Category Archives: Random

Slow down the racing mind

I’ve noticed in the last few days my brain is racing between a huge range of thoughts.

I haven’t done much differently in terms of daily routines. Not drinking more coffee than normal, and drinking less alcohol than I have in recent times.

The ability to focus on achieving one task without three others popping into my head has escaped me.

I’m taking note of the things that pop up in a notebook. It’s all mundane, normal stuff. Nothing groundbreaking.

Maybe it’s a sign that I have a lot of things to do in life in general (this is a long list), or maybe my brain has started to fire in different ways.

It could be the start of some new pathways, too. There could be a shiny thought among the mundane ones somewhere on this journey.

Keeping myself in listening mode right now is important. There will be a house move in the near future, and some travel towards the end of the year. A change in seasons is upon us as the sun comes out and the temparature rises.

Time to tune in and listen to what’s going on in my brain.

There has been a lot of upheaval in the last few weeks. This could be my brain’s way of resetting.

Panic and fear

The unknowns of the future are with us no matter what is going on in our lives.

Even if things are rolling along with no issues, there could be a curve in the road ahead.

When things are particularly bad, when the road is blocked in either direction and you’re stuck, the dark seems to be a bit darker. Small tasks are hard. Everything seems like an effort.

I’m finding myself short of breath in public spaces. This is a new thing. Not something I’ve ever had before.

There is a lot of fear inside me about the future. I’m being forced into change that I hadn’t planned. I don’t have any control over it.

Not much can be done but knuckle down and focus on myself.

I’m being told that these feelings will pass. That things will change eventually with the passing of time.

The things I say to other people going through a hard time, like ‘hang in there’, are all coming back to me.

I know they’re right, but I don’t believe it in my current state of mind.

This is life and its constant challenges.

What’s coming up around the next corner?

Quote from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

“So the thing to do when working on a motorcycle, as is in any other task, is to cultivate the peace of mind which does not separate one’s self from one’s surroundings. When that is done successfully, then everything else follows naturally. Peace of mind produces right values, right values produce right thoughts. Right thoughts produce right actions and right actions produce work which will be a material reflection for others to see of the serenity at the centre of it all.”

Robert M. Pirsig

Learnings from the last few days

There is so much to think about.

Sadness at the stage of life I’m now at. The future I’m now facing.

Contrast that with a view of opportunity, clarity. A blank page.

Words to be written.

Answers that I don’t have to questions I haven’t even considered yet.

Come down to earth, away from the torment in my head. Take each day one at a time.

Stand up and face the new reality.

Don’t shy away, curl into a ball.

Stand up. Feel the strength inside me.

Those who are against me will fuel me to be better.

Stay curious. Seek out the new.

The past has gone, however sad that feels sometimes.

Move forwards.








Sadness and differences

I had some terrible news yesterday. A large part of my life is gone.

Basic life fundamentals will now change. There will be anger, fighting, accusations, and more. I’ve worked on myself to keep my life on track and live to higher standards but it hasn’t worked out.

I’m devastated. Where once there was love, care and respect, there’s now rejection and distrust. Hurtful words are being thrown around.

Some people are built to last. They are mentally strong and resilient in the face of difficult times. They create plans and act on them.

They still have high levels of sensitivity. Anxiety plagues them but they do their best. Their life has meaning.

Others come from another place. They lack purpose and the desire to dig deep. Their ego overtakes their soul. They won’t do what it takes to change and instead run for the hills.

They’re desparate to keep up appearances. They look for the safe, the shallow. They forget the things that matter. There’s always someone else to blame.

I know where I’m at on this line from A to B. I can live with that in the face of what’s ahead for me.

As for the others? That’s no longer on my plate and that makes me sad.

The politics is a sideshow

So Trump and the republicans regain power.

Lots to ponder – and not all of it upbeat.

In the face of such a result for the world, it’s important to do what YOU need to do.

How can you help your community? Support those in your life who may be struggling, before or after the election.

What happened yesterday doesn’t have to change your ways. You have not changed fundamentally as a person because of this result.

You still have to do your thing, whatever that is.

