[Neurons] 2020 Neurons #66 'TIS THE SEASON TO BE GRUMPY
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Sun Dec 13 23:41:28 EST 2020
From: L. Michael Hall
2020 Neurons #66
December 14, 2020
'TIS THE SEASON TO BE GRUMPY
Normally the holiday season, Christmas, Hanukkah and New Years is a "holly
jolly time of the year." Stores are full of shoppers, restaurants full of
customers, families traveling and gathering, end of the year parties, and on
and on. This year, not so much. With the locked down, the economic turn
down, the number of covid cases, the people hospitalized, the over-reaching
by governments in micro-managing people's lives- this year it is more of a
season to be grumpy, to complain about how things are going. I know, I feel
that urge.
I have felt that urge to complain and to be grumpy more the past few months
than in decades. And it arises from the simplest of things- I'd like to go
out to a restaurant for an evening meal with friends. No, "Closed." Or I'd
like to go to a coffee shop and read. No, "Covid warning, closed by order
of the Governor."
Recently I began to self-model how I experience a grumpy mood, I've noticed
how different it is from frustration or anger. These tend to indicate much
bigger issues and problems. Something blocks me from reaching a goal (e.g.,
an unexpected expense, more paperwork, having to do paperwork all over
again, etc.), and so I feel frustrated. Or if something violates my values
(e.g., rioters burning down businesses, etc.), then I feel anger. It takes
bigger or more significant things to trigger these emotions for me.
But for feeling grumpy, annoyed, and irritated it does not take much. Just
a little inconvenience will do. The mind-set is also different. With the
larger negative emotions, my mind goes to the problem and then to
problem-solving. But with feeling grumpy, my mind goes to what is missing.
I do not focus on a positively stated problem that needs to be addressed, I
focus on what I don't have and what's missing. The first focuses on
something present to deal with, the second focuses on what is not- on a
negation. I can't go to the restaurant, I can't go the gym, I can't meet up
with friends.
The meanings that create frustration are obvious and clear- there's a block.
Something is interfering with my plans. I need to go through, around, over,
under, or sideways to move forward. The meanings that create anger, if it
is healthy and appropriate anger, are also obvious and clear- something is
violating my values. Something significant and important - human dignity,
preciousness of life, the value of X- is threatened or violated.
But with grumpiness, the meanings are not so obvious and clear. What are
the meanings that I'm constructing in my head in order to feel irritated and
grumpy? "I'm not getting my way!" "The world is conspiring against me."
"Nobody is helping me get what I want." Noticing this, it becomes clear
that I'm not clearly defining a problem that I can solve, I'm just
complaining. I'm whining about things outside of my control. I sound like
a 5 year-old fussing and fuming about not getting to play with a certain toy
when there are piles of toys all around him.
Now if NLP is "the study of the structure of the subjective experience" and
we look for the structure of complaining, to effectively complain you need
to begin by mis-matching what you have with what you don't have and then
pessimistically focus on what you don't have. Then step into that
experience so that as you focus more and more on what is missing, you feel
helpless to do anything about it. Your locus of control is on the outside,
it is external to you as you scan the outside world asking the "they"
question, "When are they going to fix this?" "Why don't they do something
about this!"
Wow! That's a loaded package of meta-programs: mis-matching, pessimism,
associated, external reference, etc. It comes from and it reinforces a
state of dis-empowerment. The person is not owning his own powers of
thinking, feeling, speaking, and acting. Nelson Zink wrote "To complain is
to display your inflexibility." (The Structure of Delight, p. 215). Ah yes,
the lack of flexibility! There's a lack of using one's creative
problem-solving to come up with alternatives.
Instead of thinking about how to turn what you consider a liability into an
asset (Neurons #65, Dec. 7), there is a sense of resignation. Instead of a
robust sense of resilience, there is a giving up. To the trip that has
caused a temporary, and usually tiny little, set-back- one stays down
complaining to the high heavens and does not bounce back again.
Now the value of knowing how you and I create our states, emotions, and
moods is that when you know how you create them, you are at choice point and
can create something new and different.
You could look around and match what blessings you do have and then
optimistically let them count.
You can step out of the grumpy feelings and step into more hopeful, loving,
passionate, and courageous feelings. Or you could at least stay neutral.
You could fully own your powers by referring what you think and value and
refuse to play the "world's victim."
You could increase your flexibility by adopting an attitude that there's
lots of options for turning liabilities into assets and set-backs into
resilience.
Actually, this is the season to feel whatever you choose to feel- if you
step up to do some executive thinking and deciding.
[For more see Executive Thinking and Secrets of Personal
Mastery]
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
Executive Director, Neuro-Semantics
P.O. Box 8
Clifton CO. 81520 USA
www.neurosemantics.com
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Humor is a meta-perspective about incongruity, exaggeration, playfulness,
and even absurdity.
For a touch of humor --- see the new book --- HUMOROUS THINKING (2020)
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