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The anxiety you feel for your children or the grief from losing a loved one isn't just pain. It's the tangible evidence, or "receipt," of deep love and purpose. Acknowledging this connection can help in processing these difficult emotions as a feature of a meaningful life, not just a bug.
Grief is not a linear set of stages but an oscillation. People naturally shift between focusing inward on their loss and focusing outward on daily life. This dynamic process allows for both the recalibration of their internal world and continued engagement with external responsibilities.
Trying to eliminate trauma is counterproductive. Instead, reframe its role by acknowledging it as a protective mechanism in your left brain. Thank it for its information, then consciously shift focus to other brain regions to self-soothe and move forward.
Using the analogy of mud statues hiding gold Buddhas, grief is framed not just as loss, but as the essential force accompanying every transformation. It strips away layers of conditioning and external projections, revealing your authentic, intuitive self.
Instead of avoiding emotional pain like longing or grief, treat it as vital information. Pain is the most accurate instrument for understanding what you truly desire, what you fear losing, and what you valued. Attending to pain, rather than fleeing it, is the key to undoing self-deception in relationships and life.
Don't aim to eliminate negative emotions. Instead, reframe them as valuable data. A little anxiety signals the need to prepare for a performance. Anger indicates a personal value has been violated, prompting you to intervene. This view allows you to harness emotions for productive action rather than being controlled by them.
The capacity for profound joy from simple things is intensified by having experienced life's hardships. Grief provides the necessary contrast that transforms tender moments from being merely "nice" into feeling "life-saving" and deeply meaningful.
Anger arises only when something you love has been threatened or hurt. By tracing anger back to the underlying love, you can dissolve the shame and fear associated with the emotion, transforming it into a tool for self-understanding and connection.
Scott Galloway describes a college tour with his son as both his year's highlight and profoundly sad. He frames the experience of watching a child become independent as a complex mix of pride and grief for the past. He captures this emotion with the phrase "grief and anxiety are the receipts for love."
A structured exercise for unpacking grief involves making three lists: 1) the good things you've lost, 2) the bad things you no longer have to tolerate, and 3) the unrealized future hopes and dreams. This provides a complete emotional accounting of the loss.
A growing trend in psychology suggests relabeling emotions like anger as “unpleasant” rather than “negative.” This linguistic shift helps separate the aversive sensation from the emotion's potential long-term benefits or consequences, acknowledging that many difficult feelings have upsides.