’t sleep for two. And my mind constantly raced thinking of the perpetrator.
In fact, I still think of him occasionally; it’s so hard to turn off.
Like during any trauma your body faces, it tries to repair itself so it can be whole again. My remedy? To stay busy, pretend everything was great, and throw myself into dating other people the very day things broke off.
I became emotionally promiscuous. (And sometimes, maybe, just promiscuous).
Normally my standards are that I date just one person at a time and don’t get intimate with anyone until I’m in a relationship. I’m usually very conscious of who I date and intentional of how I treat them.
But now that my heart was hurt, all those rules were thrown out the window.
I dated guys just to date someone. It didn’t matter who they were, if I had dated them before, or even if I really liked them. I was just trying to distract myself and not feel the pain.
I wanted to display the image that I was fine, happy, healthy, and so over the perpetrator. Maybe I even did it to hurt him, like he hurt me.
Eventually I decided to settle on dating one guy, someone who was kind and treated me well.
Pretty soon he asked me to be his girlfriend. I said yes, but not because I was really into him. I did it because I wanted to be into him. I hoped that if I were his girl I’d soon forget about the other guy.
But I never did. And when I realized I never would, I had to break things off.
While trying to heal my heartbreak, I had inadvertently broken someone else’s heart.
I didn’t mean to; it was never my intention to inflict that same pain of heartbreak upon someone else. I cannot express how sorry I am for doing that to someone who was so kind to me.
I’ve learned that our relationships are only as healthy as we are. You need to be happy and whole before pursuing other people. It’s never okay to use someone as a tool to fill up a void within you. If you do that, you’ll only harm that person.
Recovering from a breakup takes time, love, and patience. Surround yourself with those who love and care for you, unconditionally.
Learn to be happy just being yourself, by yourself. And when you’re ready, begin to date new people. (But only when you’re ready!)

I am now thankful for having my heart broken. Going through that experience has taught me how to handle (and not handle) a breakup:

1. Don’t let other people be reckless with your heart.

And don’t be reckless with theirs.

2. If you can, try to get closure on your past relationship.

You don’t want to haul that baggage around while you’re dating new people.

3. Never date a person to get over someone else.

It’s okay to have fun, but don’t forget that other people have feelings too.

4. You have to be okay with yourself before you’re okay being with someone else.

If you’re not happy just being single, then consider why that is before trying to get with another person.

5. Don’t display a false image of yourself in an attempt at getting back at someone.

Remember you’re hurt because someone you care for hurt you. It’s hard, but swallow your pride.Sacrificing your morals for revenge is never worth it. You’ll only hurt yourself in the end.

6. Take time to enjoy being single again.

Do things that are authentically you and will make you be happy, without dragging anyone else down.

7. Be patient with yourself, stay busy, laugh a lot, and stick with your friends.

I’ve learned to be thankful for my first heartbreak. Since I’ve experienced how awful it is, I don’t wish it upon anyone else. Now I’m much more intentional with whom I date and why, so I won’t break anyone else’s heart.

What It Means to Love: 9 Steps to a Strong Relationship


“Be there. Be open. Be honest. Be kind. Be willing to listen, understand, accept, support, and forgive. This is what it means to love.” ~Lori Deschene
They say your heart pounds when you’re in love.
But the very idea of opening up and letting love in can bring on the wrong kind of palpitations.
Saying yes to love… that’s like standing naked, bare naked, every inch of you on show.
Completely vulnerable.
Or so I thought.

My Impregnable Force Field

 “Of all forms of caution, caution in love is perhaps the most fatal to true happiness.” ~Bertrand Russell
You see, I was called a few different things growing up. People said I was reserved, quiet, or shy.
But in truth I was just scared to let anyone in. I felt I needed an impregnable forcefield. To stay safe. To be in control.
And I needed space. Lots of it.
Getting close to people, close enough to fall in love, well, that felt way too intense and personal for me back then.
We didn’t do love in my family growing up. It was busy, busy, busy in our house. Everything was about practicality, working super hard, and getting things done. And done well.
Adults rarely showed affection with each other—something about it being inappropriate in public, my brain remembers. We were taught not to talk about personal things. Life felt secretive and awkward.
As an adult, I ached to be loved. It hurt to be so alone.
It took me a long time to realize that I didn’t really know how to love. And yet, it’s supposed to be an innate trait. Even newborn babies demonstrate the instinct to love, and the need to receive love back.
But in all my years growing up, love and affection felt awkward, foreign. Love seemed equally dangerous and mysterious at the same time.
I learned to keep everything inside, and everyone outside.
In truth, life went wrong precisely because I acted that way. I ended up alone—no lifelong friends, no love in my life. I was lost. Every day felt like an uphill struggle.
And around me love bloomed, but for others, not for me.
Eventually I understood that unless I made some changes, I would never know the absolute security of another’s love. I would never hear someone telling me everything would be okay. That they’d be there for me, whatever life threw my way. And I’d never be able to be there for someone else.
I realized that I needed to start doing these nine things or I would never know what love is.


