Showing posts with label distraction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label distraction. Show all posts

Sunday, October 29, 2017

How to Quiet the Little Voice Inside Your Head

Did you ever notice the little voice inside your head that’s constantly running the play by play of your life—to you, the one who’s living it.  Did you ever listen in to your inner narrator, the one who’s unceasingly packaging your life, verbally preparing your experience for transmission to another unidentified listener?  I just went on an eight-day silent retreat and apparently my inner narrator didn’t get the memo that it was to be silent.  For the first five days, the little voice in my head didn’t stop talking, not even to catch its imaginary breath. With obsessive precision, it explained to me what I was doing, how I had transformed, and what spiritual lessons I had learned. Over and over my inner narrator repeated my experience to me, prepared it for sharing, and made sure I had everything wrapped up as clearly and understandably as possible. 
It’s an odd thing really: as we're having an experience, the little voice in our head is simultaneously describing, explaining, and commentating on the experience, providing a summary of it before, during and after its unfolding. 
Often, the narration of our experience is so integral to the experience itself, so uninterrupted and merged with it as to make us wonder if there could even be an experience without the accompanying report. If an experience happens without simultaneous inner acknowledgment, thinking about, and commentary, does it actually happen? 
It’s also interesting to notice that the little voice in our head is not without its own characteristics.  It has a certain language, style, and tone; it does its storytelling and commentary with a certain thematic and textural consistency. Like a Hollywood screenwriter, our inner voice tends to write in a particular genre, for example, tragedy, comedy, drama, film noir etc. Our commentator is a character with an identity of its own.
Did you ever wonder why our mind is telling us what we’re doing while we’re doing it, as if we didn’t already know? And, why our mind is so adamant about getting the story of our life figured out, written and packaged?  And finally, why we need to rehearse the tale of our life before we actually need or want to convey it to another person?
The mind believes that we are made of mind and mind alone, and that without its felt presence, we and all else would cease to be. If the narration were to stop and the mind was not experiencing itself through the act of thinking, then there would be nothing—oblivion.  A mind off duty, experience without the thinking about it, is tantamount to non-existence. The mind creates the story of an I; it creates an I as an object in our consciousness.  In so doing, it maintains both the experience of a self and the experiencer of a self, which it believes are needed to ensure survival.
In relentlessly narrating the story of ourselves (to ourselves), the mind is also attempting to make life, and us, into something solid, knowable, and constant.  By creating a main character called me (played by mind) who’s living something called my life, the mind attempts to transform the ephemeral, groundless, ever-changing nature of being into something that can be understood, managed, and in theory, controlled.  It takes what is really one unified process, life, from which we are inseparable, and splits it into two different things, a me and a life.  We then become the liver of this thing called life, and in the process, seemingly distinct and real.  We literally think our self into existence. 
And so, the questions beg: first, is there a downside to living with this inner narrator, and second, do we have to live this way, is it part and parcel of the human condition? Is there no alternative to a second-hand version of life, knowing experience only through the mind's description and commentary? The answer is a resounding yes, and no. 
Yes, there is a downside and no, we are not condemned to live this way forever.
The small downside to living with the play by play of your life ceaselessly running in your ear is that it can be intensely agitating and distracting. There exists constant noise in the background and foreground of your life, no silence to be heard, like having a mosquito (or buzz saw) resounding in your ear, one that you can’t silence and can’t ignore. 
