I bumped into someone the other day whom I hadn't seen in over a year. He came from a pretty troubled past, yet here he was working at his job and had his life together. This guy knew struggles, much of his life had been a series of struggles that would crush most people. Yet, I stood before him and took in his smile. I think there is no better gift in human existence, the warmth of an authentic smile that comes from hard life experience. That guy earned his expression, and I doubt few could understand it. When you scratch you way out of true despair, every day onward is a good day.
In this day of digital networks, I often advocate digital minimalism to anyone who will listen. Cast away the social networks and texting (best visualized chanting a monk robe). By raising your level of personal interaction with people, you are rewarded in ways that extend beyond notions of friendship of acquaintance. I can't express how important community is in living a healthy life. Having a support network helps a person grow. But it also makes a person within the network be both a student and a teacher. Helping others exercises our altruistic and keeps our egos in check. We learn from both ourselves and from others.
The personal reflections of Stacy Mizrahi, finding freedom from a life of anxiety and depression
Monday, October 14, 2019
Sunday, September 15, 2019
Intentionality
Live with Intentions. Did I intend to be in the middle of this river? (Yes!) |
In my writings, I
tend to stress many organizational related subjects, such as goal
setting, mindfulness and planning. There is a common umbrella topic
that all these things have: Intentonality. I think
intentional behavior is perhaps the one thing you should reflect on
the most if your struggling with difficult feelings This has its
roots in the nature of habit forming. Habit forming develops in a
separate area of the brain than our other cognitive functions, so
when I’m sure my autonomous behaviors are driving me to feeling
like Nietzschian trope, I immediately reflect on my current state and
unpack my mindfulness.
Everything that
makes up your ability think and act, the so called “executive
thinking” , sits at the front of your skull while the habit forming
behaviors behaviors are stored in your so-called lizard brain(its
actually the Stratium which sits above it). These brain functions
work hand-in-hand, meaning that your executive reasoning takes into
account your primal thoughts (pain, pleasure, habits and routines)
before making decisions. If you don't exercise critical thought, you
might be prone to being in auto pilot. Ever drive out of your house
to all of the sudden arrive at your destination without any memory of
the trip there? Routines are like that. The reason routines are so
pragmatic in sports is because it stops that few milliseconds of
executive functioning that might slow down performance. That so
called muscle memory is really your lizard brain taking the wheel.
So we can
acknowledge that this autonomous behavior can have good and bad
outcomes. It's great if you are an athlete training for an event.
It's bad if you are trying to break a harmful habit or negative emotions. I've found the
best tactic to be that of intentionality. With intentionality, you
wrestle your brain's executive control back into the drivers seat.
You can't allow habit and cravings to steer the ship. Intentionality
has to happen the second you wake up.
When your eyes blink
open from the pillow, you should start with something intentional. I
start with a positive affirmation that has nothing to do with the
addiction.
"I'm going to
paint the house and it's gonna rock"
or if you have
something going on at work
"I'm going to
finish the project this week"
The affirmation is
the start of the intentional thinking. It doesn't end at the
beginning.
For me, my morning
starts with coffee, talking to my daughter before she goes to school,
and then planning my day. I sit with two day planners, one day
planner has a to-do list where I brainstorm all the things that need
to get done. Yoga, meditation, 10-12 work items, paying bills and so
on. With the second day planner, I write down the times I will
accomplish these tasks.
It seems pretty
straight forward, right? I’m always monitoring my actions. I'm not
allowing idle time. I'm not allowing the lizard brain to take the
wheel. I set boundaries on myself and won’t put triggers in my path
to be tripped. This isn’t avoidance, rather it’s making sure my
goals are in line with the actions I’m performing. If my goal is
getting the grocery shopping done, I shouldn’t be watching Hell’s
Kitchen on the living room couch.
If I don't have a
good reason for doing something, I won’t do it. And I always vet
my reasoning before taking action. Sometimes my habits can sucker me
in to poor decision making, especially with all the marketing tossed
into our lives. . My advice is to start your days with
intentionlality and find ways of keeping intentional behaviors
throughout our day. Mantras are a good start, and task management and
boundary setting are also good intentional behaviors to help stay on
track.
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Ego Death and the Hill We Die On.
That one hit me pretty hard. I can't tell you how many times I've died on some hill defending some abstract idea that, in retrospect, I wasn't really attached to. Sometimes I do feel passionate about defending ideas, which is something I should be even more introspective about. There is this fear of being wrong, I've being proven wrong. That is my ego screaming for it's self worth to be acknowledged. I've had some time now to work on myself, to watch my mind as it stakes out hills to die on. I've gotten much better at doing the "ego check", to make sure my thoughts aren't really racing to fight because I've conditioned my ego to be am unyielding rock for ships to crash on. That power of habit has been cranking for decades, making sure I assert myself or risk being irrelevant.Fear seems to have many causes. Fear of loss, fear of failure, fear of being hurt, and so on, but ultimately all fear is the ego's fear of death, of annihilation. To the ego, death is always just around the corner. In this mind-identified state, fear of death affects every aspect of your life.
The treatment for such a sickness is evident. I slow down. I shut up. I listen. I let other people talk. I stop inserting myself into the middle. I let Ego death occur. I take off the hat of "rebel" and be at peace.
