Fresh Living
Sponsored by:  

How to Make a 'What's Bothering Me' List

Tuesday November 3, 2009

I crawled into bed last night with that lump in my throat that feels like a cork tamping down the effervescent champagne of unexpressed emotion. I realized sleeping in that state would mean I'd grind my teeth even worse than usual and have even more bizarro dreams.

So, I pulled out the notebook and started a list of everything that's bothing me. Just short bullet points. Including even and especially the things I wish didn't bother me. That if I was a better person or less sensitive they would be no big deal. But often those are the most persistent bubbles.

I filled thee large pages with everything from my new noisy neighbors to my frustation at myself for not writing people back to my upcoming six-month oncology check-up to global warming to my toe still hurting to my teensy bank account to not having anyone to cuddle with to my annoyance at myself for needing someone to cuddle with, etc. It felt very whiny and very, very good to release and confront all those things.

And what I noticed was that most of the things on the list were not real. 90 percent of it was my own heated internal huff-and-puff, shame spirals, stuckness, and beating the hell out of myself about everything from not cooking enough to not having fulfilled my dharma. Not sure what to do with that information exactly except be relived that most of it was seemingly reversible. And apparently within my control (if we can actually truly control this stuff, really).

So then I made another two very short lists. One of action items I can do now until my internal crisis abates at least (things like sit and meditate for 10 minutes a day, write for 10 minutes a day, buy tickets for a mellow concert that's the same night as my medical test.) And then a longer-term list of goals I know I want to hit but feel too overwhelming to handle right now.

And after, I felt much better. Not cured, but better. And I sat this morning for 10 minutes. Yay. 

So, three lists, if you want to give it a go.

1) What's Bothering Me? Include things that seem too small to bother someone. If it's an irritant, list it, also even if it's something that's supposed to be pleasant. Dump.

2) Short-term Action Items. Keep this list short so you actually do the things. I'm thinking 3-5 items. Scan your "bothering" list and see what jumps out at you and has the biggest emotional charge. Is there something you can do tomorrow or today to tone it down a bit? Do you just need time carved out for a hot bath to tone it all down overall?

3) Long-term Action Items. This one is more amorphous and might change when you handle the smaller stuff. It also includes things that don't dissapate no matter how many small things you handle. Such as: Move to a new apartment, get out of this relationship, spend more time with my aging mother, write a book.

And then, there's actually a fourth thing to conclude our session. :) The Gratitude List. Try for ten things, large and small. Much has been made of the power of gratitude--it's an essential element to happiness, so say the happiness experts. Again, be honest--sometimes we have "shoulds" around things that please us--"It shouldn't make me so elated that he did the dishes because that means I don't want to hold up my end of the bargain," etc. That goes on the list as: Joe did the dishes!

You can do the "bother" and "gratitude" lists every night for a while and see how that affects your life. I'm going to be experimenting and updating here. If you know of sleeker, better methods (and I know there are many) for easing your burdens, please let us know!

 Like what you see? Click here to subscribe and get Fresh Living in your in-box every day!

Advertisement
Comments
Patty Hanson
November 9, 2009 2:12 PM

In addition to the helpful comments stated above-
A good way to let go of the thoughts and things that bother/worry you, is to shit your attention away from the worry and sadness. A good exercise that can help with the shift is to become clear about what you do want. After you're clear about that, place your focus on why you want it. Pay attention to the feelings that show up for you while you're going thru the exercise. Do you feel more energy? Do you feel happy?

Liz
November 10, 2009 1:56 AM

I had always wondered if I should send my burdens or negative thoughts onto paper, because that is all that it would be-no production. I have been looking for this answer as I loose sleep over my worries. Thank you very much for providing an effective method that provides personal feedback, growth,and guidance.

I have read and understood that each person is not to place their burdens on their shoulders, but rather hand them over to our super-consciousness ("God") or visualize and request for our angels to carry each burden in a bucket for healing and awareness of whatever the situation may be presented. I hope this method can also assist others in the healing process along with the truth of our lists. I feel very blessed to keep finding these concepts to further my spiritual healing. I believe these are concepts schools should casually put out there for the children to automatically use to their benefit.

-Visualizing the angel's taking the burden concept was provided to me from: Doreen Virtue's book "Chakra Clearing, Awakening Your Spiritual Power To Know And Heal".

Machelle Thomas
November 11, 2009 3:26 PM

What is bothering me is when I pray so hard on something that I am waiting to receive from God and I still have not gotten it, then that is when I start feeling sad about it!but that is when I have to go and pray over it.God bless

Morthax
November 12, 2009 4:19 AM
http://myrtow.blogspot.com

Personally, I like to lay my thanks and complaints on my god at least once a day. Not in a "Please do this for me or the world's gonna fall down around my ears" way, but in a normal, friendly, relaxed way as if I were shooting the breeze with the next-door neighbor.

Leaving aside questions of metaphysical efficacy and empyreal etiquette, this exercise in familiarity blows off a lot of steam and does it without leaving reams of paper full of depressing lists.

Neni
November 13, 2009 5:40 AM

This was very helpful!

Read All Comments

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.



Please type the text you see in the box below to verify your post and help us prevent spam. You have a limited time to type - you may wish to compose your comment in a separate document and paste it here upon completion.

Type the characters you see in the picture above.

Advertisement

Search This Blog

feed icon Subscribe

RSS Feed

Receive updates from Fresh Living

About Fresh Living

Fresh Living is a natural health and holistic blog for people like you, who care about what you eat, how you feel, and how to be more alive, connected, and in-the-moment. We wade through the latest in mind-body-spirit wellness and plumb ancient wisdom to bring you tools, tips, ideas, and inspiration. Plus, you get to hang out with us as we journey on our paths, one breath at a time.

About the Authors

Holly Lebowitz Rossi
is Beliefnet's Health editor. Click here for her full bio.
» Posts by Holly Lebowitz Rossi
Valerie Reiss
is Beliefnet's Holistic Living editor. Click here for her full bio.
» Posts by Valerie Reiss
More »

Advertisement

Advertisement


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.