1. Be there.

Love doesn’t grow and flourish because you dress up or make yourself up. All it needs is for you to show up, to be fully present.
I used to believe soul mates were mythical creatures, as rare as unicorns, and that finding your soul mate was an honest to goodness miracle—one that happened to other people.
Not true.
Someone is ready to love you. They’re out there. And they’re looking for you right now. But you have to show up fully to connect with them.
In the past, I spent a lot of time caught up in my head, paralyzed by my fears and insecurities. When I was focusing all my energy on protecting myself, I wasn’t available to the people around me. You can’t love or be loved when you’re physically there but mentally somewhere else.
I now know that I need to focus more on the person in front of me than my worries, insecurities, and judgments. Love can only unfold when you get out of your head and get into your heart.
“When you love someone, the best thing you can offer is your presence. How can you love if you are not there?” ~Thich Nhat Hanh

2. Be open.

Love is a powerful force, but you can’t share it if your heart is closed.
I used to fear the slightest puncture in my protective force field. I worried that if I opened up even a little, it would be the end of me. Somehow staying closed felt like protection. If I let someone in, I couldn’t control what would happen. If I kept everyone out, nothing could go wrong.
But I learned that you don’t need to expose the deepest parts of yourself all at once to be open to love. You just need to let your defenses down long enough to let someone else in.
I started by sharing a little about myself—my opinions, my feelings, and my worries. A little at first, I tested others’ reactions to what I shared. But my confidence grew much more quickly than I expected. And you know, not holding back so hard or pretending turned out to be the biggest relief ever.
“The greatest asset you could own, is an open heart.” ~Nikki Rowe

3. Be honest.

Being truthful in love goes further than just not telling lies. It takes being the real you, the wonderfully imperfect you.
Pretending to be someone you’re not or disguising how you feel sends a worrying message to the person who loves you. Human beings have an inbuilt alarm when they sense someone isn’t telling them the whole truth.
I had an image of the ‘perfect me,’ and it didn’t include being vulnerable. So I lied about the true me in everything I said and did. I pretended that I didn’t worry, didn’t need help, and that I knew exactly where I was heading in life. Those lies alone alienated some amazingly wonderful and loving people who would have been life-long friends… if I’d let them.
“Honesty is more than not lying. It is truth telling, truth speaking, truth living, and truth loving.” ~James E. Faust

4. Be kind.

I wasn’t kind in the beginning. I was too insecure to let the little things go. A forgotten request felt like rejection. A different opinion felt like an argument. I was also too insecure to accept that it didn’t mean I was loved less.
For example, one night I’d plucked up the courage to sing in front of a crowd, a small one, but to me it felt like standing on the stage of Carnegie Hall. My significant other muddled the dates and double-booked himself.
I sang that night without his support from the crowd because he felt he couldn’t let down his double booking. At the time that felt like rejection, and I reacted harshly. In truth, the situation simply said “I know you’ll understand that I need to stand by my promise elsewhere; they need me more right now. I’ll be right next to you next time.” (And they were.)
Being kind in love means accepting that people can’t always meet your expectations, and giving the other person leeway in how they act and respond. It means looking after the other person’s heart even when you’re disappointed.
“Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible.” ~Dalai Lama

5. Be willing to listen.

Love needs to be heard to flourish, that’s pretty obvious. But it took me years to figure out that it was as much my responsibility to listen as to talk.
Because love is a conversation, not a monologue.
In the beginning my head was too full of all the things I wanted to explain, my heart too full of all the emotions I wanted to express. And my mouth was too full of all the words I needed heard.
But I found that when I listened, I learned valuable insights into the other person each and every time. I heard their concerns, self-doubts, and their words of love. I was able to help, support, and feel the growing connection we had. They drew huge comfort from having been heard. Listening fully said “I love you” as clearly as the words themselves.
Like the night we left the movies, having watched School of Rock with Jack Black. It was supposed to be a comedy, a fun date. I laughed lots, but the other person had to sit through 106 minutes of their painful personal disappointment over not pursuing their dream career in music. I listened hard. I heard all their regret, their self-reproach.
And I learned a whole relationship’s worth of areas where I could be super-sensitive and supportive in the future.
Because you can’t speak the language of love until you learn to listen first.
“The first duty of love is to listen. ” ~Paul Tillich

