19-20102013
Still looking at the point with
sleeping and waking up. Thanks to what I wrote before I have no
longer been skipping morning classes, but there's still a problem
with not getting up early even without something to “force” me
out of bed.
For example, today I woke up around
10am after about 6 hours of sleep. I regained consciousness, I sat up
to check the time, I felt awake and thought “I could get up already
even though my alarm goes off in an hour”, but then, for some
reason, I laid back down and fell into a dream state where I didn't
really rest but just dreamt a lot. This pattern repeats over and over
again, morning after morning. I regain consciousness after about 6
hours, but because I am not fully alert right away I think “I can
sleep a little more” and suddenly I notice I've slept for 9 hours.
This is not cool. I know I do not need the extra sleep after that 6
hours when I naturally wake up, and now I'm here to write to support
myself through those moments of almost getting out of bed.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to want to stay in bed because it's warm under the
blanket whereas my apartment feels very cold.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to think of the discomfort of feeling cold when
getting out of bed and use it as an excuse to stay in bed even though
I do not need to stay in bed.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not realize that the coldness wears off after I
get out of bed and move around, and that even though the moment I get
out of bed feels “the worst” because the coldness hits me and my
body goes into a momentary shock, the sensation of coldness will not
last when and as I move myself and/or exercise, eat breakfast and put
on enough clothing.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not realize that coldness is not a valid reason
to stay in bed because it's a practical issue I am fully capable to
take care of without much effort.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to excuse myself to stay in bed by thinking “I
don't have anything important to do”.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to define “important tasks” to be things that
have something outside of me to “please” - employers, teachers,
clients, an audience – and to thus not be motivated to do things
that do not have an external “audience” to satisfy but would only
serve my (and others') well-being without external validation,
acceptance or reward.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to get attached to the validation, acceptance and
reward I get from outside of me (as learned in childhood) and to thus
ignore self-validation, self-acceptance and self-reward.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not be motivated to do things that are
self-driven because it has required more effort to make those things
rewarding.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not be motivated to write my blog because I
rarely get direct feedback from the people who read it (easy reward)
and because it takes a lot of time to see the results of writing in
my everyday living (hard reward).
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not be motivated to exercise because I don't
remember how good it physically feels immediately after exercise
(fast reward) and because the long-term results of exercise – the
strengthening of my body – only appear after consistently
exercising for long periods of time (slow reward).
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to be overwhelmed by the push of effort I have to
make in order to exercise so that I forget the fast and the slow
rewards it gets me.
When and as I resist exercising because
it feels like “too much”, I commit myself to stop, breathe and
remind myself of the fast and slow rewards exercise gets me.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to feel compelled to stay in bed because it has
been a comfortable escape from my life which has been taking on a new
structure, using up a lot of my energy and time, making life seem
“chaotic”.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to hold on to this escape routine – which may
have been useful in the beginning of this life change so that I could
“recharge” - not realizing that this routine has served its
purpose and is no longer valid as it's now keeping me from utilizing
my time properly.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not realize that I would have a lot of useful
and enjoyable things to do with that extra time not spent in bed,
such as writing, reading, exercising, making music, cooking,
cleaning, sewing and getting back to visual arts.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to define “important” tasks and activities to
be such where there is external validation, not realizing that the
amount and source of validation that I get from an activity says
nothing about its actual relevance to the well-being of All.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to believe and perceive that a task/activity is
“important” only if there is an external “demand” that will
be rewarded with external validation.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not realize that my definition of “importance”
(stuff that needs to be done) dates back to my childhood when I
sought to compensate for my low self-esteem by doing well in school
and hobbies and getting validation from my parents, teachers and
audiences – and I forgive myself that I have accepted and allowed
myself to not realize that this definition is no longer valid as
“what needs to be done” is no longer (and never really was) to
create myself a temporary illusion of self-worth so that life
wouldn't feel like shit but is now instead to live as self-worth that
I structure, create and support myself as this will benefit All Life,
myself included.
I forgive myself that I have accepted
and allowed myself to not realize that getting out of bed when I have
had enough rest is important because through this act of
self-discipline I support myself to become an active director of my
own life, no longer floating around passively and responding to
impulses but being the impulse as a self-directed principle.
I commit myself to challenge myself to
no longer sleep in and to get myself out of bed when and as I wake up
naturally after about 6 hours within and as the realization that
through this action I build myself into a self-disciplined and active
participant and director of my own life.
I commit myself to cut myself some
slack when and as I actually need to sleep more (when I am sick or
using up more energy than usual) and to utilize SF and writing for
the possible guilt and regret for “wasting my time” on sleeping.
I commit myself to get myself out of
bed on cold mornings by walking around, moving my body, stretching,
making myself a warm breakfast and getting dressed.
I commit myself to investigate my
definition of “importance”.
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