Tag: blog

  • Overcoming Shadow Thoughts: A Guide to Resilience

    Overcoming Shadow Thoughts: A Guide to Resilience

    Decorative image representing a thought
    Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

    That sounds like a hero’s quest, am I right? … it is one we can all do though. You see, am referring to the shadow thoughts/ or what Action for Happiness call thinking traps, which affect our resilience.

    Decorative image of letters spelling out anxiety
    Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

    What does that mean? It refers to thinking patterns that leave us feeling hopeless, worthless or, despairing. When they grab hold we can feel there’s no way out, so let’s look at them more.

    One I personally battle with is a feeling that I will always be alone. It is very far from reality, but in my head it cries out. When am calm though, I can show evidence which contradicts it.

    Action for Happiness list the main thinking traps as

    • Blaming ourselves – believing that everything is our fault
    • Believing this is permanent – feeling that what is going on can’t be changed
    • Believing it will affect other areas of our life – If a problem is impacting one area, there is a fear it will spread to others
    • Blaming others – believing that others are causing us problems or difficulties
    • Black or white viewpoint – interpreting events as all bad, or all good, no in between
    • Mind-reading – assuming we know what others are thinking or feeling
    • Mislabeling – believing that we or others are one thing on the basis of a single or narrow situation.
    • Shoulds – having a fixed ideal on what should happen, or what you should have
    • Magnifying or minimizing – overplaying or underplaying what something means, how important it is or how likely it will happen.
    • Seeing our emotions as truth – believing all emotions are a true representation of what is happening.
    • Catastrophizing – believing the worst will happen even if it may not do.
    graphic image of a rainbow in the clouds

    How many of those have you felt? If you are like me quite a few but all is not lost. We can beat these traps without bloodshed.

    When you feel those things, try to write down all the evidence which contradicts them.

    So, let’s go back to my case which I mentioned at the top. My main contradictory evidence is that I have a supportive family, other people who value me. I also have had people who wanted to date me, and can go out to find other social groups. Further evidence is my virtual friends on social media. They are the ones I don’t see often (or at all).
    And finally, someone else is always going through a similar journey so we are never truly alone.

    When you feel those thoughts try to challenge them by yourself, or with others. There is no shame in asking for help.

  • What’s so amazing about words?

    A notepad with two pencils on a pink background.
    Photo by Mike Murray on Pexels.com

    Before we talk more on fonts, type color, or pictures let’s talk about words. People use words quite a lot. We use them in talking, writing, reading, listening and thinking.

    An open book with hard to decipher writing with other books behind.

    Here is an example of how not to use words well… 

    Have you ever been in a class and felt the teacher was droning on and you didn’t understand? I know for me my mind will start to wander after a few minutes. I don’t mean this to happen but when classes or meetings aren’t interacting this is what happens. How much of the lesson do you think am going to remember?

    A bored child at school stares into space
    Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com

    Even when things are written down, they don’t make sense sometimes. The sentence and paragraphs structures aren’t right, or there are a lot of words we don’t understand.

    A man struggling to read information on his laptop.
    Photo by Oladimeji Ajegbile on Pexels.com

    In all our communications throughout life, we are sending or receiving a message from someone else.

    We already looked at what happens when someone doesn’t understand. To make this easier our communications should be

    • Clear – the message should be easy for the audience to follow.
    • Concise – This means being brief and to the point. We do this through keeping our sentences short and splitting different areas into paragraphs.
    • Easy to understand – getting its meaning across to others

    Here are two examples, one follows these rules so let’s see if you can spot which.

    1st) “Due to the supermarket not having what you needed, I couldn’t get your shopping.”
    2nd) “They were out of what you need so I couldn’t buy it.”

    Which sounds better? (The answer is B)

    In summary, remember to

    • Use words your readers know, 
    • keep your message brief & get to the point,
    • Make sure the readers understand your meaning.

    Tomorrow we are going to talk about active and passive voices.

  • English mad dogs- a poem

    Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

    In summer, many Brits head outside

    All happy, playing, and feeling alive,

    While some, like me, choose to hide

    In shade when sun is past 25.

    “I’m melting “ I cry, out in the heat,

    Needs more than water to fuel my thirst,

    While English mad dogs are lining the street,

    I have air con on till it’s past the worst.

  • Write your own story

    Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

    If you think this is about actually writing, you are wrong. Although writing is also a very good practice.

    So what am I on about? Life, identity, and setting your own path.

    You see society, family and others will try to fit us into particular moulds throughout our lives.

    The only one who should decide who we are though is us.

    So how do you find out who you are beneath the makeup? Are you ready to have a look in your internal mirror?

    I want you to stop reading for a minute, be in your thoughts and try to reflect on what you feel your purpose is. This might take more than a minute, and it would not be so effective for some in a loud environment.

    Perhaps go for a walk in the park and sit under a tree to think. Once you have figured out your purpose you know what sort of person you are.

    Let me end this thought with a quote from Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society

    “Carpe deum- cease the day.”

    And remember many of you can choose which path to take.

  • Coming out the closet

    Full disclosure, the decisions I made and the path I chose were not easy. It felt like the only way forwards though.

    So why did I do this? I began gender change because staying male felt like suicide.

    I couldn’t find myself, anything I wanted was out of reach and didn’t have friends, job or a partner. There seemed to be nothing going for me and I was staying alive just for other people. If I had found a way to learn to be a man that didn’t involve sport challenges or scientific pursuits, I’d have taken it up.

    Previously I had tried Outward Bound when I was 18, and it was Hellish. That is all I can say about it.

    I was 25 when I changed gender. My mum knew for quite a while before because I told her everything. Under her advice I told family and friends in a letter, that way they had time to process. And I think one member of my family is still processing now.

    My Dad, I told first though. His response was “I thought he just liked playing with dolls” . We then wrote the letters. Because my old name was Lawrence Gareth, the new one was Bethany Lauren to help some of the family get used to it.

    This was 2005, and I got my gender recognition certificate by deed poll. Apparently that document is not of much use now. I always looked feminine, so no one saw much difference.

    Friends and family were happy to accept me as who I chose to be though. There were complications when it came to arranging surgery.

    While the surgeon was happy for me to go ahead with it, there was a serious risk of me dying on the operating table due to having haemolytic anaemia and primary immunodeficiency.

    I had already lost enough weight to have the surgery and gone through electrolysis to remove the body hair. I had to make a hard choice and realised I couldn’t risk my life for it.

    Would I have found myself better as fully femme? I don’t know, but I am what I am. If you feel stuck in a rut find a way to change it.