6. Be willing to understand.

Being willing to listen is only half of learning the language of love. The other half is understanding what you hear.
And that means being open to a different perspective, even an opposite view.
At first that sounded like I needed to give up what I believed, to forever bow down on the way I saw things.
Not the case. It meant I needed to learn to see that there could also be an alternative, equally valid viewpoint.
Understanding in love goes beyond being aware and appreciative of the other person’s stance and beliefs. It takes consciously embracing that you’re one of two, and both your perspectives have a place. Love is big enough to handle different opinions and philosophies.
So the other person grew up in a different culture, for example. That works for them and the millions of people brought up the same. There must be something in it. Love means appreciating that.
I learned that speaking your mind doesn’t have to be rude or inflammatory, no matter how directly you say it. In some cultures it’s rude not to! And yet I’d been programed to never disagree or say the ‘wrong thing’ and instead to give the accepted, acquiescent response. Love taught me there’s another way—that it’s more important to be honest and truly understand each other than to simple appease each other.
“One of the most beautiful qualities of true friendship is to understand and to be understood.” ~Lucius Annaeus Seneca

7. Be willing to accept.

Love doesn’t have a complicated vocabulary. All it wants to hear is “That’s okay. I love you for who you are.” Accepting the other person for who they are, however, doesn’t guarantee love will flourish in a relationship. For that to have a chance of happening, you have to accept yourself for who you are as well.
To let love in, you need to believe you’re worthy of love, that you truly are enough for another’s heart to fall for.
You need to embrace your human-ness, your less than polished edges, and all your quirks—and theirs, too, in equal measure.
I had to learn that I didn’t need to be perfect. And I never could be. That I needed help sometimes. And doing my best was plenty.
I had to accept that about the other person too. I had to step back and see that no matter how large the mess or miscommunication, they’d gone into the situation dripping with good intentions and love.
That didn’t happen overnight. It took some time, some gritting of teeth initially, and a fair bit of biting my tongue. It felt hard to accept it all for a while, until I truly opened my arms to all their idiosyncrasies, blind spots, and contrary points of view. I would have let those beliefs go years before if I’d known how liberated I would feel when I did.
Accept that in a relationship you’re one of two wonderful, separate, yet intertwined individuals.
You can be the amazing you that you are, and they can be their wonderful self too.
 “The greatest gift you can give to others is the gift of unconditional love and acceptance.” ~Brian Tracy

8. Be willing to support.

It’s hard to put the other person first when your own emotions are raging.
I spent years too caught up in the rawness of my own emotions to take into account anyone else’s. I was so busy struggling up my own mountain of troubles that I missed the other person struggling right alongside me.
We could have pulled each other up if I’d only reached across.
Support starts with looking out for signs the other one is struggling. It means putting your own battles on hold for a while.
I learned how to look beyond my thoughts and problems and truly be there for the other person, thank goodness. And our love deepened every time I did.
“Surround yourself with people who provide you with support and love and remember to give back as much as you can in return.” ~Karen Kain

9. Be willing to forgive.

Whenever there are two people involved, there are going to be mistakes and misunderstandings. That’s a given.
But the truth is, they are simply opportunities for love in disguise.
My anxious thoughts made me stress over small things for far too long. I’d analyze and imagine a whole scenario around what was a simple error or miscommunication. Like that confused discussion over weekend plans, when I worried that he saw what I’d suggested as dull, and his mix-up was a disguised attempt to avoid having to drag himself along.
A forgotten tiny promise felt like I didn’t matter. Like that planned cosy evening, just us and a relaxing dinner, that got steamrollered by him agreeing to watch the neighbors’ kids so that the parents could have a special evening instead.
That hurt.
Until I learned to forgive.
Forgiving says, “That mistake is tiny, our love is huge.”
And it says it just the same for what feels like a big mistake too. It says our love can weather this—really, it’s strong enough.
And more than that, every time you forgive the other person you’ll find the compassion to forgive yourself too.
“The reality is people mess up. Don’t let one mistake ruin a beautiful thing.” ~Unknown

This is what it means to love.

Imagine opening up your heart and allowing love in.
Imagine feeling more confident in who you are. Confident enough to be open, honest, and kind in a relationship. To be willing to listen, understand, accept, support, and forgive.
That impregnable force field that has kept you so alone for so long?
Throw it out.
And let love in.

How to Live a Happier Life: 3 Steps


“Very little is needed to make a happy life; it is all within yourself, in your way of thinking.”
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
“If you want happiness for an hour — take a nap.’
If you want happiness for a day — go fishing.
If you want happiness for a year — inherit a fortune.
If you want happiness for a lifetime — help someone else.”
Chinese Proverb
“When one door of happiness closes, another opens, but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one that has been opened for us.”
Helen Keller
Happiness must not always come from big things and events. It can come from smaller, daily habits too.
So today I’d simply like to share 3 quick tips and habits that help me to live a happier life.
1. Start by setting a low bar for happiness.
When you wake up in the morning tell yourself: “Set a low bar for happiness today.”
When I tell myself this and try to keep it in mind during the day I appreciate things more.
The food, my work, the weather, the small events of the day becomes not everyday stuff but something I feel happy to have. The small things or what may be something one takes for granted becomes something I now often pause for a moment or two to take in and appreciate.
But if I become happier in my everyday life for the smaller things does that mean that I become unmotivated to keep working towards the bigger things?
Not in my experience.
This way of looking at my life instead fuels me with more energy and inspiration, life becomes lighter and I feel less inner resistance as I explore and work towards both small and bigger things.
I recommend to give this one a try and to see how it works for you. You’ll of course forget about this low bar for happiness from time to time during the day if you’re like me. That’s only natural and this still makes a big difference in my day.
2. Help someone out.