But on a more profound level, the downside to the inner narrator is that it stands in the way of your actually getting to experience life first hand, in all its richness. You're relegated to living through your narrator’s description, which is really just a mental representation of the real thing, like getting a postcard of the Grand Canyon in place of being there, or a description of chocolate instead of a taste. The little voice goes on then to offer commentary on the narration, which is a representation of a representation, and you are now two layers away from the direct experience of living.
You might also notice that the voice in your head presents its version of your life as a truth. It reports your life story as if it were the actual reality existing in the objective world. It’s liberating, however, to realize that the narrator’s account of what’s happening is all going on inside your own mind and only in your mind. It’s not real in some objective sense, but rather another story about a story which begins and ends inside your own consciousness.
The good news is that you don’t have to live this way, with your inner narrator acting as a middle manager between you and life. If you’ve ever been deeply involved in an activity, you might have experienced what’s referred to as flow state.  In flow, we're so engaged in what we’re doing that we cease to be aware of our self. We're no longer the one doing the activity, but literally absorbed into the experience itself. We become the experience; we become life rather than the one who’s living it, and all notion of time and a separate Idisappears. And, while the mind has convinced us otherwise, what we discover is that when the mind is not there self-referencing, reminding us of our self, we still exist. We do not in fact disappear; the mind might temporarily, but we do not, which suggests that we are indeed more than mind. Awareness remains even when we lose the felt sense of our self as the one doing our life. And, interestingly, such experiences, the ones in which awareness of our self disappears, when there is only experience but no I doing it, are the ones that we later describe as wholly satisfying, blissful, and even divine.  The experiences in which we are gone are the ones that we most crave. 
The remedy for the little voice in our head is three-fold. First, we have to exhaust of it and become so fed up with the play by play as to decide that we’re not willing to listen or live by it anymore. Once that’s happened, we must start noticing our narrator and become aware of its voice as an object appearing in our awareness. And finally, we set a clear and fierce intention and desire to experience life directly, through our senses, now, and not just receive a report on it. We commit to diving deeply and directly into the ocean of life. 
Listening to the little voice in your head is a habit, granted a habit with deep roots, survival instincts, and lots of practice time, but nonetheless, a habit. With desire, willingness and intention, a habit, any habit, can be changed. Each time you catch the voice in your head describing or commentating on your life, practice a new habit, the habit of directly experiencing your actual experience. Each time you hear your little voice, first pause and celebrate a moment of awareness; the fact that you’re hearing it means that there’s another part of you, which is not merged with the narrator, who’s awakening—the you whom the narrator is narrating to. Next, intentionally shift your attention from your head (which is where our energy is usually focused) down into your body.  Invite your body to consciously relax. Take and feel a deep breath. From there, run a sense loop: see what you’re seeing, hear what you’re hearing, feel what you’re feeling, smell what you’re smelling, and taste what you’re tasting. Experience each, one at a time. And finally, sense your own physical presence, the feeling of aliveness in your body (not your mind). With this practice, the little voice in your head will grow quieter and less relentless, and the living will become more vivid, satisfying, immediate, and ultimately, real. 

