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10 Things you can do to Mindfully Create a Better Relationship

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

better-relationshipRelationships aren’t easy. They ebb and flow and sometimes get really stuck. We go through phases just like the developmental phases in life and we often need a few tips and tools to help us smooth the path. Below are 10 things you can start doing right now using the skills of mindfulness to increase your happiness and health in your relationships.

  1. Practice gratitude and take yourself out of default mode: being grateful and focusing on the positive tips our brain towards expecting good things. What we notice quite simply persists. Our brains are wired for negativity and we need to consciously practice tipping the scales in the other direction.
  2. Become an expert on reading your partner’s brain: notice when they are triggered or calm. Don’t raise difficult topics when your partner is activated as they simply will not be able to engage with you. Look for signs of fight/flight/freeze and know what helps you or your partner feel more settled. Work consciously towards this, be prepared to stop an argument that is going nowhere.
  3. Practice listening from an open and receptive place: mindfulness encourages us to be present in the moment and fully engaged. Mindful listening is a gift you can offer on a regular basis.
  4. Practice the attitudes of Mindfulness: gentleness, non-judgement, compassion, empathy; first with yourself and then practice extending it outwards to your partner. The more lovingly we treat ourselves the easier it is to be loving to our partner.
  5. Learn to press Pause: during an argument and at the smallest sign that things are about to escalate. Pause, notice, breathe: when you pause on a regular basis you reduce your own stress and make yourself safer for your partner.
  6. Stay/get grounded in your body: this helps us be fully present with our partner in the relationship and to remain open to connection rather than shut down.
  7. Cultivate awareness of your nervous system as this is where it all starts. When you mindfully learn to track your own cycles of activation and calm, you soothe your own brain and in doing so you co regulate that of your partner. We are mammals and we effect each other in unseen ways.
  8. Know how to repair and do it quickly: the longer ruptures go unrepaired, the more they get wired in the brain as the default place of pain and negativity. Be prepared to forgive and let go of fixed ideas of who is right and wrong, a tenet of mindfulness is let go and sense into what is happening right now and from this place of space the next moment arrives with its own wisdom.
  9. Cultivate seeing your partner with fresh eyes: we become conditioned to relating to each other in fixed and habitual ways, practice instead seeing with curiosity and interest; no matter how much you think you know what is going on for another person, you can never be fully sure!
  10. Remember our relationship with others is a mirror of our relationship with ourselves: cultivate good self care, nurture and respect yourself, find out what makes you happy and do more of it; getting yourself in a state of flow and fully connected to your own life means you will be more inclined toward what you bring to the relationship rather than focusing too much on what you can get.

Do you struggle with feeling alone? How to cope and thrive!

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

At the very heart of it we are all alone. We come into this world alone and we die alone. There is no getting away from the fundamental experience of being alone at crucial times of our lives. The existential writers tell this story of humanity so well. However, some people thrive on this while others feel terror at the thought. Much depends on how we were responded to as babies. The capacity we learnt for self-soothing and the capacity to manage and contain our emotional states are all influenced by how we were responded to in the first two years of life. And then there are other factors in the mix like trauma, upbringing and personality. There used to be such a sense of shame in ‘feeling dependent’ and many people still do anything to avoid this feeling because of the vulnerability which it brings up. If only we could tolerate it and know how normal it is! Of course we’re dependent! We are wired for connection. We need to be attached to others in an emotional way to feel secure. But good relationships require a capacity to be independent and inter-dependent. Otherwise we may end up co-dependent!

Because the fear of being alone can be so primal I recommend psychotherapy if this is your situation. There is nothing better than learning in a safe and therapeutic space how to be secure in yourself and to take care of your own needs in a way that inspires confidence and trust in yourself. In this way psychotherapy makes up for the deficiencies of our early attachment experiences.

Now you know how normal this fear can be and how you can transform it with appropriate professional help.

However, on top of that here are 7 tips to assist you to develop the capacity to be OK with being alone:

1. Practice mindfulness: breathing and meditation improves your capacity to be with your own experience, just as it is.

2. Practice gratitude by keeping a journal: write 5 things each day which make you grateful, this increases your sense of well-being and enhances your resilience.

3. Do things each day which nurture you and contribute to your happiness: take a walk, take a bath, watch a sunset, play with a pet.

4. Increase your skill base: learn a new hobby or join a group, a gym or a club. This increases your sense of connection with others in your community and can reduce the sense of aloneness.

5. Spend time on giving to your community: you will take the focus of yourself so much and meet others at the same time. Do volunteer work with others who have less than you do.

