Gigi Langer

Worry Less Now!

Ā Love More Now!

CELEBRATE INDEPENDENCE FROM NEGATIVITY!

worry less now

My friends say our worries & fears come from the not-so-helpful ā€œcommittee in my head.ā€ I call those negative voices ā€œwhispered lies.ā€

For instance, for too many years I believed ā€œIf I want to be liked, I must look good.ā€ This whispered lie made me constantly worried about my appearance and behavior.

A few more examples include:

  • ā€œIā€™ll never have enough money.ā€
  • ā€œI always sabotage my success.ā€
  • ā€œRelationships just donā€™t work for me.ā€
  • ā€œWe could all be happy if only Dad would stop drinking.ā€

Although many of our whispered lies concern ourselves, they often focus on our children, spouses, friends, or relativesā€”for instance, the last example about the fatherā€™s drinking.

Other distressing beliefs involve institutions, as in ā€œIf the government would just change this policy, weā€™d all be better off.ā€

Even though it might be true that Dad ought to stop drinking or the government should make changes, these events have no control over your own happiness.

You can find peace of mind under any circumstance because youā€™re in charge of what you think about.

Most of our worries are fueled by false stories installed into our minds long ago, just waiting for opportunities to be confirmed.

Wayne Dyer wrote that everything our brain ā€œknowsā€ is based on past experiences. Therefore, when an event resemblesā€”even in a small wayā€”an old painful one, our mind interprets the new event according to the long-standing negative belief.

Since most whispered lies live largely in our subconscious, weā€™re often unaware of them.

To illustrate the power of my own ā€œnegative committeeā€™sā€ lies, consider why I failed at romantic love so many times during my twenties and thirties. I wanted to believe that love was possible for me, but my past had taught me the lie ā€œIā€™m not worthy of love.ā€

This belief lived so strongly in my mind that, even when a man loved me deeply, I couldnā€™t believe it was true. After several months, I would become convinced that he wasnā€™t fulfilling my needs. These worries made me so demanding that I soon snuffed out all the happiness and joy of new love. When it ended, Iā€™d tell myself, ā€œI just donā€™t deserve love!ā€

Until I got honest and started healing my faulty thinking, I had no hope of enjoying a happy relationship. Iā€™m so grateful for the therapy, recovery, psychological strategies, and spiritual tools that gave me freedom from my false beliefs.

As a result Iā€™m a pretty happy camper most days ā€” AND Iā€™ve been happily married for 31 years. So what if itā€™s my 4th husband??? Heā€™s fabulous!

To learn how to win independence from your own committeeā€™s whispered lies, check out my award-winning book 50 Ways to Worry Less Now (Amazon 5 stars), Audiobook, and Ebook HERE https://GigiLanger.com/buy/

HOW TO CALM YOUR OVERACTIVE MIND

I have a tendency to overthink things. You might too.

Your mind takes off and starts imagining the worst things that could happen in the future, or you find yourself looking back at the recent past and regretting your words or actions. Even worse is when we get caught up in judging and resenting the actions of an important person in our lives. 

Here are a few tools I use to anchor my mind in the present moment rather than in the future or past. 

 THE 5,4,3,2,1 TECHNIQUE  (Full blog post:  https://GigiLanger.com/anxiety-attack/)

Take a few slow belly-inflating breathes and remind yourself that your body is right here right now, and you can choose to focus your mind on the present moment rather than on the future or past. .

1. Name 5 things you can see around you (Examples: rug, painting)

2 . Name 4 things you can feel (feet on the floor, cool air on the skin)

3 . Name 3 things you can hear right now (a fan running, peopleā€™s voices outside)

4. Name 2 things you can smell right now (perfumed soap)

5. Name 1 good thing about yourself (ā€œI am strong,ā€ ā€œI can help myself through this.ā€)

If you simply canā€™t focus, or if your body and mind havenā€™t yet settled down, take a few more belly-inflating breaths, and tell yourself that you can focus your thoughts on the present moment. Then do the exercise again.

It may take several minutes of repetition before your mind settles down.

According to independent.co.uk, “the trick, which relies on sensory awareness, is rooted in mindfulness – and apart from anxiety, it can help treat depression, addiction disorders, lower blood pressure, and relieve stress” (Harvard University Helpguide.org)

MINDFULNESS TRAINING 

It really helped me to take the ā€œMindfulness Based Stress Reductionā€ (MBSR) 8-week course. It uses breathing and simple stretches to keep your mind on your body, and its research studies show impressive results (Jon Kabat-Zinn and colleagues from  University of Massachusetts Medical Center). More info here: Mindfulness-based stress reduction – Wikipedia   Really effective.

