6 Ways to Restore Your Energy for the Rest of Your Life
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You may be the type of person who tells yourself that you need to get away in order to rest or that you will rest when you have time. Perhaps you say that when the job or project is done, then you'll rest. Maybe you are even waiting for "the kids to be grown up" before you'll rest. This way of living life, where we are consistently putting off what is essential for us, makes no rational sense at all. Rest is already in our presence and the purpose of this article is to assist you in making a crucial, subtle shift that may enable you to fully experience rest in at least one of its many facets.
There are many ways of looking at what rest actually is.
It is not only a multifaceted word but also, in life, a richly nuanced expression--an attitude that we can bring into our daily lives, no matter what we are doing. There is no need to wait to rest when we can rest right now in the moment or between moments. We don't need to strain to live. As counterintuitive as it may seem in today's culture, for the most part life can be lived in a relaxed, restful way.
As far back as 300 B.C., the philosopher Chuang Tzu observed that when an archer was practicing, he shot with relaxation and skill. When a moderate financial award was placed in front of the archer, he got a little tense, his aim faltered, and he often missed the target. When a large award was offered for his accuracy, he became nervous and worried, with obvious results. This led Chuang Tzu to wryly observe that, "He who looks too hard on the outside gets clumsy on the inside."
In modern times people who play golf find their swing is near perfect when there is no ball to hit. But once a ball is placed on the tee and someone is keeping score, the inexperienced golfer's swing inevitably fails and the ball goes off its intended path. When a golfer has a "drink," he often becomes more relaxed and his game improves. So even though a specific feat can be improved by artificial means, it is at the expense of our being fully present and reduces our ability to respond to other circumstances. Imagine how our performance in everyday life would improve if we could learn to find rest and relaxation from within ourselves.
The question is, "How could we relax in the process of living?" or, "How can we have rest in our daily lives? How do we live for the rest of our lives?"
Here are six resting points or techniques that can assist us in finding rest and relaxation, peace, tranquility, and restoration, within ourselves and within the great Self that embraces and holds us all.
Try one and you're on your way to the rest of your life.
6 Ways to Restore Your Energy - Resting Points
1. The Breath - Following the rise and fall of your breath can bring you to a peaceful and calm place and restore your energy. It brings you present. Allow your breath all the way into your belly to reduce stress. The key to natural and full breathing is in the exhalation--the letting go. However, don't force anything.
2. The Nap - It is very underutilized in our culture. Twenty minutes is ideal but even a five-minute nap can be very restorative. Don't go more than 20 minutes or you may feel groggy. If you only have a minute, try this. Hold some keys in your hands and bend forward in your chair with your lower arms resting on your thighs. As you nod off, the keys will drop and wake you up. Even in that minute, you will feel a little more refreshed. The point here is that taking a little time for yourself for rest, prayer, meditation, or spiritual exercises, can profoundly affect the quality of your day.
3. The Pause-Learning to pause is a great tool to have up your sleeve. Its value is in bringing you consciously present. You can pause a moment in your daily routine and say, "I am present. I am here, now." Then allow yourself to be with whatever is revealed. A further refinement is to bring your attention to the pause between exhaling and inhaling. Even doing this once will give you a moment of rest and restoration.
4. Silence - The word "listen" contains the same letters as the word "silent."-Alfred Brendelr
Choose to be present and alert and to listen past the inner conversations of the mind, listen past the sounds of the world, and just listen to the silence. Listen attentively to whatever comes forward out of the silence. If things start to distract and disrupt you, bring your focus back to the silence. When you practice bringing your presence into the silence, you will experience a knowing and a wisdom that will start flowing within you. It will usually bring you to a state of peace, calm, and clarity.
5. Doing Nothing - Can be a great way to interrupt the pattern of habitual doing. It is akin to entering a state of observation, where you perceive things clearly just for what they are. An analogy is watching boats going out to sea. You observe them as they pass you. Then you observe the next one. If you gawk, think about how you would like to be in a boat, etc., you have moved out of observation. Observation is only about what is, not what you know or don't know about a situation. The power that comes from that, internally, is tremendous. It's an active place of neutrality. The process of observing what is, is the process that releases and restores us.
6. Resting in Yourself - Meditation. "To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders." Lao-Tzu. When you haven't developed an intimate relationship with life, with yourself, you'll tend to look toward having sex or acquiring more money, or to any attractive distraction to fill the emptiness inside. To fill yourself, you have to be prepared to spend time alone-quality time with yourself-not with a good book, not watching television, art or with music. Although those have their place, learn to be quiet with your own inner self. Any time you can bring your focus onto one thing--a flower, a sacred word, a scene in nature--you are meditating. The simplest way to meditate is to observe the rising and falling of your breath.
Paul Kaye, D.S.S. has co-authored with John-Roger, D.S.S. The Rest of Your Lifeavailable on Amazon.com and in bookstores.
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About the Author
Born in London in 1950, Dr. Paul Kaye has been a dedicated student of spiritual thought and practices since his yourth. Drawing from a Jewish upbringing and a broad education in religious studies, including schooling at the Holy Trinity church of England School, his explorations hae taken him into Yoga, Zen, and the martial arts. Dr. Kaye's interests include the philosophies of such poets and teachers as Lao Tzu, Rumi and Kabir and the esoteric teachings of Jesus Christ.
For over 30 years Dr. Kaye has studied with renowned educator and author, John-Roger, founder of the church of the Movement of Spiritual Inner Awareness (MSIA), an ecumenical, non-denominational church that teaches Soul Transcendence. He currently serves as President of MSIA, and is an ordained minister with a doctorate in spiritual science. Dr. Kaye has edited several of John-Roger's books, and co-authored with John-Roger, Momentum: Letting Love Lead, What's It Like Being You? and their latest and third book in the trilogy, The Rest of Your Life.
Dr. Kaye has designed workshops on the practical application of spiritual principles and presented them worldwide. Paul is a unique and remarkable presence. He brings an abundance of lightheartedness and his wry British wit into whatever he does, and his presentations are inspiring, practical, and filled with a wonderful sense of humor and wisdom.
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