Helping someone out is one of simplest but also one of the most powerful things one can do to live a happy life.
How can you help someone out? By giving them value in some form.
Here are a handful of ideas for how to do that.
  • Offering some practical help. With for example work, moving houses or cooking dinner.
  • Giving some good advice. People may not always want advice but if they ask then give your best advice based on your experience.
  • Hugs. The comfort of one hug or more can make the other person’s situation at least a bit better.
  • Encourage someone. There is much discouragement in the world. So instead, be an exception and encourage people to believe in themselves and what they want to do.
  • Just listen. Sometimes people don’t want any help. They just want to vent or for someone to listen as they figure things out and release pent up emotions. It may not seem like much but it can be an immense help for someone who needs it. So be there fully – don’t sit there thinking about something else – and listen.
  • Put things into perspective. It’s easy to get wrapped up in a problem and to make a mountain out of a molehill. But you can help out by adding your perspective. The two of you can talk about it, perhaps laugh about it and even find the hidden opportunity within the problem that in one person’s head may have almost seemed like the sky was falling.
And remember to pat yourself on the back and appreciate yourself for helping someone out. Do not brush it off or make it smaller than it is.
Pause and take a moment to quietly reflect on how you did something good.
3. Be kind to yourself.
Being kind to yourself is a very helpful thing for healthy self-esteem and for living a happier life.
There are of course many ways to be kinder to yourself, but here are three good ones that I’ve found to be powerful.
Change your input to things that are kind and constructive.
Destructive messages from the people around you or from people further away such as media, advertising and society in general does not help you to be kind to yourself.
So, bit by bit, replace them with other daily and weekly input.
It could be the encouragement of friends and family and the help from someone close who has been in a situation that you are in now.
It could be practical personal development books and blogs that help you out with real solutions to the challenges you face and the goals you want to achieve.
Or it could be to spend more time in nature and in silence to relax and recharge yourself.
Compare yourself to yourself.
Comparing what you have and your results to what other people have and have accomplished can really kill your motivation and keep your self-esteem at a low level. There are always people ahead of you.
So focus on you. On what you have accomplished. And on how you can and have improved your results. This is important because it’s a great motivator to see how much you have improved and how far you have come.
Give yourself a break.
I sometimes hear that you should always be positive or always be winning or working towards your goal. That may sound inspirational in theory. But reality is not ideal or perfect and neither are you and I.
Life gets in the way sometimes. You may get in your own way. And sometimes you simply don’t have the energy or the courage or the time to do something. And that’s OK.
Instead of trying to live up to some perfect image that other people and/or you may press upon you, choose to set human standards for yourself. Choose to give yourself a break when things don’t go as you may have wished and choose to cut yourself some slack.

How to Overcome Frustration: 3 Simple but Effective Steps


Frustration. It winds you up and can take so much out of you.
Because it not only sucks energy but also distracts you and can steal quite a bit of time.
So what can you do?
Well, sometimes that frustration can actually be a positive and can give you a new idea or angle on things. Or it can give you the power to keep going just a little bit more until you reach your goal.
But when you start going in circles, when the frustration just makes you mad or your mind foggy and the day is starting to slip through your fingers then there are steps you can take.
There are ways to turn such a state of mind or day around.
Into something better. Into something more helpful. And into something that will make you feel better again.

Step 1: Be here now.
When you are frustrated then you are often somewhere in the future in your mind. Somewhere you wish you would be. Or you are reliving a stumble or failure from your past.
Snap out of those head spaces and calm down by focusing your mind and attention on what is now, right here at this moment.
You can do so by for example:
  • Focusing on your breathing. Sit down, close your eyes and just focus on the air going and out of your nose for 1-2 minutes. Take calm and slightly deeper breaths than usual and breathe with your belly and not your chest.
  • Focus on what is around you at this time. The sun shining in through your window. The kids playing out in the street and the cars and people going by. The smells and feeling of the clothes and warmth of the sun on your skin. Do this for 1-2 minutes to get your attention back to the present moment.
Step 2: Appreciate what you do have.
After you have pulled your attention back to where it can be most helpful focus it on what is still positive in your life.
The quickest and easiest way to do so is to focus it on appreciating what you do have.
A favorite of mine during this step is the important things we may sometimes take for granted.  Like for instance:
  • A warm home and a roof over your head.
  • Plenty of drinkable water.
  • Not having to go hungry.
  • Access to the internet.
  • Your friends and family.
Spend a few minutes on this and you’ll find much to be grateful for.
Step 3: Focus on what you can do right now.
With your attention in the present moment and your mood a more grateful and positive one it is now time to get constructive about what frustrates you.
You can do that by asking yourself:
What is one small step I can take right now to improve this situation?
It may be to see what you can learn from what frustrates you and to try another path towards your goal.
Or it could be to try one more time and to keep going (because not all things in life will come to you the first, second or third time you try).
Or it could be you simply realizing that you may have taken on a bit much lately or things have been tough and that you need to take this evening or a few days to just relax, take care of yourself and perhaps simplify a bit.
So that you can recharge and then get back into moving towards what you want out of your life in a more focused way.