Unfortunately, there is this lingering side effect. I now see ego of others screaming back. I'm aware of their fears pouring from their mouths. It's as if I walked into a funhouse to admire the hideousness of my ego's reflection in different a thousand warped varieties. Perhaps it isn't so bad, maybe this new found perspective is to serve a reminder of the self I could not see. If I am forced to reflect on the screaming egos around me, perhaps it keeps me ever vigilant to monitor my fears. In ego death, there is no finality, only transcendence.
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Nocturnal Panic Attack
I had "waking" anxiety episode the other night. Long story short, I used all the tools I've been collecting to jump on it and avoid having an attack. It's a very empowering feeling to see all the hard work pay off Mediation,yoga and breathing exercises helped me stay focused and not get lost in my feelings. Also, word of advice to those who want to avoid such things, don't eat salty food the night before a stress-educing day. I need to get better at my dietary habits as a tactic to mitigate stress. A blog post for another day!
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Stacy Mizrahi Fights Anxiety with Meditation |
Thursday, August 8, 2019
Distraction Doesn't Fix Anxiety and Depression
One disadvantage to having ADHD, anxiety and depression living in the same skull is that you tend to let distractions enter your life and use it as a coping mechanism to deal with daily issues. Some might think distractions are the way to go. Heck, one might argue that Cognitive Behavior Therapy is a giant distraction exercise to get your mind out of the fog. But after getting a wide variety of therapeutic approaches, I can say that distraction never deals with the root of the problem. That's not to say that distraction doesn't have its merits, it just means that distraction won't be the pathway to long term solutions.
See that big smile? Yeah, I may of been happy at that moment, but I was a big wreck. My work with the alumni was a giant excuse to go out, drink beer and socialize. Sounds like fun, right? Unfortunately, the alcohol consumption was fueling my depressive episodes, which I wasn't putting together at the time. I would drink to help relax after anxiety spent the day kicking my ass. Then I would obsessively read about football and drink to lower my anxiety about the results of the game. I spend most of my football watching shouting and screaming at the TV (or at the stadium if I was attending a game). So my distraction was both anxiety inducing and would eventually induce depression. Once in a depressive state, I could be in it for days. Does this sound like fun? Hell no! And week after week I would subject myself to this, trying to convince myself that I was living a rich life doing things that no one else did.
Here I am with Jimbo Fisher the year he took control of the football team. Great photo op, the coach and some guy that's two drinks away from jumping off a building. The distractions kept me alive, I guess. But I never got anything close to recovery in these days. I was actually digging my depression into a Grand Canyon sized issue. I wish I had one of those time traveling DeLoreans to go tell that guy to get some help (me and the coach). I can't see happiness in any of these photos because I know the pain behind the smile. Too proud and pigheaded to get help, and too distracted to put in any effort. If there is any lesson here, its to those currently struggling: don't find solace in distraction.
This is a picture of me almost 10 years ago when I was president of the Seminole Club of Baltimore.
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Stacy Mizrahi at FSU Leadership Conference 2009 |
Stacy Mizrahi and Jimbo Fisher |
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
ASCI is Awesome
We did our first Deep Creek summer vacation, and I have to say that it was pretty darn awesome. But I wanted to focus on ASCI, which stands for Adventure Sports Center International. We have done a good deal of white water rafting in the past, so when I saw that there was an artificial water course - my first thought was, "why?"
Why go to a man made course when there are so many great white water options nearby? The answer is because it's always good. On most rivers you are rolling the dice on any given day depending on the conditions. The ASCI experience is always consistent : non stop white water.
I was surprised at how much fun I had on this course. If you have ever been to Wisp resort during the winter time, you've probably noticed that big empty flat area surrounded by bolder at the top of the mountain. Believe it or not, that is a summertime water course. If you go, you'll get about 2 hours of run time, I think we had about six or seven runs through the entire course. They have guides at various areas to make sure everyone is safe, and my 52 lb daughter had no problems staying in the boat (see picture). If you are staying at Deep Creek, the advantage of this is that you can get the white water experience without having to commit your entire day. After our 2 hour run, we drove back down to the lake and had some lunch, then went down to the beach at the state park. It's the perfect family getaway without having to go all that far away!
Why go to a man made course when there are so many great white water options nearby? The answer is because it's always good. On most rivers you are rolling the dice on any given day depending on the conditions. The ASCI experience is always consistent : non stop white water.
Our Group Paddling ASCI at Deep Creek |
Thursday, July 18, 2019
The PHP Resolution
Last month I was dealing some PHP issues on my recent project and I finally came to an understand of what was going on. In short, I would run a SQL and have PHP return the value for the result, only to find out that the result wasn't what I expected. The gaff I made reflects on my lack of understanding of comparison operators. Having lived in an Oracle SQL world for nearly two decades, I used SQL to troubleshoot other peoples data issue by writing code to tease out problems. When I needed to make an exact math on data, I would use the equals sign to get that record I was looking for. However, in PHP land, using the equals sign is how you SET a variable. If you want to find a match for something, you use two equal signs (==).
The transition in compassion operators between SQL to PHP can be nerve racking as you have to switch "logic" hats while writing code in the same damn file. The SQL and the PHP sit side by side, yet the use of the operator has different meaning. You live, you learn!
else if ($variable == '3')In the above situation, the double equal translates to ," If the variable is equal to 3, then its true"
The transition in compassion operators between SQL to PHP can be nerve racking as you have to switch "logic" hats while writing code in the same damn file. The SQL and the PHP sit side by side, yet the use of the operator has different meaning. You live, you learn!
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