MIND REFOCUSING 
I often catch my mind worrying about the future, and when I notice this I substitute a quick little phrase to anchor me back into the now: ā€œAll is well right now.ā€ or, ā€œHelp me to see this differently.ā€ Also repeating a short prayer like the Serenity Prayer helps a lot.

The idea is to substitute a ā€œright nowā€ thought or sensation for our worries, fears, and stressful thoughts.

NOTE: In my experience, I often need to make the switch several times an hour (sometimes many times a minute!)

It will take consistent practice to retrain your mind to stay in the present. Keep at it and your life and health will improve.

Gigi Langer, a person in recovery, holds a Ph.D. in Psychological Studies in Education and an MA in Psychology from Stanford University. Through her writing, coaching, and speaking, Gigi has helped thousands of people improve their lives at home and at work. She lives in Michigan with her husband and Murphy, her cat.

Get Gigiā€™s new book, “50 Ways to Worry Less Now: Reject Negative Thinking” is available in audio, e-book, and paperback (5 Stars on Amazon). Click HERE

ā€œValuable, heartfelt manual.ā€ ā€” Publishers Weekly (BookLife)

ā€œThis book is a winner.ā€ -Karen Casey, Hazelden author

LETTING GO OF URGENCY

I often hear a whispered lie telling me ā€œGotta go faster!ā€ or ā€œItā€™s going to horrible if I canā€™t get this done.ā€

Such urgent thoughts scare the wits out of meā€”and theyā€™re NOT TRUE.

To re-calibrate my exaggerated self-talk, I breathe, meditate, pray, and use other tools to connect with my true self/higher power. And then, voila! Those things that just ā€œhadā€ to be done are effortless and in perfect order. Whew! Relief!

I love this reading about urgency from Melody Beattie, The Language Of Letting Go.

ā€œOne thing at a time. Thatā€™s all we have to do. Not two things at once, but one thing done in peace.

ā€œOne task at a time. One feeling at a time. One day at a time. One problem at a time. One step at a time. One pleasure at a time.

ā€œRelax. Let go of urgency. Begin calmly now. Take one thing at a time.

ā€œSee how everything works out?

ā€œToday, I will peacefully approach one thing at a time. When in doubt, I will take first things first.

Great advice, aye? I think Iā€™ll follow it by letting go of my urgency!

Gigi Langer holds a PhD from Stanford University in Psychological Studies in Education. Sheā€™s an award-winning teacher and writer with 33 years clean and sober. Her new book, 50 Ways to Worry Less Now won the National Indie Excellence Award and rates 4.7 stars on Amazon. The AUDIOBOOK is due in mid-September 2019 (Audible, Amazon, i-tunes)

7 Tips to Stop the Nasty Voice in Your Head

Do you have a voice in your head that incessantly whispers lies of impending doom or replays past events in the hope of changing them?

It might sound like this: ā€œI alwaysā€¦(fail, am rejected, sabotage my success)ā€ OR ā€œIf only he or she would (fill in the blank), we would all be okay.ā€œ

Although I used to hear this voice often, over the years I’ve learned to turn such negative thoughts into positive ones. Here are a few tips that might help you do the same.

  1. Notice how the voice in your head causes tension in your body and perhaps emotions of anger, pain, frustration, envy, or a need for security, recognition or love.
  2. Stand apart from the thoughts and feelings, as if youā€™re on a balcony observing them. Do NOT condemn them.
  3. Breathe slowly and deeply until your body calms down. Withdraw your attention from your worrying and focus on your breathing.
  4. Recognize who is watching the thoughts. It’s a part of your mind independent of your thoughts and emotions. This is your true self (higher self, God-mind, etc). It is greater, stronger, and wiser than the imagined disturbances.
  5. Make a choice: Do you want to stay in the drama of the fear-filled voices in your head, or do you want to experience peace and happiness?
  6. Write your mindā€™s false messages in a journal. Notice that many of them predict one of two horrible things: 1) past pain will repeat itself, or 2) the future will be disastrous. KNOW THAT NONE OF THESE IS TRUE.
  7. Dissolve your mindā€™s lies by using meditation, affirmations, prayer, therapy, yoga, inspirational reading, groups, energy work, or any other method to connect with the goodness and light of your true self.

As you refuse to believe the fearful voice in your head, sooner or later the answers to your troubles will appear in the most amazing way and for the best of all involved.

HOW DO YOU CALM YOUR OWN NEGATIVE THOUGHTS? I’d love to hear from you!

GIGI LANGER is the former “Queen of Worry” whose award-winning book, 50 Ways to Worry Less Now, rates 4.7 stars on Amazon. She holds a PhD from Stanford University in Psychology in Education.