“The secret of change is to focus all of
your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new.”
― Socrates
So today I woke up with
a jelly bean hang over. I ate somewhere south of a cup of the little
buggers while watching Game of Thrones last night, two bad habits in one.
My body just cannot take the on-slot of pure sugar. Maybe
it used to be able to but not any more, not any more. I still have a ton
of jelly beans, yum Jelly Belly, but I am not sure what to do with them.
I should have brought them with me to work and given them to all the
teenagers I am surrounded by. Don't get me wrong I love my
teenagers they do great work and have loads of energy, usually. They are
really low key today, very focused on all the work I gave them to do.
Darn, because I sure could use a little of
their silliness today, jelly bean hang over oh it hurts.
So change. I used
to work with OCD clients and man they will teach you a whole lot about habits
if you let them. When I started we were working with the behavioral
modification model Man oh man that didn't work. With
behavioral mod it was all about stamping out the (bad) behavior/habit. We
would stamp them out alright but it was like stepping on smoke.
The minute one habit died a new one would take its place. Actually
mostly two or three little new ones would show up and by the time we noticed
them they had all gotten as big and strong as the original habit. No
wonder I dreamed of fighting hydra back in those days. Truth
be told the only thing I found that brought any relief was helping the client
identify their anxiety and develop new coping mechanisms.
I am not OCD. If
there is a thing that is the opposite of OCD I am that. If I
even get a hint that I am doing something habitually, I change it. This
is no healthier than obsessively washing your hands.
Imagine going through your whole life with the conviction that every
moment must be a spontaneous and unique experience it is exhausting
and CRAZY.
Back to change. According to Socrates, and my own life experience,
change is less about what you no longer do and more about what you do
differently. So change number one: Today I will walk to pick my son up from
school. It is a half mile walk each way,
rather pleasant with a moderate incline.
This will give me more energy, help me sleep better, decrease the inflammation
in my legs, all good. Even better it
gives me slow time with my son to chat about his day. He loves being outside and walking. We get to see wild life and he has better focused
when doing his homework. This leads to
an overall better evening, read no yelling.
Yep it seems silly not to go and get him. By being lazy (lets face it that is what it
is, lazy) and having him come home on the bus, I am causing myself and my son
all kinds of grief.
Second change, do
something with those Jelly Bellies that does not involve consuming them! Please comment any ideas that you have for
resolving my Jelly Belly problem. Creative
ideas welcome. FYI putting them in any
other orifice will be considered consuming so don’t even go there with your bad
selves.
― Socrates
OK so I drove to get my son. Insert excuses here. Anyway he took it out of my hide. Man that kid was mad. I let him go out to play before homework. It did not help. Aforementioned yelling commenced at 5:30 and continued until 9:00. Tomorrow I walk to get the kid. Lets call tonight a good session of adversive therapy.
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