EN WARRIOR TRAINING – Leadership for the Modern Visionary https://zenwarriortraining.com Get out of your head and into your power. Tue, 24 Jan 2023 18:08:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 Barriers to Meditation https://zenwarriortraining.com/barriers-to-meditation/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:15:28 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=204 For many people, the notion of meditation, simply sitting alone with one’s eyes closed and focusing on nothing, seems like a complete waste of time, if not a horrifying, anxiety-producing experience. We want to know that the activities in which we are choosing to participate have some value, and the novice meditator may see little value in sitting still with his or her own thoughts and feelings. As humans, we tend to look for things outside of us that we can control, things that might help us to make more money, maintain our friendships and relationships, relax, etc. But we frequently wind up feeling unfulfilled with our endeavors to find what we are looking for as we perpetually seek some abstract experience that must be right around the corner, assuming we play our cards right or get lucky.

Approaching life from this angle does not take into account the power of the subconscious mind (or unconscious, if you prefer) to control our experiences of reality. If you have ever felt that you were basically the same person having pretty much the same experience and the same emotional triggers day after day, you have been a victim of the power of the subconscious. The subconscious mind includes a vast array of memories dating back to the moment we were born (and perhaps before), and it seems that its principle duty is to protect us from harm through constant analysis of ourselves and our surroundings. While this served as an essential survival skill with our early ancestors, it has more recently adapted to take on the job of analyzing our own individual psychology and individuality in a world where we are less likely to be consumed by tigers and more likely to be consumed by that relationship that went south.

Our memories constitute how we experience reality. They are the framework around our awareness and the choices we make. We decide what’s good, what’s bad, what’s wrong, what’s right, and remain somewhat fixated with our preferences, the origin of which we can’t necessarily determine. Without really questioning it, we assume that our experience in the future will be roughly the same as our experience of the past. As our subconscious goes about its job of trying to keep us alive, it sifts through memories that seem to give our lives context. This tendency keeps most people bouncing back and forth from the past to the future in their thoughts and missing out on the substance and value of their own presence.

Meditation, far from being simply a means by which to relax, is the most effective tool for working with, rather than against, this powerful subconscious influence. By committing to a meditation practice, to showing up and sitting with one’s self regardless of how one feels about doing so on any particular day, one can begin to separate the observer from the object of observation; in other words, we can see our own thoughts and feelings from a detached perspective, almost as though they were happening to someone else. By doing so, one can become more empowered to choose which thoughts and feelings to follow and which ones to ignore. The thoughts and feelings that emerge from inspiration can be noted, while those that contain self-judgment or random musings can be dropped.

This separation from one’s incessant thinking and the deep relaxation that comes about as a result must be earned. Just like any skill, we have to practice meditation regularly if we wish to receive its benefits. It is particularly difficult for people living in a results-oriented culture to practice something which only has benefits if you eschew the desire for results.
The biggest barrier that people face in meditation is not financial (it doesn’t cost anything) and it’s not logistical (you can be anywhere, anytime). Like most obstacles, it is our own minds getting in our way.

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We’re Living Backwards https://zenwarriortraining.com/were-living-backwards/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:15:00 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=202 One of the most common problems I see with people is what I might call “struggle without context.” It’s the tendency to become absolutely consumed with challenges which feel meaningless, when our present day problems seem to be preventing us from living the lives that we believe that we deserve to be living. This existential pain feeds on itself until an emotional reaction of some sort ensues, providing what feels like temporary relief, but which is, in fact, only a release valve for feelings which creates more problems than it solves. Every attempt to deal with challenges in this manner ends futilely.

I attribute this anxiety-producing struggle partly to living backwards. Most people experience the present moment as a byproduct of their past experiences, including all the stories and judgments that they have told themselves over the years about who they think they are and how they either fit in or don’t fit into the world. Most of what our minds associate as the “self” is actually a complicated and often paradoxical mishmash of unconscious thinking created from our half-assed attempts to make sense out of the world from the time we were born. But what if we have it backwards? What if we are not actually who we think we are based on our past creating the conditions of the present moment? What if we are actually our future selves, yet to be created, pulling us in the direction of greater self-realization?

This puts an entirely different spin on the nature of reality, because, while we have no control over what has happened in the past, we do have the ability to consciously shape our futures.

Let me use a personal experience to illustrate what I am referring to. A few years ago I had to undergo several surgeries and spend two months in hospitals and an additional two months bedridden at home. This was not the first time I’d had an experience like this. I have been bedridden for over three years of my life, two of which were in hospitals. Without going into unnecessary detail, suffice it to say that I was not only physically, but emotionally, challenged. I was married and I was in the process of creating a business which was just getting off the ground. This was going to put an enormous amount of pressure not only on me, but also on my wife. The situation was devastating. The first thing that happened was I began to be haunted by all the insecurities I had thought were behind me about how my entire life might be destined for failure. I acknowledged the fact that this might destroy both my marriage and my career. I felt stupid and weak, like this was something that I should’ve been able to avoid.

