mindfulness

Present, Not Perfect

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With endless time, nothing is special. With no loss or sacrifice, we can’t appreciate what we have.

— Mitch Albom

The realization hit me harder than I expected…

There are less than 3 months left in this decade.

IN. THIS. DECADE.

My shoulders suddenly started to feel a little heavier once the weight of the burden began to sink in. How am I going to spend these last few months of the year?

Time has taken on a new urgency in my life since I’ve been in remission. Why is it that we never seem to know until it’s too late just our limited our moments are? Why do we take our time here on earth and the precious time we have with our loved ones for granted most days?  Why do we often fail to do anything positive, productive, beautiful, creative, healthy and passionate with each minute of the day?

My cancer diagnosis has altered my perception of time. I found a minute can seem like an eternity when you’re hooked up to an IV during treatment.  I’ve seen advanced cancer spread and be destroyed in a matter of months. I know everything can change in an instant. So my time is something I can no longer afford to waste on unimportant things—things that do not spark joy in myself or others.

This October marks two years since my cancer journey first began. In October 2017 is when I first noticed the lump on my neck that turned out to be Stage 3 Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. These past two years have been a blur of doctor’s appointments, tests, waiting, uncertainty, loss, growth and every emotion in between.

Why is it the more we try to manage and plan our time, the quicker it seems to slip through our fingers? What I do know is that each tick of the clock and day that passes brings me closer to another visit or another scan that could possibly turn our lives upside down again.

So where do we go from here? How do I keep moving forward, when everything around me seems to remind me of where I’ve been? How do I make the most of the time I’ve been given?

It kind of feels like our lives are made up of a countless number of weeks, doesn’t it? Unless we are under extreme circumstances, we never really stop to face our own mortality. However, when we actually do stop to do the math our fleeting, momentary existence here becomes shockingly clear:

 Life is a matter of moments, not milestones.

Did you realize if you live to be 90, that means you only get 4680 weeks on this earth? If we live to be 70 years old, we get roughly 613,200 hours to live.  (That’s 365 days, times 70 years, times 24 hours.) This is the time we have to enjoy, to love, to lose, to learn and to cry. Our search for meaning, fulfillment and purpose must fit into this average amount of hours.  

We know that our children grow up in the blink of an eye. But did you realize that outside of only 18 summers you have with your child, between the day your child is born, and the time he or she turns 18, you get just 940 Saturdays — and 260 of them, are gone by their fifth birthday?

 The hard truth is we spend a lot of our time doing other things. Things we have little choice in, as our clocks tick down to their final moments without us realizing—we often don’t know how little time we have left until it’s too late.  

 As a cancer survivor, it feels selfish not to try to make the most of every moment I’m blessed with. Unfortunately, the first year of my remission was one of my toughest to date.  I finished treatment on August 9th, 2018 and enjoyed one full month outside hospital walls before my family once again found ourselves in the middle of another health emergency.

 I had high hopes and some lofty plans when I finished my treatment last August. Last October I decided one way I was going to reclaim my health after treatment was to change my daily routine thanks to Mel Robbin’s work with the 5-second rule and Rachel Hollis’ book Girl, Wash Your Face.

I decided to take part in Rachel Hollis’ #last90days challenge. The goal of the challenge is to end the year with the same intensity, drive and focus that we usually plan to start the year with in January. This is based on the principle that it takes 21 days to create a habit, and 90 days to change your life.

The last 90-day challenge begins on October 1st and goes on until December 31st. The #Last90DaysChallenge encourages us to make the last 90 days the most successful days of our year. Each day you follow a 5 to Thrive plan; each week tune in to the weekly podcast and keep yourself accountable.

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It started off great. I was waking up an hour earlier than I normally did. Starting the day by writing 10 things I was grateful for and setting my daily intention. I was moving my body, staying hydrated and away from foods that did not benefit my health.

 But as usual, life had other plans…

When my oldest daughter became seriously ill last year, my priorities shifted from reclaiming my health to ensuring my daughter made a full recovery. It’s hard to wake up an extra hour early when you spend those extra hours laying awake at night full of dread and worry. When times get hard, it’s easy to forget what you are grateful for and to be thankful for what is still going right in your life even when everything appears to be falling apart. Suddenly the things that occupied your time get moved to the back-burner. Your health is no longer your priority. Your focus becomes survival at all costs.  

However, I’ve found where ever you are in your health journey, little changes made consistently over time can bring lasting results for good. While I may not be pushing myself to adhere to the Five to Thrive program and #last90days challenge this year, the habits I formed doing the challenges last year are helping me to make the changes I need to hopefully achieve long-term remission. I do know what each step that I take towards personal growth, is one more action I am taking to hopefully ensure I remain cancer-free.

So in honor of #thelast90days this year, here are seven tips that are helping me appreciate and make the most of my time:

1.    What is your time worth to you? If my journey with cancer has taught me anything it’s that our time here is way more limited than we realize. I believe there are two important questions when it comes to how we view life and death: If you knew you would die tomorrow, what would you do today? And, if you knew you had 20 years more to live, what would you do today instead?