ධනාත්මක චින්තනය: අශුභවාදී සහ ඍණාත්මක සිතුවිලි ජය ගැනීමට ඔබට උපකාරී වන ඉඟි 10 ක්


පසුගිය වසර 14 ක කාලය තුළ මා විසින් තෝරාගත් වඩාත් ප්‍රබලතම පුරුද්ද​ වන්නේ, වඩාත් සඵලදායක හා ඵලදායී ආකාරයකින් සිතීමයි.

එය ජීවිතය වඩාත් සැහැල්ලු කරයි. ඔබ යන්නට අවශ්‍ය තැනට යාමට​ නව මාවත් විහිදී යයි, එනිසා ඔබට පසුබෑමකින් තොරව ඉදිරියට යා හැක (සහ බොහෝ විට හොඳ දෙයක් ලබා ගැනීමට එය ඔබට උපකාර කරයි.)

ඔබ තව දුරටත් කනස්සල්ලට පත් නොවනු ඇත.

නමුත් ඔබ මෙම පුරුද්ද අනුගමනය කරන්නේ කෙසේද?

හොඳයි, වඩාත් ධනාත්මකව සිතීමට ඉගෙන ගැනීම සමහර විට මෙම උපුටා දැක්වීමේ ලිපියේදී ඔබට අදටත් භාවිතා කළ හැකි ප්‍රායෝගික උපදෙස් හා කුඩා පුරුදු 10 ක් දක්වා බිඳ දැමීමට අවශ්‍යයි.

1. ඔබගේ වටපිටාවේ හා ජීවිතය තුළ ඇති ඍණාත්මක බව තුරන් කිරීම.

ඔබ සිතන දේ සහ ඔබට දැනෙන දේ රඳා පවතින්නේ, නිරන්තරයෙන් ඔබේ මනසට ඇතුලුවන දේ මතයි.

ඒ නිසා ඔබ ඔබේ මනස තුළට ඇතුලුවන්නට​ ඉඩ දෙන්නේ කුමක්දැයි විමසන්න.

ඔබගෙන්ම මෙසේ අසන්න:

මාගේ ජීවිතයේ ඍණාත්මකම ප්‍රභවයන් 3 මොනවාද?

ඒ ඔබේ සමීපතමයෙකු හෝ ඔබ හා එකට වැඩ කරන්නෙකු විය හැකියි. ඔබ නිතර නරඹන​ වෙබ් අඩවියක්, සඟරාවක්, රූපවාහිනී වැඩසටහනක්, සහ වෙනත් දේවල්.

දැන් ඔබගෙන්ම විමසන්න:

මේ සතියේ මෙම ප්‍රභවයන් 3 සමග අඩු කාලයක් වැය කිරීමට මා කළ යුත්තේ කුමක්ද?

හිස් කඩදාසියක ඔබේ අදහස් හා ඒ සඳහා අනුගමනය කළයුතු ක්රියාමාර්ග සටහන් කරන්න.

දැන් ඔබට මේ සියල්ලම ප්‍රභවයන් 3ටම​ කර ගත නොහැකි නම්, පළමුව​ ප්‍රභවයන් එකකට පමණක් මෙය සිදු කරන්න.

ඊලඟ දින 7 තුළදී, ඔබ දැන් ඔබේ ජීවිතයේ වඩාත්ම ධනාත්මක මූලාශ්රයන් කාලය ගත කරන්න​.

2. ඔබ ඍණ තත්වයක සිටින බවක් පෙනෙන්නට තිබෙන විට, එය හොඳ හෝ ප්‍රයෝජනවත් යමක් සොයා ගන්න.

සමෘද්ධිමත් පුද්ගලයෙකු හා නිෂේධාත්මක සිතුවිලි මනසින් අවුස්සන කෙනෙකු අතර ඇති විශාලතම වෙනස වන්නේ ජීවිතය තුළ යම් පසුබෑමක් හෝ බාධාවක් ඇති වූ විට එයට​ මුහුණ දෙන්නේ කෙසේද යන්න අනුවයි.

නිදසුනක් වශයෙන්, මාහට ඍණාත්මක තත්වයකට පත්වූ විට​, සියල්ල අතහැරීමට සිතුණු කාලයක් විය​. එය මා කෙසේ කටයුතු කලත් එම තත්වය වෙනස් නොවේයැයි මට හැඟුණි. එනිසා මා මනස අශුභවාදී සිතුවිලි වලින් පිරී, මා කරන සියල්ල අසාර්ථක විය​.

