Introduction
First we must value practice. Managers,
educators and practitioners should reflect
practice in order to transform it, rather than guide practice from the
mountain peaks (Pearson, 1999). When we have identified a need for change we
must adapt, quantify, and dedicate away those things we want to change to
contemplative practice. It is scary to seek out new approaches and philosophies
but we do that when there are gaps or doubts in the present most excepted ones.
There is a need by clients for reassurance. Qualified professionals should have
first-hand experience on integral approaches they recommend. They must be able
to walk the patient through the process with their own valued understanding of
the positive benefits and outcomes. The client should feel that this “person”
has been healed, changed and is the figure to assist them on their journey to
establish a bond that might be life-long. Having a witness and being one can
explain the psychological, spiritual and physical development one must practice
daily to reach higher levels of overall transformation.
Personally I need to continue to
develop on all areas of the integral process. Times, life and circumstances are
always dynamic and fluctuating. I have found that what once work doesn’t always
and that we must adapt and find solution once that happens. Physically, I was
where I wanted to be, but now, I need to rededicate myself to getting back on
tract after to an injury. Psychologically there is always room for important.
Meditation, listening to relaxing music, mental imagery, vacations and spending
time with myself and others is important for my mental growth. I plan on always
being aware of how valuable it is to be grounded with love, gratification,
kindness, compassion, having a giving nature and practicing daily time-outs.
All these adventures lead to spiritual growth eventually. One thing that is
missing and I plan to rectify is finding a mentor. I do need guidance and
someone I can talk to about my concerns, questions and when I feel less
motivated to meditate. Through some of my meditation sessions, I have had the
opportunity to pump into entities that given me advice, shared insights, and
have said “you are home; it’s been a long time since seeing you”.
Assessment
On a scale of 1-10, as a whole I
rate myself an 8. This is a resolving condition and a sought after goal to
improve upon daily through reading, searching, and thoughtfulness but also
integral thinking. I am a physical person naturally and rate myself an 8 again.
I enjoy life’s simple pleasures of the great outdoors and the playground we
have inherited that is outside. I will hike mountains, seek peaks to climb,
travel by way of river or creek, run up and down hills yet during I am a peace,
harmony and tranquil in thought, connected to God. When I am not outside I am
working out indoors doing P90X or yoga. But my newest adventure will be Turbo
Fire with Chalene Johnson. I could use to lose about twenty pounds of fat, so a
fat-loss program is warranted. Daily exercise also refocuses the mind,
definitely helps my spirit and self-esteem plus I feel a sense of
accomplishment and soothes a restless mind into calmness.
Psychologically I rate myself a
7. I have much work to do on this subject. Recent difficulties have tested my
resolve and I have hit many bumps in the road because of it. My perceptions
have not always been positive even with my heighten awareness of it. I do get
stressed out; feel frustrated if things don’t go my way immediately. When I
feel that way, I go within and still my mind from my senses and thoughts to
relax, to let another world exist, to reenergize my soul with purpose. I love
to be a peace and harmony with things in nature and in my mind. It feels like
home!
Spiritually I feel is one of my
strength because I have always been aware of it by my ancestors, parents and
grandmother who was once a holy woman in our tribe that turn to religion to
escape unsolicited visits from the outside world. Even though I feel
spiritually connected I rate myself an 8. This is due to my struggle in the
psychological area. I recently read an article entitled Empting the Cup: Healing
Fragmented Identity. This paper was about indigenous people’s struggles
(alcohol, drugs, depression and helplessness) that are in relations to the
spiritual stripping and the oppression of culture, language and traditions
brought on by colonialism. We have lost our way but seek to educate ourselves
and fellow tribal members that we need bring back the old styles of communion,
dancing, and spiritual practices. Emptying
the Cup implies that our human bodies are physical vessels that contain our
spiritual, emotional, and mental energies. My vessel has been filled with
images of dancing barbaric savages in war paint, uneducated and defeated people
whose culture was deemed heathen and of course cowboys and Indians rivalry. Amy
Desjarlais wrote this piece and it made me aware that I need to “empty my cup” of negative colonial
ideals and return to the ways of my ancestors. In the past there were traumas
but these events are still affecting people to this day in the form of
historical trauma theory. Historical trauma is cumulative emotional and
psychological wounding over the lifespan and across generations, emanating from
massive group trauma resulting from a cataclysmic history of genocide. Thanks
to this class and education I have to this point, I have stumbled onto
something quite important to me that is healing something I didn’t understand
before. Through community support, meetings with tribal leaders and identifying
grief I will empower my spirit.
