Transition: Patterns of Change

Transition: Patterns of Change

Transition and change are an inevitable part of life, yet so many of us recoil from, frantically run towards, or hold on too long to the status quo in vain attempts to assert control over a reality that is quite simply, uncontrollable. Specifically, we attempt to not feel the uncomfortable feelings associated with change. I’m interested in how we as humans navigate transitions, why we develop the patterns we do along the way and methods of freeing ourselves from those that are no longer serving us.

Love Patterns: The Brain's Role In Our Relationships

Love Patterns: The Brain's Role In Our Relationships

As adults, we often consciously seek partners to love us the ways our parents couldn’t, and yet we often find ourselves back in similar relationships, repeating the same patterns of our childhood families. The irony of this is not lost. And in fact, it can be not only perplexing as to why this continues to happen but is downright upsetting. I mean, no one goes out looking for a physically or emotionally abusive partner. Yet many times someone will go (unknowingly) from one abusive relationship to the next. It’s not like someone actively looks for a partner who has a substance use problem or addiction. And yet they may go from one relationship to the next with someone who is addicted or has a troubled relationship with substances. And the truth is, this happens in many different types of relationships, and we repeat the pattern over and over again.

Mass Shootings & The Destructive Power of Otherizing Men

Mass Shootings & The Destructive Power of Otherizing Men

Patriarchy is a politically loaded term that often gets misinterpreted, so I prefer referring to it as The Order of Unbalanced-Masculinity. The essence of this imbalance is that we are detached from our emotional selves, from our community, and from our spirit (however you define it). As technology continues its meteoric advancement, its application will be determined by the conscience of those who fund and develop it. Currently, this by and large means men, and guys, we are overwhelmingly stuck in emotional adolescence. If we are to avoid killing ourselves or creating some sort of dystopian nightmare (beyond what we’re already living), then men, we have a lot of work to do.

5 Ways To Cope & Respond to Boulder's Mass Shooting

5 Ways To Cope & Respond to Boulder's Mass Shooting

The mass shooting that took place in Boulder, Colorado on March 22, 2021 was horrific. In these early hours of the aftermath, many of us are experiencing shock, grief, fear, and rage. Our community is feeling the effects of terror and many are wondering how to respond and what to do. With that in mind, here are 5 things you can do now to tend to your mental and emotional health, which will lay the groundwork for your own healing and also allow you to respond effectively to those around you.

Spring Equinox: Planting the Seeds for Growth

Spring Equinox: Planting the Seeds for Growth

Spring Equinox, March 20th 2021, marks the end of winter and the beginning of spring. It is a time where we celebrate coming out of the darkness, out of scarcity, out the harsh cold stillness of winter, and into the light, into dreams of summer growth and fall abundance. It is a time where we wake from the deep sleep of winter, crawl out of our dens, and stretch into the sunlight that falls upon our faces - waking us to the possibilities that may come.

Lost in the Drama Triangle: Understanding the Paradigm

Lost in the Drama Triangle: Understanding the Paradigm

When we find ourselves lost in conflict with others (or with ourselves), and trying but unable to navigate the discord, we must identify the role(s) we are embodying in the conflict, and take 100% responsibility for assuming those positions. The motivation behind all of us stepping into these roles is power. Human beings need to experience a sense of power or agency (ability to affect change in one’s life), but when we don’t know how to access power in a healthy way, we will grasp for it anywhere we can. Thus, the birth of the Drama Triangle and the Victim, Villain, and Hero roles.

The True Allegory of the Mountain Lion: Or How to Lose Yourself and Come Back 

The True Allegory of the Mountain Lion: Or How to Lose Yourself and Come Back 

Some years ago, I was walking along a sparsely visited trail outside of Evergreen, Colorado, and my appreciation for the beauty of the environment was in full effect. My mind drifted from thoughts of gratitude for the “aliveness” of this place to the wonderful insights gained during the previous weekend's meditation retreat. I specifically chose this location because I wanted to be solitarily immersed in the grandeur of Nature and to hear what She had to say.