2.    What is the legacy you want to leave behind? If you knew your time was up tomorrow, would you waste your final moments in worry about what will come, lost in regret wishing you had lived differently? Would you recognize that each day is a gift and in every 24 hours lies the possibility of joy, contentment and connection with your loved ones? Would you consider that in every moment there is a choice to see the good or the bad in any situation?

3.    Is this how you want to spend your minutes? What is the value of your time? To make the most out of my days, I have started focusing on the things that deeply matter to me. The question I am now asking myself is, “Is this how I really want to spend my time?”. This helps me prioritize what’s important and what’s not. What is worth concerning myself with and where I need to let go and refocus my attention.  

4.    Change your story. Change your situation.  When I’m feeling anxious or upset about something I like to zoom out and picture the situation from a different perspective. I try to remind myself that I am 1 of 7 billion people on this planet. BILLION. Everything I experience is affected by only 2 factors: 1) my biology. 2) the stories I tell myself (my inner narrative).  I like to ask myself, “What am I telling myself that is making me feel this way?” After I acknowledge the story I am telling myself, I then ask, “What can I tell myself to better serve me?”

5.    Priority management vs. time management. I’ve come to learn in my first year of remission, that steady progress, healing and even radical remission are rooted in grace and gratitude. Making the most of the time we are given is a full-time job. After pushing through the unthinkable these last two years, I finally realized that I really don’t have to do anything. I was already doing most of the correct things in regards to my health and nutrition. Now as much as I don’t want to admit it, I must simply be. If my body is in a constant state of survival, it has no to rest, recover and heal.  I must be patient and let my body heal on its own terms. Just as you cannot force a tomato to ripen faster, I must provide my body with the right conditions and environment so that it can start to heal itself.

6.    I don’t have to do anything but I get to do THIS! Realizing that others aren’t as fortunate as I am to be where I’m at today regarding my health helps me stay grounded in the present moment. Whether it’s the fact that I’m in remission or that I have both my arms, hands legs and feet. I can see, hear, smell and taste. Other’s aren’t as lucky. It’s important to focus on what’s going right, instead of worrying or trying to predict what could go wrong. To help me stay in a positive mindset, I try to spend at least 5-10 minutes every morning in silence, then I write or reflect on 10 things I am grateful for that very day. This helps give me much needed perspective on the size of my problem or current situation. When I don’t feel like moving my body or working out, I remember the days when I was too sick or too weak to get out of bed. I remind myself that to be active and to be able to work out is a privilege not everyone, even myself at times, is able to enjoy. I must take advantage of this opportunity while I still can.

7.    Learning to say “Yes and…” see what happens. Perfectionism often fuels depression and anxiety. Learning to let go and go with the flow has made a huge difference in my life and my relationships. If I’m not careful, I can easily wall myself off by saying no to new experiences. I can quickly come up with a ton of reasons why to do or not do something, but I’m starting to learn that if I can just relax and let things unfold naturally things still work out okay---and I save myself a whole lot of energy in the process. Energy that is usually better spent in other ways rather than worrying about all the things that could possibly go wrong. To put this into practice, I’ve started replacing the “what ifs” with “why not” scenarios when I feel my anxiety start to bubble up and cloud my ability to act.

Time management is an oxymoron. Time is beyond our control, and the clock keeps ticking regardless of how we lead our lives. Priority management is the answer to maximizing the time we have.” 

– John C. Maxwell

We often forget that our beginning and end are the same. What we do in between is what makes all the difference. Remember, it's never too late to be who you might have been. We can always be a little kinder, a little healthier and less selfish.  

Cancer gave me the wake-up call I needed to make significant changes in my priorities, diet and lifestyle. Where ever you are on your journey, taking the time to set goals to refocus on your health and make yourself accountable is always time well spent. But if this is the year you need to give yourself some grace and a pat on your back for all that you’ve overcome, take the time to rest and enjoy yourself and time with your loved ones. Because as they say, the time you enjoy wasting, is never wasted time.  

How will you be spending these last 90 days of the year?

Resources:

How the 5-Second Rule Can Transform Your Life- Mel Robbins

Girl, Wash Your Face- Rachel Hollis

#Last90days 5 to Thrive Challenge

Living Well While You're Unwell

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I am thankful for today…

I am grateful for the air that fills my lungs,

For time with family and friends,

For I don’t know what tomorrow brings,

But I am here today

And that’s all that matters.


One of the hardest parts of being sick is the uncertainty that it brings. Future plans get put on hold. It seems everything depends on the outcome of your health. Such ambiguity can be difficult a difficult burden to bear.

For me, I definitely have my good days and bad days. However, I’m happy to report right now, the good days far outnumber the bad. And for that I am extremely grateful.

I have read enough and spoken to enough people to prepare myself for the difficulty that lies ahead. I know there will be days that I am unable to get out of bed. There will be days when I will be unable to hug or hold my children. There will be times when I am unable to eat or even taste.

I have surrendered to the fact I am unwell. I believe in doing so, I take the first step towards healing. I know that difficulty lies ahead, but I am prepared to tackle it head on with dignity and grace for I know I have the faith and support I need to truly heal.

