Daniel Davis, LMFT

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We Psychology: Healthy Relationships

November 10, 2015 By Daniel Davis, LMFT Leave a Comment

Darkness on the Edge of Town by Bruce Springsteen

Everybody’s got a secret, Sonny
Something they just can’t face
Some folks spend their whole lives trying to keep it
They carry it with them ev’ry step that they take
Till one day they just cut it loose
Cut it loose or let it drag them down
Where no one asks too many questions
Or looks too long in your face
In the darkness on the edge of town

I grew up in the Santa Clara Valley, what is now called “Silicon Valley” – home to the businesses of Google, Apple Computer, and Facebook. When I was born, I was full of joy. I think babies are whole and feel connected to all of life – everyone and everything. I took the criticism of my parents, teachers, coaches, siblings, and friends and began to criticize myself. I tried to be good. I blamed myself for many things that  had nothing to do with me – my dad’s temper or my teacher’s angry outbursts. In turn, I learned to judge others, and I felt better by comparing myself to others. At least, I was a better football player than him. In my family, school, and later work, I came to realize as an adult that our American culture was one based on harsh judgments and conditional love.

Our culture has a strong belief in independence – doing it yourself. This strength of character has its faults. Due to this rugged individualism, we are lonely and isolated in many ways. It is true that we may connect with our iPhones or other computers, yet many of us live in communities where we are strangers to our classmates, neighbors, family, coworkers and – even – ourselves.

Here is a list of what people are wanting socially in their families, neighborhoods, and workplaces (from a North American research study):

  1. Having neighbors with whom you can interact freely and comfortably.
  2. Being able to share deepest feelings with someone.
  3. Having friends who value the same things in life.
  4. Being in a group where you can discuss your most basic beliefs and values.
  5. Having friends you can always count on when you are in a jam.
  6. Having people in your life who are never critical of you.
  7. Being part of a group that helps you grow spiritually.
  8. Having cooperation rather than competition with people at work.
  9. Having people you can turn to when you feel depressed or lonely.
  10. Know more people in your community.

One doctor found out about this in his research. Dean Ornish, MD, wrote: “At first, I viewed our support groups simply as a way to motivate patients to stay on the other aspects of the [heart-disease prevention] program that I considered more important: the diet, exercise, stress management training, stop smoking, and so on. Over time, I began to realize that the group support itself was one of the most powerful interventions, as it addressed a more fundamental cause of why we feel stressed and, in turn, why we get illnesses like heart disease: the perception of isolation.”

There are reasons why we separate ourselves from others. The answer lies in this research. People attending a community building workshop were asked to rate significant barriers to connecting with others:

  1. Hard to find people you can trust (before workshop-65%, after-32%)
  2. Fear of being judged (61%, 13%)
  3. Fear of being rejected (55%, 10%)
  4. Feeling misunderstood (52%, 16%)
  5. Unable to lower my defenses – social mask (48%, 0%)
  6. Too shy (42%, 21%)
  7. Fear of appearing weak (35%, 7%)
  8. No opportunity to meet people interested in connecting (30%, 16%)

How do we find community? One answer can be found in the research of Daniel Siegel. When we are mindful, we are more able to change in order to face the challenges of every day. Being mindful is just being aware of what is going on around us as well as being aware of our thoughts, feelings, and body sensations. When we are mindful, we are not overwhelmed with worry about the future – the test tomorrow or the baseball game next week. We live in the present and our mind and heart is liberated from much worry and emotional suffering.

When we are mindful, we are paying attention to the unfolding of possibilities in every moment. Attunement is how we focus our attention on others and perceive their communication at all levels – the sad words they chose, their eyes shamefully looking downward, or the fearful look on their face. I need to take these and other signals from the other person inside my mind and be aware of them to be attuned to this other person to whom I am listening. I can think someone is angry at me, because they look mad. If I ask my friend, “Are you upset with me?”

My friend may say: “Am I mad at you? No way. It is Bob who I am so angry with!”

Now, I am getting more attuned to my friend. I understand what is going on inside her. I need to carefully set aside my assumptions about what someone is thinking or feeling to see and hear clearly what they are really feeling and thinking.

When I am present, I am open to others and the wisest parts of myself. When I attune to others, I work to become aware of what the other person is thinking or feeling. At a wedding, they often say referring to the couple: “Two shall become one.”  Resonance is when I connect with another person in a special way.

Resonance is when we both attune to each other and we are changed by the thoughts and feelings of each other. Daniel Siegel writes: “When such resonance is enacted with positive regard, a deep feeling of coherence emerges with the subjective sensation of harmony … Two literally become linked as one. The whole is larger than the sum of the individual parts.”

The word used for this is synergy. This is a relationship between people or things who rise to a new level, because of the quality of the relationship. Groups can be high in synergy or low in synergy.  David Goff writes: “Synergy, therefore, is a way of describing the qualities in a relationship (that produce the likelihood of a greater or lesser whole). A good example of this difference is one that most people have experienced. Some groups generate positive energy, the way members interact makes the group smarter than any member would be alone would be. Conversely, the way members interact can create a negative synergy, which makes the IQ of the group lower than any given member.”

In 1978, I went to work at the Rustler Steak House in San Jose, California, USA. I was fifteen years old and worked with a group of employees who were around my age. We spent a lot of time together away from work doing the things that teenagers often like to do: playing football and baseball, going to the beach, going to movies, and going to parties. I loved spending time with my friends from work. Our connection with each other changed the way we worked together. The quality of our relationships improved as a result. The performance scores of our restaurant dramatically improved when we were evaluated by the area manager.