Adult Anxiety: The Link Between Your ACEs Score and Anxiety

Adult Anxiety: The Link Between Your ACEs Score and Anxiety

While stress can be good in small doses and helps us evolve as a species, anxiety is chronic, can inhibit us from growth, and limits our ability to live our fullest lives. In other words, anxiety often makes our world smaller. We fear what might come (anxiety) rather than what is currently happening (stress). In this blog post we will discuss the link between Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and anxiety as well as the physiological impact anxiety can have on us.

Winter Solstice as Nourishment

Winter Solstice as Nourishment

We have four seasonal markers each year: Spring Equinox, Summer Solstice, Fall Equinox, and Winter Solstice. These seasonal markers have long traditions that range from logistical (preparing food, migration, and farming for the season ahead) to spiritual (celebration of coming light, birthing season, abundant harvest). Regardless of how you think of these seasonal markers of change - or if you think of them at all - they influenced our ancestors greatly and they are a wonderful time for us to explore our own lives.

Adult Anxiety: Is It Stress or Anxiety?

Adult Anxiety: Is It Stress or Anxiety?

We recently had a blog series that discussed the connection between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and depression, upper limits, and how these early experiences may limit our ability to experience happiness as an adult. This blog series explores anxiety, discusses the connection between ACES and anxiety, and explores how these early experiences might impact us as adults. This blog breaks down the difference between stress and anxiety and offers tips for supportive practices that may help alleviate the impact of mounting stress or chronic anxiety.

Autumn Equinox: Utilizing the Season for Ritual and Connection

Autumn Equinox: Utilizing the Season for Ritual and Connection

We are transitioning into another season - fall, and for some, there’s a feeling of the wave coming in. With this transition many find themselves back to peaking anxiety and questioning - how to do the kids’ online school while working, what will the holidays look like this year with COVID, how long will this last, and what happens now that we’re all moving indoors?

This blog post looks at the changing season, and more specifically the fall equinox, as a time of celebration, a time to come inward, and a time to look forward. It offers some prompts that might be helpful to navigate the unknown, to connect to the natural world and our rhythms, and to help us prepare for a healthy fall and winter season as the temperatures drop, and we move inside and slow down.

The New Normal: COVID-Fatigue, Natural Disasters, and Coming Winter - OH MY!

The New Normal: COVID-Fatigue, Natural Disasters, and Coming Winter - OH MY!

This post looks at current national events and how it might affect our mental health. Is this the new normal? The overwhelming sense of anxiety, depression, despair, hopelessness? The ping-pong between all the “negative” emotions? Sure this can’t go on forever. Surely something has got to give! Learn how to support your mental health and adapt to change in healthy ways in this blog post.

What is Nature Therapy?

What is Nature Therapy?

Nature Therapy is about reconnecting with our natural roots. It’s about engaging with therapy in a setting that removes much of the noise of our everyday, busy lives, and reconnecting with something inside ourselves that’s been lost. In this post, we'll explore some of the science behind nature therapy and what you might be able to expect from introducing it to your therapy.

Summer Solstice and Navigating the Unknown

Summer Solstice and Navigating the Unknown

Let’s face it, 2020 has been a challenging year - a pandemic, social/physical distancing, racial injustice, political divide, canceled plans, relationship stress, family pressures, financial impacts, and lots of uncertainty for what the future holds. Utilizing the ebb and flows in nature as an opportunity to reflect can be a valuable resource. How can you use the time of Summer Solstice to support your mental health?