නමුත් දැන් මා සිතන්නේ වෙනස් ආකාරයකටයි. මා ඍණ තත්වයක සිටින බවක් දැනුනු විට​, මා මාව බලගැන්වීමට සහ වර්ධනය කිරීමට උපකාර වන ප්‍රශ්න මාගෙන්ම විමසා එම තත්වයෙන් මිදෙනවා.

මෙවැනි ප්රශ්න:
  • මගේ හොඳම මිතුරා හෝ මව්පියන් මට උපකාර කරන්නේ කෙසේද?
  • මේ තත්වය ගැන හොඳ දෙයක් කුමක්ද?
  • මේකෙන් මට ඉගෙන ගන්න එක දෙයක් හෝ තිබේද​?
  • ඊළඟ අවස්තාවේ මීට වඩා හොඳ ප්‍රතිඵල ලබා ගැනීමට මා කළ යුත්තේ කුමක්ද?
3. ඇවිදින්න​, පරිසරය රසවිඳින්න​.


ඍණාත්මක සිතුවිලි වලින් මා මනස වෙහෙසට පත් වූ විට​, විනාඩි 30ක් පමණ අවිදින්නට යාම මගේ පුරුද්දකි. නැතිනම් සති අන්තයේ මුහුදු වෙරළට යාම​, මිතුරන් සමග ක්‍රීඩා කිරීම
වැනි දේ මගින් මනස සැහල්ලු වී අලුතින් හිතන්නට හැකිවේ.

එය ඉතා හොඳ කාලයක් වැය වන නිසා, අභ්යන්තර ආතතීන්, කලබල වන හැඟීම් මුදාහරින බව මට දැනේ. මෙමගින් මනසේ අරමුණ වෙනත් අතකට යොමු කල හැකි වේ. අලුත් සතියක ආරම්භයේදී ඍණාත්මක ගැටලු සියල්ල අමතක වී යයි. 


4. කෙන්ද කන්ද කර ගන්න එපා.

මෙය මගේ ලොකුම ගැටලුවකි. මම කුඩා හෝ මධ්යම ප්රමාණයේ ගැටළු හෝ අභියෝගයන් මගේ මනස තුළ විශාල රාක්‍ෂයන් බවට පත් කළෙමි.

ඔබ ඉදිරියට යාමට පියවර ගැනීමට අවශ්‍ය​ නම්, හෝ ඔබ ඔබේ දෛනික ජීවිතය තුළ මහත් කරදර සහ බිය ඇතිකරගැනීමට​ අවශ්‍ය​ නැතහොත්, මෙය​ හොඳ පුරුද්දක් නොවේ.

ඔබ පුංචි දෙයක් ලොකුවට හිතනවායයි හැඟුන විට​, එයින් මිදීමට හැකි පහසුම ක්‍රමය නම්, මෙවැනි ප්‍රශ්නයක් ඔබ ඔබෙන්ම අසා ඔබේ ජීවිතය දෙස බලන්න​:

තව වසර 5කින් නැතිනම් සති 5කින් මේ ගැටලුවේ වැදගත්කමක් තිබේවිද​?

මට ඇත්තටම හැමවිටම පිළිතුරක් නොලැබෙන බව මම සොයා ගත්තා.

5. ඔබට ලැබී ඇති දේ පිලිබඳ ඔබ ස්තූතිවන්ත වන්න.

ඔබේ දෛනික ජීවිතය දෙස බලන ඔබේ කාචය ඍණාත්මක ආකාරයකින් පැහැපත් කළ විට, ඔබට සැබවින්ම කෘතඥ විය යුතු අවස්ථා මග හැරී යා හැක​. ලෝකයේ බොහෝ දෙනෙකුට නැති ඔබට ඇති දේ පිලිබඳ ඔබ ස්තූතිවන්ත වන්න​.

උදෑසන අවදිවූ විට සහ රාත්‍රී නින්දට පෙර විනාඩියක් පමණ ඒ පිලිබඳ අවධානය යොමු කරන්න​. එවැනි අවස්ථාවක මගේ හිතට නැගෙන කරුණු කීපයක් නම්:

  • දිනකට අනිවාර්‍ය ආහාර වේල් 3ක්
  • ජීවත් වීමට නිවසක්
  • පිරිසිදු ජලය​
  • ආදරය​, සෙනෙහස පිරුණු පවුලක්දිනකට ස්ථාවර ආහාර තුනක්.
  • විශ්වාසවන්ත මිතුරන්
ඔබ පසුබෑමක් හෝ අසමත් වීමක් ඇති විට ඔබේ ඉදිරිදර්ශනය වෙනස් කිරීම සඳහා මෙය ඉතා හොඳ ක්රමයකි. ඔබට ස්තූතිවන්ත විය හැකි දේ ගැන මෙනෙහි කිරීම සඳහා විනාඩියකට හෝ ඊට වැඩි කාලයක් ගත කරන්න.