Friday, March 3, 2017

Rewire Me With Nancy Colier and Rose Caiola


The Mindful Way To Stay Sane In A Virtual World

Do you compulsively check your emails? Are you always plugged in? Let’s face it: Our society has an addiction to technology.
In this interview, Rose talks to Psychotherapist and Author, Nancy Colier, about her new book The Power of Off: The Mindful Way To Stay Sane In A Virtual World, her story of being addicted to technology and what inspired her to make a change.
Nancy explains how to have a healthy relationship with technology and how to go from addiction to living a balanced healthy life in today’s digital age. During their conversation, Rose and Nancy talked about everything from the impact technology has on our bodies and minds to how to create a more empowered relationship with technology.
Are you ready to start your digital detox? Pick up the Power of Off and stay connected to what is truly meaningful in life.

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Why You Should Stop Asking Google What to Do With Your Life

At the last minute my afternoon meeting was cancelled. And so, unexpectedly, I was presented with a substantial chunk of unscheduled time, five hours of open, unfilled space with which I could do whatever I wanted.
I immediately flipped open my laptop and started researching. Researching what?  Everything, anything, something that would interest me, something to do, something to fill the space.
After distractedly surfing through movie schedules and museum exhibits, I had a thought, “sound baths.” Within seconds, Google had delivered a page of options on the the new auditory class that meditation and yoga studios now offer. I inattentively skimmed through several descriptions and testimonials on the bath experience, as well as schedules for five or six studios that offered it. Rapidly scanning the pages, I wasn’t able to find a class for the day at hand. In the process however, I bumped into a link for the ten hardest workouts in New York City. Wouldn’t that be a great idea, I thought, and so I flitted through a whole host of kettle ball, circuit training, and boot camp options, none of which sounded remotely like something I wanted to actually do.  I am not sure what happened next but I found myself inside a list of vacation destinations with direct flights from New York.  Seems I had followed a link for easy family holidays that won’t break the bank. Inside one of the hotel write-ups was a description of a garden that sat on the sea, which reminded me of a neighborhood park that I had read about but not yet visited.  I found the park online and superficially perused its history and hours for visiting.  But then I remembered, I needed a new pair of sneakers.  And so I sped over to the Nike site and discovered that there were so many new styles, all of which were fabulous, that I couldn’t decide. The only pair I investigated further wasn’t available in my size.  At this point I went back to movies because I had a thought about a documentary on a runner.  But it turned out the film was way downtown and that didn’t appeal.  What then followed was a speed train through hot yoga studios, great city walks, dog parks for shy dogs, independent book stores, places to buy cooking supplies and kirtan performances…which is where I woke up. 
I shut my computer and took a deep breath, pulling the air down into my body.  “Stop” I said to myself. “Just stop.” I looked at my watch: I had been down the rabbit hole for two hours. Two of my five free hours were gone. I felt agitated, anxious, and paralyzed, entirely overwhelmed with possibilities but unable to move on anything. I was “twired,” tired and wired at the same time. I put my hand on my heart and felt the simplicity of stillness.
“Come home,” I said to myself. “Be here.” I then unhooked from all ideas of what I should or could do with the time and just felt into my body, felt my own physical presence. I took a few conscious breaths and invited myself to relax and land where I was, now. 
What happened was that I felt an immediate sense of relief and peace, to be allowed to be where I was, to not have to do anything at all, nothing other than pay attention to what I was actually experiencing. 
I then became aware of a longing to call a particular friend. I also felt the desire to take a walk, to be with myself and be outside. That’s what came, organically, when I dropped into my body and now.
One of the problems that technology is creating is a feeling that we should be constantly taking advantage of every opportunity available to us. And if we’re not, we are somehow missing out on life. We believe that there is something, somewhere inside Google, that will make this moment complete, some place else that is better than where we are, something more that we ought to be doing. We no longer ask ourselves, or let our selves discover what we want to do. Rather, we ask Google what’s possible or what we can do. The thing is, what we can do is often very different than what we want to do. We find, frequently, that what we want to do is much simpler than what we can do. And also, that when we listen in to what we actually want, from the body, the answer is clear and without ambivalence and confusion; it has a sense of “Oh yes, that’s right.” Unlike the “can and should do’s,” which leave us feeling murky and without the clear “Yes” that comes with truth. 
Technology creates an infinite number of choices. We can do anything at any time.  And yet, while we may delight in the idea of choice, research shows that when we have too many choices, we actually end up unhappy, deadened, overwhelmed, fatigued, and immobilized. With unlimited choices, we frequently end up making no choice at all.  And, if we are able to make a decision amidst the mountains of choices, we generally feel less satisfied with our choice and more concerned that another option would have served us better. Unlimited choices also cause us to shut down our creative thinking.  When presented with too many options, we often revert to the simplest choice or consider only one manageable variable in making our selection.  The more that technology beckons with possibilities, the more we humans are pulling the covers over our heads and finding ourselves frozen, in a perpetual state of too much and not enough.   
The issue too is that we are looking outside ourselves for our own truth.  When we have a free afternoon, we go looking to the internet, hoping to find something that will generate interest in us.  When we cook dinner, we go surfing on Instagram to find a picture of something that will tell us what we want to eat.  When something happens in our life, we post the experience to find out what it should and will mean to us. 
We have forgotten that we can know things through our own experience.  We have forgotten that the process of knowing can be one that happens from the inside out and not the outside in.
The next time you find yourself with a chunk of unscheduled time, even just a little (standing in line, riding public transportation), try living it in a new way (differently than I did) and creating a new habit.  Instead of immediately searching outside yourself, to your phone or computer, to find something that might interest you, something to fill the time, do this: drop into yourself, into now. Feel your body, the sensations arising, feel how you are in that exact moment.  Pay attention inside; notice if there is a natural longing or interest already present. If nothing comes, that’s fine, just stay still and keep attending. Practice not doing, not filling the time, not habitually forcing something into every open space as soon as it appears. In so “doing” you are, in fact, turning yourself, now, into a destination and a place to be. 