Mental Health Awareness Month May 2020

By Megan Newton, LPCC

Was there ever a better time in history to designate a month to mental health awareness than in the middle of a global pandemic? We think not. As a global people, we have not experienced something on this scale before, not in the way that COVID-19 is challenging both our individual and collective mental health. For some of us, the COVID-19 outbreak has threatened our purpose and our sense of wellbeing. COVID-19 has brought anxiety, depression, and grief to our doorsteps unrelenting. Never before have we been so ‘plugged in’, and while that has its incredible benefits, the cycle of news and social media confronts us with a harsh reality over and over again, inducing us into the fear of uncertainty. In the overwhelm of that experience, many people are asking, what is mental health? What is my mental health and how do I take care of it? In this moment, the first step is to recognize you are not alone in your experience of grief and fear. We invite you to recognize that truth in yourself. And we also invite you to recognize what is also viable in uncertainty: hope and possibility. The invitation is to acknowledge the truth of your experience, and that in uncertainty both grief and hope, fear and possibly, can exist at the same time.

Deep breaths.

If you are experiencing joy, hope, and possibility during this time there is not something wrong with you. If you are experiencing fear, grief, anger or loss during this time, there is nothing wrong with you.

Deep breaths.

Are you feeling more grounded? I hope so. Perhaps now we can circle back to where we began, which is an inquiry around mental health. Maybe you are asking the question, “What is my mental health?”. Perhaps you have wondered about this question before and the answer has been unclear or too uncomfortable to consider. It is true that in our society, mental health has a long history of negative connotations, secrecy, and denial. Why? Because mental health issues have often been categorized in a binary sort of way; either you are crazy or you are sane; either there is something wrong with you or there is not. Let us say it again, there is nothing wrong with you. Mental health is an inquiry into one’s own self. It is the process of integrating of our emotions, thoughts, sensations, and behaviors that result in an experience of wellbeing, both in ourselves and with others. Mental health is about telling the truth.

Many of us hide from ourselves. Even the most intelligent, high-functioning, capable people. It is not either you have mental health or you don’t. The question is about to what degree is your mental health functioning and how willing am I to be honest with myself about that answer. For many people, it’s too uncomfortable a question to ask. “I’m fine,” I hear people say. Yet, I can’t help but wonder what does that really mean? For some of us it is true that we are “all good”, and that is wonderful! Mental health isn’t about being bad. It isn’t about being wrong. It runs a continuum from ‘I’m barely surviving” to ‘I’m thriving’. For example, I know mostly happy people who are successful and high functioning, and who are also overwhelmed with anxiety. Notice that I did not use the word ‘but’. Using the word ‘but’ perpetuates this idea of mental health that there is something to hide or to ignore. We have a gazillion ways of justifying or explaining this to ourselves. Instead of denying, the field of mental health, and therapy at Evolve In Nature, instead invites you to come to know yourself in the totality of your experience. It is only when we are willing to tell ourselves the truth that we can thrive in all aspects of our being. After all, you have only this one precious life to live, in this one precious moment.

Mental health is about the process of deep knowing, of calling into balance the parts of ourselves, and it is no doubt a vulnerable process. It is so easy, for example, to shove to the side the fact that I yell at my kids when I’m frustrated. And then I feel bad, but who wouldn’t? And then I tell myself I will do better next time. And then the next time comes around, and I yell, and before you know it that is the pattern of relationship with my children. That becomes the pattern of relationship with myself - to snap or rage when I am upset, bypassing my experience completely. And just like that, the past is gone. I have hid from myself over and over and over again. Do you see the denial in this example? The denial is not that the yelling isn’t happening. After all, in this example, I wanted to do better, I acknowledged I didn’t do something well. The denial exists in the act of ignoring that there is anything here to take seriously enough to come to know, to understand, to put in the effort to change, to pick up the phone and call a therapist to say, “What I am doing isn’t working. I want to grow and I’m scared.” Exploring your mental health is an invitation to disrupt the pattern. Not because you are bad or wrong, but because the possibility of thriving in your relationships and in your body is real.