Food is something I love. We can find synergy in delicious food. Recipes, which often combine the same ingredients in different proportions, or add or delete certain ingredients for different effects. When I cook spaghetti sauce, I use many individual ingredients: tomato sauce, basil, sausage, oregano, mushrooms, onions, thyme, and peppers. If I were to eat a raw onion by itself it would be an unpleasant experience. If I took a handful of basil and ate it, I would not enjoy it.  Yet the combination of ingredients in the spaghetti sauce with pasta and cheese are magnificent. This is synergy!

In this video, Tim Locke describes the “We Psychology” of Fritz Kunkel and the barriers that keep us from connecting with our own creative center as well as others – our parents, classmates, siblings, friends, children, spouses, and significant others.

Blog 29

Filed Under: Blog, Community, Consciousness, Marriage and Family Tagged With: American culture, Apple Computer, attunement, barriers, Bruce Springsteen, community building, culture, Daniel Siegel, Darkness on the Edge of Town, David Goff, Dean Ornish, Embracing Life: Toward a Psychology of Interdependence, example, Facebook, Four Springs Retreat Center, Fritz Kunkel, Google, independence, intentional community, iPhone, learning organization, M Scott Peck, mindfulness, psychological defenses, research study, resonance, rugged individualism, Santa Clara Valley, Silicon Valley, song, synergy, Timothy Locke, trust, vulnerability, We Psychology

What is Journaling?

August 18, 2015 By Daniel Davis, LMFT 2 Comments

“We write to taste life twice,” says Anais Nin.

 

Journaling is creative expression.  It is a way to capture ideas that otherwise would float by unnoticed.  We have thousands of thoughts each day.  When I journal I have a way to collect the jewels – the valuable ideas.  There are thoughts and feelings that are important.

 

When I take time to journal, I am most often just writing.  I write and let whatever idea that I am presently experiencing just emerge.  Writing this stream of consciousness on paper enables me to see them clearly and examine them.  I put my thoughts and feelings into a concrete form.

 

Unfortunately, 65% of our thoughts are negative and redundant – or both.  Yet when I capture these negative thoughts, I am able to see the negative patterns that keep repeating themselves.  When I identify my negative thoughts and write them down, I give myself a choice.  I can see the patterns.  I have the ability to choose what is of value, instead of subconsciously living out the self-destructive patterns.  This is taking responsibility for my own life, and as a result, I have the ability to respond consciously.  Words carry power.

 

I have done lots of journaling, using free association, since 1986.  As I have done so, I have learned to observe my thoughts and feelings with neutrality and simply record them.  This allows me to capture gold amidst, a great deal of worthless rock – dross.  In this way, I am like a social scientist observing an indigenous tribe in the wild.

 

One day, I sat down and wrote this poem spontaneously and effortlessly:

 

Treasure in a field

There is a treasure in a field.
I sell everything.
Buy the field,
and regret nothing.

There was a time
that this seemed foolish.
Now, it has no parallel.
There is no choice.

Love is the only option.
The mess left is why
I have forgone the way
of shallow pursuits.

This is what I tell myself,
at least.
Nothing is left of the old life –
my newness is rewarded.

Single minded presence
begets a way of life
rich in mystery and potential,
lacking the hopeless wandering.

So many stones overturned
– hearts broken!
As if this time,
the outcome would be different.

Yet it is all the same.
The bitter aftertaste,
the regret of love,
lacking heart and meaning.

Don’t be depressed.
Regain the vitality of
endless opportunity,
buried in a hidden place.

For it is a secret.
The place is known,
but eluded me for so long –
far too long.

Being home, I know –
the sweet sorrow of past regrets,
the aimless wandering
of dead end streets.

As I enter the threshold,
my heart leaps with joy,
my step is light,
I know the trust life brings.

 

Chade-Meng Tan, one of the founders of Google, suggests this journaling exercise: “You give yourself a certain amount of time, say, three minutes, and you are given (or give yourself) a prompt, which for our purposes is an open-ended sentence such as “What I am feeling now is. . . . “  For those three minutes, write down whatever comes to mind.  Try not to think about what you’re going to write – just write.  It does not matter how closely you follow the prompt; just let all your thoughts flow onto the paper.  There is only one rule; do not stop writing until your time is up.  If you run out of things to write, just write, I ran out of things to write.  I have nothing to write.  I still have nothing to write. . . . until you have something to write about again.  Remember, you are writing to yourself, for yourself, and you will never have to show this to another person unless you want to.  Hence, you can do this with full honesty.”

 

Please watch this video of Judith Peterson discussing the process of writing in a journal.

Key Words:
Blog 17
Blogs by Daniel Davis, journaling
Poems by Daniel Davis, “Treasure in a Field”
Anais Nin
Judith Peterson, journaling
Chade-Meng Tan
Free Association
Google (founder- Chade-Meng Tan)
Journaling
self-destructive patterns
“What is Journaling?”

Filed Under: Blog, Journaling Tagged With: Anais Nin, Chade-Meng Tan, founder, Free Association, Google, journaling, Judith Peterson, Poem, self-destructive patterns, Treasure in a Field

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Daniel Davis, M.A., LMFT
Counselor in Santa Clara, CA
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