6. මේ මොහොතට​ නැවත එන්න (මේ මොහොතේම රැඳී සිටින්න).

ඔබ නිෂේධාත්මක සිතුවිලිවල යෙදෙන විට, ඔබ බොහෝ විට සිදුවූ දෙයක් ගැන නිතරම සිතනවා.

ඔබ එම අවස්ථාව​ යළි පණගන්වයි. ඔබ කළ යුතු හෝ කළ යයුතුව තිබුන දේ ගැන නැවත නැවත සිතා බලන්න.

නැතහොත් ඔබට සිදුවිය හැකි යමක් ගැන සිතන්න.

ඒ දෙකෙහිම එකතුවක් අතීත අත්දැකීම් හා මුසුව ඔබේ මනස තුල විශාල රාක්ශයන් දෙදෙනෙකු බවට පත්වී අනාගතය ගෙන ආ හැකි කරදර පිලිබඳ සිත් තැවුලට පත් වෙයි.

එවැනි විටක එම සිතුවිලි වලින් ඉවත් වී වහාම මේ මොහොතට පැමිණෙන්න​, දැන්මම.

ඔබ මෙය පුරුද්දක් ලෙස පවත්වා ගතහොත් සහ දවසේ වැඩි වේලාවක් මේ මොහොතේම ගත කලොත්, ඔබේ ඍණාත්මක සිතුවිලි ප්‍රමාණය කෙමෙන් අඩු වී මේ මොහොතේ ඔබට කල හැකි හොඳ දේ පිලිබඳ අවධානය යොමු කල හැකි වේ.

ඉතින් ඔබ එය ප්රායෝගිකව කරන්නේ කෙසේද? මේ මොහොතට පැමිණීමට මා යොදා ගන්නා ප්‍රායෝගික ක්‍රම කීපයක් නම්;
  • ඔබ අවට ඇති දේ පිලිබඳ විනාඩියක් දෙකක් අවධානය යොමු කරන්න​. ඔබට පෙනෙන දේ, දැනෙන සුවඳ​, ඔබේ සමට වැටන හිරු රශ්මියේ ඇති උණුසුම​, ඔබේ ඇඳුම​, ඔබ අසල ඇති කවුලුවෙන් එපිට සිදුවන දේ, ඇසෙන ශබ්ද​ 
  • ඔබේ හුස්ම ගැන පමණක් අවධානය යොමු කිරීම සඳහා විනාඩියක් දෙකක් වැය කරන්න. සාමාන්ය හුස්මකට​ වඩා ගැඹුරින් හුස්ම ගන්න. ඔබේ බඩ සහ නාස්පුඩු සමග හුස්ම ගන්න. මෙම කෙටි විරාමය තුළ ඔබ ඇතුළේ සහ පිටත වාතය ගැන​ පමණක් අවධානය යොමු කරන්න.

7. එය පිට​ කරන්න.

ඍණ සිතුවිලි ඔබේ මනස අවට විලාප නඟන විට ඔවුන් ඔබව ඇද දමනු ඇත. පුහුණුව මගින් ඔබට ඒවා නිදහස් කිරීමට උපකාරි වනු ඇත. එසේ නැතහොත් ඉහත​ විස්තර කර ඇති සුභවාදී හැඟීම් ප්රවර්ධනය කරන ප්රශ්න භාවිතා කළ හැකිය.

ඇත්තෙන්ම හොඳින් ක්රියා කරන තවත් දෙයක් තමයි එය පිට කිරීම​.

ඔබේ සමීපතමයකු සමග ඒ පිලිබඳ කතා කරන්න​. එමගින් ගැටලුව දෙස නව කෝණයකින් බැලීමට හැකිවනු ඇත​. සවන් දෙන පුද්ගලයා ඒ සඳහා කලයුතු දේ ගැන ඔබට කියා දෙනු ඇත​.

නැත්නම් එම තත්ත්වය පිළිබඳව සංවාදයක් ඇත්නම්, ඔබට වඩාත් ප්රයෝජනවත් ඉදිරිදර්ශනයක් සොයාගත හැකි අතර, සමහර විට වඩා හොඳ දේවල් කිරීමට ඔබට කළ හැකි ක්රියා මාර්ග සැලැස්ම ආරම්භ කිරීම පවා කළ හැකිය.

8. අන් අයගේ ජීවිතයට ධනාත්මක ප්රතිචාරයක් ලබා දෙන්න.

ඔබ මනසින් ඍණාත්මක සිතුවිලි වල සිරවී සිටීනම්, එයින් මිදීමට​ හැකි සරළම ක්රමයක් වන්නේ ඔබගේ සමීපතමයකුගේ ජීවිතයට​ ධනාත්මක භාවය ගෙන ඒමයි. එමගින් ඔහුගේ හෝ ඇගේ ජීවිතය අලෝකමත් වී සතුටින් සිටිනු දැකීමෙන් ඔබ ගැනම සහ වඩාත් සුබවාදී හැඟීමක් ඇති වනු ඇත.