Mental health at Evolve In Nature is a journey to seeing yourself as you are. Like the cactus in bloom, capable of both thorns and flowers. The invitation is not to rid yourself of who you are, it is to come to know what’s true, to learn how to navigate through the thorny places, to bloom often, and savor the nectar.

In this month of May Mental Health Awareness, what questions do you want to ask us? Fire away and we’ll do our best to offer one perspective in the sea of many. What is it about yourself you want to know better? What are the questions you are willing to ask?

How to work with anxiety

By Shelly Froehlich, LPC

There is so much chatter out there right now about how to 'fix' your fear and anxiety. How to distract yourself from it as a solution. The thing is, a distraction only lasts for so long and all the while your fear is being ignored, it likely will become bigger and more fearful. There is no way to 'fix' a normal human emotion that is an appropriate response to uncertainty, especially in regards to health and safety (physical, financial, relational, etc). Instead of offering you a 'fix' we would like to invite you to pay attention to your fear or anxiety.

Your body is the most valuable resource you possess and we invite you to face in, with love, to yourself:
1. When the fear or anxiety arises, let yourself notice it in your body.
2. Notice the sensations of fear in your body. Where are they located? What are the qualities of sensation? Spend 4 mindful breaths allowing yourself to notice your fear/anxious sensation(s). 
3. Allow yourself to name it as you experience it - "I have a knot in my stomach. I feel scared." (notice that no explanation is needed here. There is no "because" required) 
4. Come back into your body, into that place where you felt the fear sensation and take 3 mindful breaths, just noticing.  
5. Check-in and ask yourself, "Do I still feel the scared/anxious feelings in my body?"
6. If the answer is no. Amazing....giving your anxiety or fear attention allowed it to move. Come back to this practice every time it arises. 
7. If the answer is yes, ask your body what is its impulse? Do you want to scream, air punch, run, growl? Where it will not cause distress or harm to others, allow yourself to express your impulse for a maximum of 1 minute or less. 
8. Come back to your body. Notice that place in your body where you felt the fear/anxiety sensation as you breathe 3 mindful breaths. Are those sensations lessened or gone? 
9. Try it and let us know how it goes for you.  
10. Repeat as often as fear or anxiety arise. 

Your sensations just want to move...and they need attention to let them do that. Once they've moved you will know what you need and want next.

Dietary and Lifestyle Immune Support

By Shelly Froehlich, LPC

We are in a very challenging state of health affairs. Keeping our physical body in the best health is critical right now. An expert, Board Certified Holistic Nutritionist, Susan Guegan, offers some excellent dietary and lifestyle immune support advice, compiled by the Institute of Functional Medicine, that can be an asset to you and your communities and is immediately within your control: 

https://www.ifm.org/news-insights/boosting-immunity-functional-medicine-tips-prevention-immunity-boosting-covid-19-coronavirus-outbreak

One of the best ways to help our immune system is through our digestive system. In addition to the above, I offer 5 quick tips: 

1. Increase your organic food intake when possible (organics may help to minimize stress on the body caused by chemicals and/or lack of nutrients in conventional crops)*

2.Eat a Rainbow of veggies/fruits every day (more veggies than fruits) 

3.Avoid overeating at any one meal which creates a burden on the body to break-down intake.**

4. Eat in a stress-free environment. Take “nature-breaks” throughout your day whether that means taking time to listen to a bird or taking a walk. ***

5. Make every bite count – minimize processed food intakeincrease real whole-food intake according to your body’s needs and sensitivities.

References:

*Human health implications of organic food and organic agriculture: a comprehensive review

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5658984/ 

**What Happens When You Overeat:

https://www.mdanderson.org/publications/focused-on-health/What-happens-when-you-overeat.h23Z1592202.html

***Levels of Nature and Stress Response

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5981243/

www.cdc.gov

Susan Schiliro Guégan, NC                          

     Board Certified in Holistic Nutrition®

        MBS Functional Nutrition, Your Climate Diet Coach

        720.480.4266       susan.guegan@comcast.net