reset and reboot

Two days before this year is over I find great comfort in the idea that I get to try again, do it better, do it differently, try something else - a bit like the movie Groundhog Day.  Next year is another chance, a chance for a do-over, a chance to redefine myself, a chance to try something else, a chance to catch my breath and start anew.

The beauty of a circular understanding of time - according to indefinitely returning seasons, years, or cycles - is that we always get another chance. Our humanly understanding of time has changed as our consciousness has evolved.  We now combine a circular and a linear way of seeing time.  All natural processes are circular, while our modern industrial processes are linear - they cannot be indefinitely repeated the way the seasons return over and over, or the way the moon phases repeat themselves endlessly.  Our concept of time has evolved accordingly.  We see history as a linear process that begins with the Big Bang and goes endlessly into the future, or our life that begins with birth and ends with death.  At the same time we experience our life as a succession of Christmases, or summers, or school years, or birthdays - markers that repeat themselves, at least until this life is over.  That is comforting.

What are your dreams for the New Year?  Your hopes?  Your ambitions?  Are you planning any do-overs?  Something completely different?  It's never too late! 

conquering negative thinking

Always seeing the glass half-empty can send you into a perpetual negative spin and eventually leave you depressed.  Yes, for self-preservation purposes we are evolutionarily wired to react faster to negative than to positive news.  However, it is important to realize that dwelling on negative thoughts keeps you stuck in the past and is self-perpetuating.            

How to get out of that vicious cycle?  Psychotherapist Lesley Alderman explained in a recent article that it is important to actually acknowledge your negative thoughts in order to move on, rather than suppressing them.  The first step to any self-improvement - wanting to change a behavior or pattern - is always to become aware of what you're doing.   Many depressed people actually deny that they are depressed; they don't realize that they keep producing unhelpful thoughts and are on a hamster wheel of negativity.  That is fooling yourself, burying your head in the sand.  Without interior work there can be no improvement. 

If you believe that everyone is out to get you, that people don't appreciate you, that you're alone, that there is a lot of negativity in the world, that things are not going well - maybe it's time to take a big long beautiful breath and acknowledge that you are the one who has been producing all these negative thoughts and beliefs.  If you are ready for change, if you are ready to think positive thoughts, uplifting thoughts, go see a funny movie and make a conscious shift - housekeeping of the mind needed.