- You’re feeling a certain way—because of the way your life is going, you might be feeling overwhelmed, anxious, afraid, sad, lonely, emotionally exhausted, frustrated, battered by life.
- You resist that emotional state—you don’t want to feel that way, so you resist letting yourself feel it. This resistance is usually in the form of distraction, such as online distraction, busywork, messaging, et cetera.
- Facing difficult things is harder in this emotional state—turning toward a difficult project, or clearing clutter, or dealing with a thousand emails—these are all overwhelming in the best of times. But being in a difficult emotional state makes it even harder. No wonder we’re avoiding!
- We try to overcome our avoidance with tactics—we try to coerce ourselves to do the thing we’re avoiding with tactics. “No distractions, only work today!” And it sometimes works, but because the underlying emotional state hasn’t been addressed, it never lasts long. We go back to avoidance.
- This makes us feel bad, and worsens the underlying emotional state—we feel bad about ourselves when we revert to avoidance. This only adds to whatever emotional state was already there. We essentially go back to the first step above, and repeat, with some added emotional stress.
Any of this sound familiar? It’s what many of us are going through, every day, usually without knowing it. Even if we’re aware, we’re rarely actually facing it, because we’re resisting the emotional state.
- We’re unaware of the emotional state causing avoidance.
- We resist the emotion, whether we’re aware of it or not.
Let’s talk about how to address these issues, so we can address the real cause of avoidance.
Bringing Awareness to the Inner State
The key is to notice when you’re avoiding something. Is there a project, task, conversation, or personal habit you’re putting off?
Accepting the Emotion
If you’re avoiding or caught in distraction, it’s a good bet that you’re resisting the emotion. That means that you don’t want to feel it—you feel there’s something wrong with feeling sad, angry, anxious, et cetera. In your head, you might think there’s nothing wrong with these feelings, but there’s a part of you that doesn’t want to feel them.
How to Not Avoid
Putting this all together, here’s how to create a shift so you aren’t avoiding as much.
- Notice when you’re avoiding or stuck in distraction.
- Notice the underlying inner emotional state.
- Surrender to the emotional state, letting yourself feel it. Relax.
- Give yourself some love and self-care.
- Once you’ve done that, you should be much clearer. Now see if your heart is more open to taking on what you’re avoiding.
- Just do five minutes of what you’re avoiding to give yourself an emotional victory. It’ll open your heart even more.
- Dance in victory.