There's No Crying in Baseball!


Readers know by now three things about me.  I may be a little too sensitive, I share maybe a little too much, but I always keep it real.  So, in the spirit of keeping it real, I was truly afraid this week was going to be the first week without a blog post in 44 weeks!  I’m still going strong, at 308 days on the wagon, but this week was a tough one.  I can’t lie.  I struggled for inspiration on what I needed because this week came at me like drinking through a fire hose.  Every single long exhausting day left me uninspired and wilted.  Today I realize I simply need to heed my own advice, from the beginning of this journey, and just keep it real.       

I know I’m a put together business woman with a high stress job, I accept that.  I know I’m good at my job, I don’t doubt that.  But sometimes my cup overflows with too much stress, and since I no longer choose to hit the vending machine of sugary evil comforting goodness, I have to find healthier ways to cope.  Hiding from these feelings, or denying they are there, has only gotten me into big trouble in the past.  Today I realize I’ve actually come a long way.  Unfortunately, this week I cried and I cried in front of a colleague.  Yes, I cried, but I didn’t eat anything bad for me.  Yes, I cried, but I still came home and did my workout.  Yes, I cried, but I'm still standing, and guess what?  It probably won’t be the last time I cry at an unwanted time.  I know I’m not alone.  I know it.

The same day, of my humiliating crying event, there was a horrific plane crash just blocks away from my work.  A military plane landed on a freeway and nine people were killed.  My path home took me literally feet away from the devastation.  I slowly drove by the crowds of military and police officials blocking the road.  The road was closed in all directions but they allowed one lane to cross the freeway which was my way home.  I inched across the four lane freeway and could still see smoke rise from the previous explosion that billowed in the sky hours earlier.  Tears flowed again.  This time I felt the extreme grief for the military family members now receiving phone calls of their fallen heros.  I then started to quickly feel guilty for being so upset at my "bad" day, which paled so very miserably to the reality of a truly bad day.   

So today I give myself permission to be human.  If we want to heal, we have to feel.  I allow myself to feel the gamut of emotions, the unpleasant negative feelings, and the good positive ones.  Clearly I used to suppress the bad emotions with food, deny their existence, or try to ignore them.  Emotions flow through the same pipeline.  The problem is when we suppress negative feelings we restrict the flow of positive feelings.  This week I realized it’s important to give myself permission to feel the negative, and to work through them, so there’s room for the positive to flow.   We are all blessed with a rich emotional makeup.  This week I realized that  through this journey I have now allowed myself to feel.  Unfortunately, that meant I cried in front of a colleague at work, but who really cares?  

Life isn’t easy.  We all will have good days and certainly bad days.  I try hard to keep my vibrational level tuned in to a positive frequency to manifest amazing blessings in my life, and stay connected to God.  But some days you just need to cry, wipe it off, and keep pushing forward.  It’s not normal to try to make yourself feel good when you just don’t.  Denying our emotions creates inner turmoil.  Through this journey I’ve become more in tune with what I’m actually feeling.  I developed a practice of consciously feeling, becoming more aware of my emotions, and this has opened a new way of living.  I am not grazing my way through the kitchen in search of relief anymore, and that’s changed my life!


THE GAME CHANGER

The Switch
Switch from thinking to actually feeling.  Physically feel what the feeling is doing within your body.  Be fully present with your feelings and notice where they exist physically within you.  Notice the physical sensations within your body when you feel whatever is happening.  I feel fear in my stomach, anger in my jaw, stress in a tightening of my neck and sadness in my chest.  I’m sure it may be different for everyone.  Honestly, I never paid attention to this before.  This is a new discovery for me and I continue to discover more.  Healing occurs when we shift from thinking about the issue happening to feeling what it’s physically doing to us. The key is to stop thinking about the situation that got you into this moment and focus on how you physically feel.

The Shift
When we allow our bodies to fully feel the emotion, they rise up into expression.  That is what emotions need, to be expressed fully.  Once that happens they shift and you feel relief.  Feelings are usually very uncomfortable but when we feel them they change, and often this happens quickly.  Feeling the feelings doesn’t solve the problem but feelings are our pathway to growing and loving.  When we stop feeling we stop growing.  This allows you to stop reacting.  The shift occurs and you are no longer stuck in the prison of that emotion.    

I have heard your prayer and seen your tears I will heal you. 
2 Kings 20:5

I realize this is an ongoing process, and with practice, has become easier to recognize what I’m feeling.  I know when I'm about to go off the deep end and lose it.  This week I came close to the edge but I’ve developed new ways to actually feel, and that’s made all the difference.   I used to not even know what I was truly feeling, just knowing something was wrong. It’s no wonder I was using food as a coping mechanism. Brandon Bays said, “True courage is the willingness to fully experience whatever you are feeling at the moment.  You can attempt to run from your emotions, but eventually they will catch up with you.  They will chase you, haunt you, until finally you give up the chase.”  

Part of having a full life is feeling all of your emotions, the good and the bad, and to allow the emotional pipeline to flow both ways.  Bryant McGill said, “Don’t be harsh or demanding on yourself.  Just experience your feelings and know that your tears are announcing change in your life.”  There’s no crying in baseball, but maybe there should be. 


Results for the week:  - 0.0 lbs lost; Total Lost: 40.4

D.O.W. = 308

Starting weight:  182.0; Current weight: 141.6

Comments

Brenda C said…
Another awesome post Sandy! I’ve always been a cryer so I understand exactly what you are talking about. I’m going to try and really “feel” the feelings next time. Of course now that I’m retired there are fewer of those days! 😊
Unknown said…
Crying is my release valve. I do hold thing in until... Not sure how to feel my feelings. Will some how think on this.

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