Trump and his goons will lick their lips and make life a bit more tricky for those who oppose them.

But it’s worth remembering that the effect this will have on most of us right now is only a feeling.

Take action based on that feeling. Use it as a force for good.

If ever there was a time to prepare your own plans for the next few years, this is it.

Reset, set goals, and take action.

Changing the way we talk to ourselves

Physical self harm, at its most graphic and shocking, involves cutting the skin. Biting fingernails and the skin on the fingers until they bleed or deliver constant pain is a lot more subtle, but it’s the same thing. I do this latter version all the time.

(I wasn’t aware that it’s also a version of self harm, and came from the same ‘family’ of bad stuff we do to ourselves, until a few years back when I talked to a therapist about it. I’ve done it for as long as I can remember, all the way back to childhood.)

Mental self harm could be the way we talk to ourselves in light of whatever choices we make. It could be based on the way we spend our time, or the judgments we make about our behaviour in any circumstances.

Both types can benefit from treatment. Maybe the mental version leads to the physical version. (Of this, I’m not certain, but I suspect there is a strong link.)

They’re definitely both worth working on to remove them from your life.

I see the link between thoughts and actions. Everything starts with our thoughts – the good and the bad. Making an effort to use what we say to ourselves, how we talk to ourselves, as a force for good can be transformational.

Some simple daily reminders of this – triggers for changing the response to something bad, for example – are something I’ve been working on. They make a huge difference.

The plasticity of our brains – neuroplasticity – means that we can change the way we think, but it goes on the ‘too hard’ pile most of the time.

I used to see my brain as a hard drive that worked one way, and was impossible to alter. But this isn’t the case.

The effort to make these changes is never wasted. The consequences of a life spent suffering from self-inflicted pain are not what I want for the rest of my life.

Look into their eyes

Ran past a guy this morning who wanted to race. It only lasted a couple of hundred metres, but that was plenty. It got my heart racing. He wouldn’t let me pass without coming back at me, and credit to him for that. I’d be the same.

The pedal was pushed to the floor but I searched for another gear. After a few seconds of worry – that’s gonna hurt, have you got it in you? – I hit the red button as he tried to overtake again. It was all or nothing with about 600 metres left to the finish.

I looked around after 10-15 seconds to see if he was hanging on. All I could see were his eyes fixated on the ground. His posture was broken. His cadence wasn’t as steady or rapid as it had been. I knew he was done.

The case for making notes

I started writing in early 2020 in simple lined notebooks as a way of straightening out my thinking. By June of that year I had started my fifth book.

There was a lot coming out. I was 48 years old. Life was a struggle. I couldn’t seem to make anything stick.

I had been working on my own small business for about 4 years. It was making money and a small team was supporting me but there was little satisfaction coming from the work I was putting in.

The writing stopped me in my tracks.

From my writing, I could see that things had to change. I could map out ideas for the future, make sense of the lack of fun, the lack of progress, and the breakdown in my self-belief.

It did a couple of important things that I needed at the time – it put it all there in front of me, and it set me on a new path.

One of the by-products of continually writing these notes has been the ability to revisit them. The progress I’ve made since those dark days is clear.

I took time to listen to what was going on inside myself, and being real about my attitude to life. I hadn’t done this before, and I’m glad I began to. It’s unlocked much more than I thought it would.

The words I wrote are hard to look back on but they needed to be said. I had to have this kind of talk to myself, being honest about where my life was at.

It all came out on the page once I committed to the process, the practice, of writing things out.

When I think back on how powerful a tool it has been (and still is), it’s up there with the best things that I’ve ever done for myself.

Choose your friends with care

Was at a cafe this morning with my wife and the dog. A guy who works in the same industry as my wife showed up, and he began talking about their ‘shared’ challenges.

He complained of a lack of time, about having too many things to do, and that he doesn’t see an end to this in his business. He was complaining about how busy he is while also mentioning his upcoming three week vacation (how fabulous?!) that was stressing him out…

I asked if he has a target to aim for, an end point for his business, and he shrugged his shoulders to express that he doesn’t, while looking at my wife to join him in agreeing this is always the way in their world.

It was a sixty second encounter but it spoke volumes.