So right now, I am savoring every moment. Every embrace. Every sunrise. Every taste.

I’m not sure what tomorrow brings—so I am reveling in the wonder of today. Now, more than ever I understand the importance of mindfulness and making every moment meaningful.

Growing up, I always looked forward to Saturday mornings. My dad usually traveled a lot during the week and over the years, it became our special time together. It was always a magical time. Moments seemed to slow down.  Our most difficult choice became whether we wanted a waffle or a pancake. It was a time to catch up and just enjoy the pleasure of each other’s company while we took turns mixing the batter.  

Now as a mother myself, I’ve tried to recreate this special time with my own children.

Today, at breakfast we chose to make waffles with fruit topping. While I tweaked my family recipe to make it gluten free the kids got a special side of whipped cream. Why not? My kids are still home on winter break from school so we were able to take our time and enjoy every minute of breakfast. Now more than ever I am so grateful for these special moments.

 

Life is always unfolding now. But so often, we let these precious moments slip away, allowing time to rush past unobserved and unseized. We squander the precious seconds of our lives as we worry about the future and ruminate about what has passed.

As my time is growing uncertain, I am trying to make the most of each moment. While I’m not always successful, I believe the most important thing to do is to try and to be grateful for each moment while you have the chance.

What I've come to realize is that most of us don't accept our thoughts in awareness. Rather, our thoughts end up controlling us.  Often, "ordinary thoughts course through our mind like a deafening waterfall," says Jon Kabat-Zinn, the scientist who introduced meditation into mainstream medicine. In order to feel more in control of our minds and our lives, to find the sense of balance that eludes us, we need to step out of this current, to pause, and, as Kabat-Zinn puts it, to "rest in stillness—to stop doing and focus on just being."

We need to live more in the NOW. Living in the moment—also called mindfulness—is a state of active, open, intentional attention on the present. When you become mindful, you realize that you are not your thoughts; you become an observer of your thoughts from moment to moment without judging them. Mindfulness involves being with your thoughts as they are, neither grasping at them nor pushing them away. Instead of letting your life go by without living it, you awaken to experience everything around you more fully.

Here are some ways I have learned to practice mindfulness to be more grounded in the present moment:

Let go and just be. In order to move forward, I believe you must let go and accept your current situation as it is. Try not to impart judgement or reasoning into why it is happening to you. Rather accept that is and let go of your preconceived notions of how things should have or might have been. You need to have faith that this happened for a reason.

If something is bothering you, it’s important move toward it rather than away from it. Mindfulness is about acceptance—letting the emotion be there. That is, being open to the way things are in each moment without trying to manipulate or change the experience—without judging it, clinging to it, or pushing it away. The present moment can only be as it is. Trying to change it only frustrates and exhausts you. Accepting the moment as it is helps relieve you of this needless extra suffering.

Savor the present moment. Often, we're so trapped in our thoughts about the future or the past that we forget to experience or enjoy what's happening right now. Instead, it’s important to relish or revel in whatever you're doing at the present moment—what psychologists call savoring. This could be eating a piece of chocolate, taking a shower or basking in the sun. It usually involves your senses.  Savoring forces you into full awareness of what you are doing in that precise moment, so you can't worry about things that aren't there.

 Know that you don't know. Pause to recognize and appreciate the newness of your surroundings. You will soon realize that everything is constantly changing around you. In fact, change is the only constant thing in life. By stopping to see the world with fresh eyes, we realize almost everything is different and new each time—the pattern of light on the buildings, the faces of the people, even the sensations and feelings we experience along the way. The more you notice, the more you see.

Realize you are not your thoughts. According to Jon Kabat-Zinn, “we often relate to our thoughts, whether they’re intensely negative or not, as a reliable statement of the truth. When you’re angry, everything can seem threatening or annoying or inadequate. You believe what your thoughts are telling you. Mindfulness of thoughts allows you to be aware of a thought or strong emotion as a kind of a storm in the mind or an event in awareness. Once you see it as an event or a storm, it no longer has the same power over you.”

With practice, mindfulness can help us catch stressful emotions when they first arise. This keeps these emotions from turning into elaborate stress-filled stories that have no basis in fact but which we start to believe without question. For as Buddhist teachers like to say: the suffering is in the stories.

An effective way to bring your attention out of your stories and into the present moment is by taking three deep in-and out-breaths while turning your attention to the present moment. As you do this, notice what’s available to your senses right now: a sight, a sound—even the sensation of your clothes on your skin. Even if it’s not a particularly pleasant moment, at least you’re present for it instead of being lost in regrets about the past, or worst-case-scenarios about a future you can’t predict. And, more often than not, being mindful of your present moment experience reveals that there’s something pleasant going on right around you that you simply hadn’t noticed. This can be both soothing and healing.

True mindfulness is a journey, not a destination. But I truly believe it is the key to living well while your feeling unwell. Sure, there will be bumps and distractions along the away but the first steps start with the awareness and acceptance of what is, and faith in what will be.

So take a deep breath and just be here.

 

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