6. Work out what your purpose in life is and put energy and time into developing that, as well as giving back to others this enhances your sense of self.

7. Connect with something bigger than you, be it spiritual or religious, having a sense that you are part of something bigger enhances well being and connection.

Read the rest of the tips/article here.

Resilience In Tough Times

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

I could write a whole book on this subject alone! Resilience is such a big area. It is also complex. What makes some people get over things easily while others find it much harder to pick themselves up, dust themselves down and get back on the horse? Our early experiences and attitudes affect us profoundly. If we suffer massive grief or loss for example as a young child then subsequent losses may bring up the earlier trauma. Unless we are able to work through those earlier difficulties. And the attitudes of our parents or early care-givers also effects how we respond to loss. So you can see how complex it can be.

However, complexity aside, there are things we can do as adults to learn to develop more resilience. The good news is that self-care is something we can all work on and it has a corresponding link with our resilience. Eating well, getting enough sleep and having a regular sleep pattern, time of going to bed and getting up, have all been demonstrated to improve our capacity to deal with life’s challenges. So too, does exercise and having a good support network. Having a range of family, friends or confidants to go to when things are tough helps us feel more connected and is likely to be a factor in resilience. Add to this list a sense of contributing to something and giving back to the community and being involved in meaningful work which contributes to a sense of purpose in life. Also having a connection to something outside of ourselves such as religious belief, faith or spirituality clearly assists many people get through difficult times.

Lastly, my most favorite is cultivating a capacity to live in the present moment. By practicing mindfulness and meditation we develop our capacity to be with what is, to embrace as Jon Kabat Zin would say, the full catastrophe of living. This allows us to develop a capacity for acceptance of what is and this enable us to feel our feelings, to fully allow ourselves to connect with our experience but not to be so identified with it that it overwhelms us, at least some of the time. Mindfulness is a practice which as well as developing our awareness enhances our resilience in every facet of our lives.

Read the rest of the article here.

How To Stop Overthinking

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

The mind is a most powerful resource but yet it can also be the source of torment and pain. After all, it is the meaning we make of things that causes us distress. And overthinking is a common enough cause of stress and anxiety. Commonly when we are overthinking, the mind just adds fuel to our problems and does not allow us to access other internal resources such as intuition and creative problem solving. So, how to stop this feedback loop of perpetual thoughts that can tie us in knots?

Mindfulness is a well-accepted antidote to the stress and anxiety of too much thinking. It is being used in hospital settings and educational institutions world-wide. Even business has cottoned on to the power of mindfulness. Ironically, the term, although using the word ‘mind’ refers to whole heartedness and embodying breath with our entire being. It offers us the capacity to bring awareness and attention to our experience without being caught up in judgments of our experience.

Cultivating this quality of beingness helps us develop the capacity for presence which includes all of our experience not just our thoughts. We are multi sensorial and when we develop our capacity to tune into our bodies we can be more grounded, more centered and often feel more energy and a greater sense of aliveness. Joy springs up from inside spontaneously. It’s not like our thoughts disappear but rather they lessen their grip and we learn that we are more than the sum total of our thoughts.

Mindfulness is best cultivated with regular practice. There are apps and courses available to assist. The practice of meditation is nearly always the best way to become more mindful. But mindfulness is not only on the cushion. We can use it in our daily life, moment to moment. Just stop right now and notice what is going on around you and take a moment to sense inwards. Pause and notice your breath as it rises and falls. It may be shallow or deep. You may notice your thoughts too, the goal is not to stop thinking, but to sense into the space around your thoughts. We are more than just the sum of our thoughts. Reality offers us a sense of groundedness which we can become attuned to over time. The practice of mindfulness is a powerful way to slow down the mind and is a reminder to come back to the breath again and again. Pause, notice, breathe….

(My book Mindful Relationships is coming out soon, watch this space!)

Read the rest of the article here.

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Empower-Mindful Relationships-cvr-v3 with blurb

A practical guide for using mindfulness to enrich relationships and effectively manage stresses associated with conflict. The authors explore how we can use mindfulness to develop a more compassionate, friendly relationship with ourselves and others; communicate more effectively; reduce defensive patterns; and work effectively within couples, families and workplaces. Case studies highlight key principles, while practical exercises enable the reader to develop their mindfulness skills.

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About Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling

Margie Ulbrick relationship counselling provides psychotherapy services for relationships, stress management and happiness. Margie Ulbrick Counselling offices are based in East Malvern, Melbourne and service the surrounding areas of Chadstone, Glen Iris, Armadale, Ashburton, Malvern, Carnegie, Kew, South Yarra, Toorak, and East St Kilda. Read more about Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling.

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