Goals
Within my work I have set some
goals in all aspect of integral health and wellness. More involvement with my
community in the neighborhood and tribe through dance, festivals, volunteering,
gardening, sharing feelings and rancor but most of all, feeling good about life
and the knowing that we can have health, happiness and wholeness for ourselves,
friends and enemies. I already have a fitness program (Turbo Fire), nutrition
guide and have set a time to start which is after the holidays for 90 days, six
days a week. Psychologically I need to continue with my mental practices of
meditation, visualizations, and imagery. I have purchased a couple of albums
dedicated to meditation. One is by Dr. Miles Neale titled Mindfulness Meditations
For Tranquility and Insight and the others is Weight Loss through Hypnosis and
Relaxation by Dr. Michael Cohn and DR. Mary Fuller. I have already started
using them and they are great tools I bought at the iTunes store.
Practices for personal health
I have set goals, deadlines,
priorities and will engage persistence and determination to meet all aspects of
my spiritual, psychological and physical requirements that I have imposed of
myself to heal, strengthen and reach higher places of awakening. Physically its
exercise and yoga six days a week with my structured program I have already
mentioned. On my days off I will visit my favorite hiking destinations and
indulge in blissful meditation there for spiritual connections and energy
absorption. I also love art, music and community gatherings. All these
expressions of creativity I will utilize to further my spiritual journey, as I
will paint, draw and write. New Age music I already use and am using as I write
my paper. Addressing old wounds and
exploring the ones I don’t know yet are at the root of my psychological
development. I am trying hypnosis via MP3’s with guided practice geared towards
openness, stillness and witnessing. Those practice I started last night at
bedtime. This morning I was ready for my daily tasks and excited to do them,
one is this assignment. I like the idea of cross-training integral practice (Dacher, 2006) . The idea is to
incorporate all priorities for a whole-body approach to health; addressing
individual quadrants with further the development of all. Replacing negativity
with can-do attitudes is a focus of mine through contemplative practice as the
witness. I see my failings; adjust my feelings and emotions based off that
assessment, and work diligently daily to heal. My intention is supreme!
Commitment
I have been on a journey for quite
some time now and what I have learned is I am evolving daily with meditation,
physical enjoyment through exercise, eating healthy nutritious foods, and with
my awareness of myself, the world and universe. We are all connected and part
of the whole ocean of consciousness, spirits and energies that we can tap into
to help us navigate unmapped territory. The entire universal system is made of
the same materials, orbit small and large cosmic bodies are powered by the
radiant energies of thought that travel to us, nurtures and heal us. My
commitment is to us! My commitment is to all; to respect each individual as
precious and a needed part of everything. We all need each other’s help to move
on to something wonderful and beyond what we presently have. What we have is
good but can be much better if we include everyone and leave no one behind. When
we finally realize that hurting others hurts ourselves wars will seize and we
will have time, resources, and dedication to spread health, happiness and
wholeness to ever corner of the planet instead of suffering. By reconnecting to
the Great Spirit, with our Mother Earth and Father Sky Image we can collect our
inner peaceful nature, calming our minds to hear the messages, and working in
unison as a whole, we will overcome our many obstacles through divine wisdom
and loving-kindness which will bring in a new level of reality and existence
for humanity that includes living beings and consciousness. My commitment is to
experience reconnections lost or forgotten, to stymie my own fears, to be
open-minded and committed practitioner of integral health practice that include
the practitioners in it makeup and considerations. I can’t forget something
written in the Empting the Cup: Healing Fragmented Identity article: it is
impressed upon the reader the vital role spiritually practices, culture, and
ceremony play in Aboriginal identity, trauma prevention and healing: it also
opens the door to discussing a pragmatic approach to culturally appropriate consultation that empowers all
communities to take responsibility to come together in a good-way, for a fresh
look at the contemporary consultation models and provides necessary inspiration
to think beyond the limitations of current diseased and disempowering realities (Desjarlais,
2012) .
Hector, Emptying of the Cup sounds like a book I would be interested in reading. I like your commitment for yourself and the fact that you included nature in the whole scheme of things. Everything is interconnected and if we don't realize this then we are stuck. All living things are important not just humans. The lack of respect that we have shown to mother earth is disheartening to me. I hope that in the future everyone will come to respect this wonderful planet we live in.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas, Happy Holidays to you and good luck in the future