ඔබට එය කළ හැකි ක්රම තුනක් මෙන්න:
  • කරුණාවන්ත වන්න. ඔහු හෝ ඇගේ හැකියාවන් අගය කරන්න​. වාහනයකට නගිනවිට දොර ඇර දෙන්න​, බරක් ඔසවාගෙන යන්නේනම් එයට සහය වන්න, සිනා සෙන්න​, හදවතින්ම සුභ පතන්න​.
  • උදව් කරන්න. ඔබ ඔබේ මිතුරා දැනට සිටින තත්වයට මුහුණ දී සිටින විට ඔහුට හෝ ඇයට​ හොඳින් වැඩ කළ හැකි හොඳ උපදෙස් කිහිපයක් ලබා දෙන්න. මිතුරා සන්විධානය කරන උත්සවයක් සැලසුම් කිරීමට සහය වන්න​, මිතුරා වෙනත් නිවසකට යනවිට බඩු ගෙනයාමට උදව් වන්න​.
  • ඔවුන්ට අවශ්‍ය විට ඔවුන් සමග සිටින්න​. ඇයට සවන් දෙන්න. එසේත් නැතිනම් ඇයට එම තත්වයෙන් මිදීමට​ තම මාර්ගය සොයාගැනීමට උපකාර කරන්න.

9. සෙමින් යන්න.

මම වේගයෙන් යන විට, වේගයෙන් සිතන විට, වේගයෙන් කතා කරන විට, කිසිවක් හොඳින් සිදුවන්නේ නැහැ. එයින් සිදුවන්නේ මානසික පීඩනය වැඩි වී කිසිවක් පැහැදිලිව සිතීමට හෝ ඉදිරිය දෙස බැලීමට නොහැකි වීමයි.

සෘණාත්මක සිතුවිලි නිතරම මගේ මනස වසා ගැනීමට පටන් ගනියි. ඒවා හැසිරවීමට හෝ ඒවාට නතර කිරීමට අසීරු වේ.

අනික් අතට මා සෙමෙන් යනවිට​, මගේ ශර්‍රිරයත් මනසත් සන්සුන් වේ. එවිට මට යහපත් සුභවාදී දෘෂ්ටිකෝණයකින් අවශ්‍ය දේ කරා ඉදිරියටම යාමට පහසු මාවතක් සොයාගත හැකිවේ.

10. ඔබේ දිනය සඳහා ධනාත්මක ආරම්භයක් ලබා ගන්න.


උදෑසන ඔබ කරන පළමු දේවල් කීපයක් ඔබේ මුළු දවස පුරාම තියනවා. ඔබ උදෙන්ම යම් ගීයකට සවන් දුන්නොත් ඔබ එය දවස පුරාම මුමුණනවා.

ඔබ ඍණ හෝ අශුභවාදී ආරම්භයකට යනවා නම්, ඔබට දවස පුරාම එම සිතිවිලි වලින් මිදීම අපහසු වෙනවා.

නමුත් ඔබ උදෑසන ධනාත්මක ආරම්භයක් ලබා ගතහොත් නැවත රාත්‍රී නින්දට යන තෙක් එම සිතුවිලි පවත්වාගත හැකි වෙනු ඇත​.

ධනාත්මක ආරම්භයක් ලබා ගත හැකි සරල ක්‍රම 2ක් නම්;:
  • ඔබගේ ඇඳ අසල හෝ නාන කාමරයේ කැඩපතේ ධනාත්මක සිතුවිල්ලක් ලියා තබන්න​. එය යම්කිසි ධනාත්මක චින්තකයෙකුගේ කියමනක් හෝ ඔබේ අනාගත සිහිනයක් හෝ අරමුණක් විය හැකියි. ඔබ අවදි වන විට පළමු 1-3 විනාඩි ඇතුලත ඔබට එය දැක හැකි පරිදි රඳවා තබන්න​.
  • ඔබේ මනස තුළට ධනාත්මක තොරතුරු හෝ සංවාදයක් ලබා ගන්න. ඔබ ප්‍රිය කරන සංගීතයක් රසවිඳීම​, හොඳ පොතක කොටසක් කියවීම​, වැදගත් බ්ලොග් පොස්ට් එකක් කියවීම ඔබට එය කළ හැකිය. නැතහොත් උදෑසන ආහාරය සඳහා ඔබේ දරුවන්, සහකාරිය, සම සේවකයෙකු හෝ මිතුරෙකු සමඟ විනෝද වීමට හෝ උද්යෝගිමත් සංවාදයක යෙදිය හැකිය.




How to Stay Positive: 11 Great Steps Towards Happiness

" Once you replace negative thoughts with positive ones, you'll start having positive results." Willie Nelson "Adopti...