How To Escape Inner Turmoil

I sometimes hear this from some of my real estate students: “I have so much turmoil”, or “I’m so stressed” or “I can’t fit the pieces together”.

It takes some students a little more time than others to get their investing business where it needs to be. But if you follow the path step by step that has been set for you, you can make it happen. In the meantime, if you are experiencing inner turmoil in other areas, I hope this article helps.

If the world seems to be in turmoil, this is nothing new. The world “out there” has always been a source of trouble and never the source of peace. The real issue is how to relate when your world is in turmoil.

What Is Inner Turmoil?

The following is a direct quote from Deepak Chopra, M.D. since he describes very well how to overcome it.
Turmoil is a broad term. There are many ways that people can feel worried, agitated, anxious, and depressed. But if you look inward, certain common elements are generally present.

• Troubling thoughts keep repeating themselves.
• It feels as if these thoughts are in control.
• As a result of feeling out of control, you experience an element of fear.
• The inner agitation feeds off itself the more you dwell on it.
• Finding a way out of turmoil seems impossible, which leads to spiraling helplessness.

If you stop for a moment and reflect upon anything that has deeply worried you or made you feel depressed, especially if that is happening right now, you will notice these mental qualities. To escape your inner turmoil, each of them must be reversed.

• Troubling thoughts must be put to rest.
• You need to feel that you are not the victim of your mind and emotions.
• The element of fear must be released.
• Inner agitation needs to decrease day by day.
• You must regain enough power to feel in control once more.

How to Escape Inner Turmoil
How can you achieve these things when they seem far out of reach? To begin with, realize that all the elements of mental turmoil disappear naturally and spontaneously when the mind is relieved of stress. It’s normal to feel worried in certain circumstances, such as when you are waiting for medical tests to come back. When they do and the results are good, your mind naturally returns to a non-anxious state.

This simple fact gives us a valuable clue. It tells us that the mind doesn’t need to be forced to escape turmoil. Mental calm and balance is your default state. Inner agitation of any kind is self-correcting. So the best strategy for escaping inner turmoil is to support what your mind wants to do in the first place, which is to be calm. So what kind of support can you offer?

Here are some suggestions, rooted in the world’s wisdom traditions:

1. Stop feeding your inner turmoil. Reduce external stresses. Stay away from disturbing conversations and people who dwell on bad news and worst-case scenarios.

2. Limit your exposure to 24-7 news cycle on TV and the Internet. There is no need to keep fueling the stress response.

3. Experience the calmness of being centered in yourself. The best way to do this is through regular meditation.

4. When you notice that you are in a worried state, take a few minutes by yourself in a quiet place and become centered again. Taking deep breaths with eyes closed tends to be very effective.

5. Exchange negative thoughts for positive ones as soon as they occur.

The last point is necessary because most of your negative thoughts are born of habit and old conditioning. They keep returning if you don’t replace them, and this return repeats the past over and over. Replacing negative thoughts as soon as they occur requires commitment; it’s much easier simply to let inertia take over. But if you want to stop feeling victimized by your thoughts, you must stop them from roaming freely through your mind.

How to Practice Positive Thinking

Here are the kinds of positive thoughts that can free you from old conditioning.

• If you start worrying, think instead, “I have never improved a situation by worrying about it.”

• If you experience signs of fear or anxiety, think instead, “Fear is just a reaction. It doesn’t really tell me anything I need to know.”

• If you are visited by an old memory that brings a bad feeling, think instead, “I am not that person anymore.”

• If you feel stressed by a situation, think instead, “I am not a victim; I can change my response to this situation.”
These are only examples, but the general principle is always the same: Disinvite unwelcome thoughts. Tell them they are not needed and can go. If you keep this tactic in mind, you will experience a personal shift. Rather than encouraging and tolerating negative thoughts and feelings, you will be encouraging mental balance to return. The world’s wisdom traditions teach you not to fight against your mind—a battle that can never be won—but to seek the mind’s natural ability to self-correct.

Above you have Deepak Chopra, M.D.’s secret of escaping inner turmoil.

For repeated inner turmoil, the treatment I personally recommend over 3 months to have a profound impact to create a more positive self-concept is as follows:

Step 1: Incorporate at least 5 servings a week of omega 3 and 6 rich foods. These foods have been shown to be statistically significant in lowering levels of depression.

Step 2: Get 30 minutes of physical exercise at least 5 times a week. Exercise is known to release chemicals in the body that combat unhappiness, as well as boost energy levels.

Step 3: Do 2 mental psychological exercises every day. Exercise one is make a gratitude list. Rewrite it every morning, adding a couple new items daily. Exercise two is an accomplishment list. Make a list of as many accomplishments you can remember achieving and a list of some you yet wish to achieve, every evening.

Step 4: Every time you catch yourself making a negative statement (either intrinsically or extrinsically), immediately make 2 positive statements to counteract it.

Step 5: Make a one-time goal list, and subsequent weekly goal lists. The one-time list includes your long term and short term goals. The weekly list contains immediate ancillary goals that are track-able and measurable that work toward your short term goals. The steps for the ancillary goals must be very specific so as to track progress.

Look for small ways every day to make yourself happier, nurturing yourself first, so you can also then give to others.

6 Replies

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  1. Barbara
    Great article thanks for sharing

  2. Katrinka Spiro says:

    Very good advice! It is all so true. Turning off all media or electronical devices every day for a while, sit and just be and listen to silence is so helpful.

  3. Lyn. B. says:

    I really wish it were that easy!

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