Taming the Inner Demons
Photo Courtesy Luis Galvez on Unsplash

Taming the Inner Demons

Here are real utterances of people who had been through a difficult time facing their demons of dealing with fear, anger, grief, conflicting values lack of confidence.

 “I felt so much that I started to feel nothing.” “You don’t understand.” “I would try if I only had.” “Nothing will work.” “I’m not fixable.” “I just want to hide.” “I don’t know what to do.” “I feel like crying.” “I don’t care anymore.”

Emotional breakdown leaves us crying our eyes dry, behind closed doors, heart smashed into tiny pieces. In such a situation, the howling pain tears us down completely, and we are tired of thinking, unable to do anything except being in the moment wanting to go back in time and reverse what happened.

Funnily enough, after all that letting off conversations, and crying, the body lets you know its hungry, needs to empty the bowls and wants to sleep. When the demons of pain are holding the mind captive, the body is oddly fighting against it. If you don’t believe, keep your nose and mouth to stop breathing, even in the most difficult of times in our lives, the body would still grasp at the air to live. The life force within is not our mind’s doing, mind changes with circumstances, but life wants to take its course, telling our brain to face it.

It is a proven fact that the negative thoughts in mind affect our hormones, and our body, making us sick. So, if it is likely that our thoughts make us sick, it is also a fact that our thoughts can make us well too. 

The most constructive way to alter thinking to gain control of feelings is to create a gap; to contemplate between the space of occurrence and our reaction. One of the tools that create this personal space is “Meditation.”  Clients have also benefited by “Journaling Thoughts” every day.

Lakshya Malhotra

Marketing Specialist at MRCC

1 年

Janaki, thanks for sharing!

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Smriti Goel

Executive Coach (PCC) | Senior Practitioner (EMCC Global) | Coach at AON UK | Leadership Consultant | Speaker | Enabling Leaders to Transition to the Next Level of Success

5 年

Well said Janaki! Your empathy is palpable!

Veena Grover MYT.

Certified Instructor of Taekwondo & Ananda yoga.

5 年

Veena Grover practicing physical exercise to release stress.

Veena Grover MYT.

Certified Instructor of Taekwondo & Ananda yoga.

5 年

Crying is one way to release anger and it helps us to add calmness

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