It’s Your Story

Is Your Needle on Empty? You CAN Recharge!

English: Windpark in Galicia, Spain.

Divorce is exhausting. It requires huge amounts of physical, mental, and emotional endurance at a time when your reserves are depleted. Luckily, you do not possess a finite amount of energy. Rather, you ARE a renewable resource. In this article on MindBodyGreen, I suggest several strategies for recharging and building up your energy stores.

Dream

Have You Taken Out Your Mental Garbage Lately?

Check out my post on MindBodyGreen about clearing your mind of unwanted and unneeded rubbish.

meditation

 

Push “Pause” or “Play”?

I woke up yesterday with a pulled hip flexor. It’s nothing serious. It’s completely functional and the pain can be ignored. But should I ignore it and push “play,” or give in to a pause?

My nature is to keep going, using ice and other modalities to ease the pain enough to continue on my planned runs, my marathon training schedule etched in concrete in my mind. Will this serve me in the long run? Or, by pushing too hard and too fast, will I prevent the necessary healing and end up off the trails longer than if I simply give in now?

Over the last three years, I have begun to be more comfortable pushing “pause.” For months after the divorce, I kept going through the pain, ignoring it while pressing forward. That only works for so long. I learned to be more sensitive to the nature of the pain and realize when I needed to give it time and space to present itself and heal and when I could ignore a small uprising and continue as if all was well because it soon would be.

Both buttons have their place in our lives. There are times when we need to keep going and push through the cobwebs blocking our path and there are other times when we need to stop and rest and allow ourselves to mend. Listen to your body. Your heart. It will tell you what it needs.

As for me, I plan to let my hip rest for one more day. There is time enough for play tomorrow. Pushing “pause” is not the same as pushing”stop.”