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Fox News Health Talk with Dr. Manny and Nancy Colier


With the seemingly relentless and inescapable noise and demands of modern-day devices, getting a mere five minutes of distraction-free time, and dare I say peace...



Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Change Your Attitude, Change Your Life with Joan Hermann



New Podcast with Joan Herrmann: Our reliance on technology is rapidly changing how each of us experiences life.  We're facing new issues and difficulties, we're encountering new emotional triggers... read more... http://nancycolier.com/change-your-attitude/

Tami Simon and Nancy Colier Podcast: Waking Up From Our Digital Addiction



In this episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon and Nancy have a frank discussion of the large-scale modern addiction to cell phones, email, and social media. Nancy offers ways one can recognize addictive behavior and how we can break out of compulsive cycles around technology. They also talk about parenting in the digital age and the importance setting appropriate boundaries when it comes to electronic media. Finally, Nancy considers the need for a "digital detox" and how it is imperative that we all set aside time to spend in silence. (65 minutes)
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Sunday, December 11, 2016

Tiny Buddha with Nancy Colier

Have you ever found yourself mindlessly surfing the web, hopping from one site to another, when you didn’t have any specific reason to be online?

Falling Through the Cracks with Dr. Rebecca Risk and Nancy Colier

In the hustle and bustle of today's world it's easy to get lost in the matrix of technology.  We often forget to put our phones down and connect with those around us. In Nancy Colier's new book "The Power of Off," she is helping people put down their phones, turn off their computers and rediscover what it means to be human.

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Breaking Up Our Dysfunctional Relationship with Technology

We can all agree technology has many advantages.

To list a few, technology promotes education, helps keep us safe, provides a closer reach to those who were once out of reach, saves lives, keeps us connected with instantaneous communications, and most importantly, allows a virtual window for some (you know who you are) to peek in on an ex-boyfriend or ex-girlfriend…just in case you find yourself curious as to how they’re doing.
However, in light of all of the advancements, “Houston, we have problem.”We can all agree technology has many advantages.

WCBS Health and Welness with Pat Farnack and Nancy Colier




Nancy Colier is a Manhattan psychotherapist, life coach, and author of "The Power of Off." She talks about how use of our devices has really affected our entire world, and not always for the better.


Caught Between Generations with Dr. Merle Griff

 How to create a life of wellbeing in the midst of a tsunami of technology!




It's All Happening with Zach Leary and Nancy Colier


 Zach Leary and Nancy Colier on "It's All Happening" What's happened to us since getting addicted to technology?  And where do we go from here..


Good Morning Washington with Nancy Colier

Good Morning Washington: Why we tolerate bad technology behavior and how to live a life of balance with your devices!  Nancy Colier and The Power of Off! 

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Are You Addicted to Your Smartphone? Tips for Breaking the Habit



With the seemingly relentless and inescapable noise and demands of modern-day devices, getting a mere five minutes of distraction-free time, and dare I say peace and quiet, can seem near impossible.
We are living in a time when there is no distinction between “on” and “off” or public and private time. Whether we realize it or not, we no longer have space to ourselves.

Even at home, the world floods through our cellphones, laptops and tablets, and our attention remains on call— essentially, we are always in “on” mode. Consequently, our nervous system has become locked into a state of perpetual fight or flight, and we are “twired” all the time—tired and wired—with the prospect of relief nowhere in sight... Read more... http://www.foxnews.com/health/2016/11/06/are-addicted-to-your-cellphone-tips-for-breaking-habit.html

NBC Connecticut Interview with Nancy Colier, The Power of Off


Nancy Colier on NBC Connecticut, Digital detox with The Power of Off