There’s no doubt about it, our bodies are in a continuous state of transition. One day we wake up and have a mild headache. The next day we wake up and we have a pain in our left leg. The third day we wake up and there is no pain, but there’s a surge of energy that’s running throughout our entire body.
This shifts also happen continuously throughout each day. Every second of our lives there is a ticker tape of messages that are being transmitted by our body to our mind.
What’s the interpretation of all of this? Well, let me offer you this standard response. There’s a shift in what’s happening to the body. A symptom has surfaced that has not yet been experienced. What typically happens for most people is there is an immediate jump to the future. There is an instant transition from one “room” to the next without any thought about what it means to enter into the new room so to speak. There is an interpretation particularly for individuals who have a diagnosis of a chronic condition like Parkinson’s.
What is the interpretation? Well, typically the interpretation is the same,
“Oh my goodness, something else is going wrong with my body. I can’t believe it. Don’t I have enough symptoms as it is? What’s wrong now? What therapy am I going to have to go get?”
And so on and so forth… In other words, We immediately skip to the future without stopping to experience the true meaning of what is happening in the moment. In so doing we miss hearing the message that our body is trying to send to us.
The changes in the body are surely, as you can well understand, not all bad. Many of them are positive, meaningful and useful transitions that the body is making to full health and wellness. With many therapies, you will actually feel worse before you begin feeling better.
When meridians are opened up – when surges of energy begin running through our body – it will very likely feel different and very strange. Yet, when the interpretation is
“What is wrong now?”
rather than pondering …
“Hello. What is here now”?”
We miss being present to the experience. We instantly draw the false conclusion that we are getting bad news. Our body is often giving us signals that are positive, that are rewarding, that are supportive of all the work that we are doing to become symptom-free, to recover, to lead our lives in full and productive manners.
The exercise of stopping before opening any door is an exercise that invites a focus on being present in the moment – of being present to any transition that is made from one state to the next. As I mentioned in the introduction to the exercise, we pass through 200-300 doors often in any one given day. That’s also the case with transitions our bodies are making, though our bodies can potentially make more like 800 or 900 different transitions in a day as it rocks and rolls for us. The body is in a continuous state of change.
The invitation then is to continue the exercise to stop, take a breath and then – and only then – open up each door that you confront. When you confront obstacles – and here the obstacle is a door that is shut – consider an alternative interpretation that you are in a temporary transition. Something has shifted. The invitation is to stop, to take a breath and to say to yourself,
“What’s here now in my body? What wonderful message is my body conveying to me now?
I’ve stopped.
I’ve paused.
I’ve become mindful.
I am listening now in the moment with no bother or worry about whatever implications this experience might have for me in a minute, or two minutes, or tomorrow or next year. It does not matter what awaits me in the next room.
If you take this exercise seriously you will begin to appreciate the many different ways door knobs feel when you touch them. You will begin to appreciate how the new space feels to you when you enter it.
Enjoy the many transitions you will make over the coming days as you pass through one door after another. Enjoy the experience of stopping, taking a breath and then opening up the door that separates the two spaces. When you take mindful notice of the transition – each one will have a different feel to it. Each will be a uniquely precious experience.
Notice that when you enter the new space there is renewed interest and awareness about what is really present. By being mindful of transitions you are able to recognize and honor that the difference in the room to be entered (when compared to the room that is left) can be delicious.
May you relish all of your transitions this week.
Robert
© Parkinsons Recovery