Unless he begins to think differently, it will never end. His first world problems were not uncommon to ‘busy professionals’, but his level of relative misery was crying out for company. I’m sure he finds it often.

Surround yourself with people who hold you to a plan. Who lift you rather than drain you. Who you aspire to learn from and spend time with. Who help you get the best out of your life each day and cheerlead for you constantly.

The rest? Move on from them. Don’t get dragged down to their level.

They’re looking for people who agree with their outlook on life. People who validate their way of operating and share the same perceived challenges as they do.

If you’re on a down day, maybe you’ll feel like agreeing with them. Assume this isn’t going to work out well for you over the long term.

You’ll be keeping misery company soon enough, like two alcoholics propping up a bar, and it’ll become harder and harder to show it the door.

Nothing beats calm

NSW coastline

Yoga, meditation, or breathwork maybe?

It could be yin in the evenings, yang in the mornings.

Time to read. Quiet, alone time.

Writing time first thing in the morning or last thing at night.

It all matters.

It all adds to your spiritual bank balance (rather than taking away from it).

Nothing beats it.

We were always ok

Before we knew who we were, or questioned anything about our life, we were good enough.

We were always good enough.

The things we learn as we get older, and the things we are told are wrong with us, blind us from this simple fact.

We were always ok.

Don’t let the stuff that comes up in our life take away what we were as children.

That innocence. That thrill for the new. The energy and excitement. The smiles.

When bad things happen, or you doubt yourself, remember this.

Let no one take this away from you.

Self belief: overcoming mental obstacles by making choices

One day we see the world as rosy, the next it can be nothing but problems.

We can write ourselves off, with our brains giving us no chance to succeed.

It takes self belief. The ability to decide and act is all on us.

The ability to override our brains is also on us.

It’s a choice.

All we are is the product of our choices.

Write on your blog

No one cares if it’s hard. It doesn’t matter. Just get it done.

What’s the point in having one if you don’t use it? It’s like having a bike and never riding it.

If you’re not adding to it, it just sits there. Everyone can see it’s empty.

Deep down, you know you should be writing. It bugs you. It’ll eat away at you.

You’ve got two choices: keep it and use it, or kill it.

One or the other.

The reader’s dilemma

I picked up a book on Sunday that had been on the shelf for a few months. I had started to read it but something else took my attention. I put it to one side.

I couldn’t remember much about the contents. It was a book about writing by a writer so there wasn’t much of a mystery to solve.

I read it for a few minutes on Sunday night. It wasn’t pulling me in. I picked up again last night for another go, but the reason I put it down instantly became clear.

I didn’t like it. I couldn’t get on with it. The way it’s written, the types of examples the author uses (all about himself), even the font size left me feeling empty.

Something I find time to do because I enjoy it wasn’t enjoyable.

The minute this happens, it’s worth stepping away. The book will be removed from the shelves, taken to the charity store. I don’t want it anywhere in the house.

Life’s to short to spend time doing something for fun, like reading, using your precious free time, and not enjoying it.

Put it down, find another book from the pile, and take a different journey.

Empower Yourself: From Scrolling to Blogging and Journaling

Nobody changed the world while scrolling.

Ever used the ‘Screen Time’ app on the iPhone (see above)? (Sure there’s gotta be one on Android phones, too). It’s scary to come face to face with the real number, knowing how much content you’ve watched.

Add on the odd video on other devices. The videos in your lunch hour on the work laptop, or something your friend shows you on their phone. This stuff adds up to some massive numbers.

The time taken to produce something is far, far less than the time we spend consuming.

Why not start your own blog, or write something in your journal, or start a journal or blog if you don’t have one right now?

It has to be better for you than watching more of other people’s stuff for hours on end.

Here’s a list to start you off with what to write about:

  • Day to day happenings
  • A quote from a book you’ve read
  • Three things you need to get done
  • Things you’re thankful for
  • A progress review on a project of some kind
  • New project plans
  • An idea
  • Something funny you heard
  • What you’re reading, watching, listening to right now

Obviously this is only the tip of the iceberg. Use it to get started and see what your own brain can come up with.