After this initial stage of remorse and self-pity, it became clear that I needed to step up my game in practicing what I preach about the power of intention. Our lives are shaped by intention. So what kind of intention would have me going through this personal hell? I realized that this was not something that could be explained to me by God, but something that I actually had the power to decide for myself. I turned my attention towards the three main areas of my life, namely, my personal health, my relationship with my wife and my career. I made myself commit to the intention to use this challenge to improve all three areas of my life. In essence, I imagined where I wanted to be in the future and let everything that was happening in the present moment be framed as an opportunity for growth in that direction.

While being hospitalized is not typically associated with building a career, I made it so. I decided that this was going to be continuing education for Zen Warrior Training. I coached nurses and other patients while I was hospitalized, honing my skills at supporting people in challenging situations while going through my own challenges. I set a clear structure with my wife, Meghan, about how she could and couldn’t support me. For instance, I told her that she was only to visit me in the hospital if she did so completely on her own volition without feeling some kind of pressure to do so when she didn’t have the time or energy to be present and supportive. And I committed to taking even better care of myself through nutrition and exercise, which was going to be essential for making me healthier in the future. I let my intentions for the future create the context for everything that I was going through, and the more powerfully my mind was committed to that direction, the less I suffered and the more I learned. These intentions created structures that were necessary for me to get to where I am today.

When I was finally given the doctor’s approval to sit in my wheelchair and go out again after four months of bedrest, the first thing I did was go to lunch with a couple friends. They remarked on how unbelievably healthy, vibrant and present I was after going through such an intense ordeal. Without minimizing the challenge, I pointed out that it was now all in the past, and my reality was not being created by my past, but by my future self.

If I had not chosen to choose how I wished to perceive the circumstances of my life by intentionally framing them in a positive context for the future, things would’ve turned out quite differently. The suffering that I would’ve gone through would likely have set me back months or even years.

I suggest we all take a look at whether we are living backwards.

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What Turns You On (and How to Get More of It) https://zenwarriortraining.com/what-turns-you-on-and-how-to-get-more-of-it/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:14:26 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=200 For some people it’s sex. For some, it’s football. For others, it’s the thrill of being at a rock concert, dropping acid in the woods, skydiving… you name it. For every rush, entire industries exist to make sure that you can get off on whatever excites you the most. People will go to extreme lengths, pay top dollar and take huge risks to experience their turn-ons. These ineffable thrills can feel like they give temporary meaning and purpose to an otherwise underwhelming and mundane life.

For a few minutes or at the very most a few hours, we feel the aliveness that we felt in our youth, connected deeply to our vitality, perhaps even closer to God. But as soon as the activity is over, the buzz begins to wear off and we are back to our normal lives, dreaming of the next time we can have a similar experience. After a few reliable highs from doing what we most love to do, our minds begin to create neurological pathways to hardwire in the association between the activity and the subsequent high. In other words, we start to convince ourselves that it is only through doing this activity that we can feel this way. Because this happens at an unconscious level, we never even realize that it is occurring.

If these types of fleeting experiences of joy are all you know, you are like most people. It is rare that someone even questions this way of experiencing the world. But throughout the ages, a few among us have recognized this tendency and deeply committed themselves to challenging it. These deeply devoted souls have undertaken the seemingly impossible task of discovering this pleasure in regular, otherwise unnoteworthy moments. These are not exceptional beings any different than you or I. They are ordinary people who recognize that the feelings that are created during these experiences are actually something taking place internally, inside our own bodies. The activities simply serve as a catalyst to activate more of our own native energy, which otherwise remains dormant.

There are numerous practices available for those who wish to tap into this energy on a more regular basis. Yoga, meditation, breath work, qi gong and tai chi are disciplines which were created specifically for this purpose. Those who dabble in these practices may get little more than a good stretch and a bit of temporary relaxation. But those who powerfully commit, who are willing to take the dive into their bodies and psyches and stay the course day after day, week after week, year after year, no matter what happens, tend to unlock something far more profound. Some may describe it as “enlightenment,” a poorly understood word, and others may describe it as a remembering of their authentic selves. Most begin to regularly embody the boundless energy of their youth but with the groundedness and maturity of adults and with deep insights into the nature of the human experience.

Somewhere along the way, we learn that pleasure is contingent upon certain activities which “give” us our thrills. This generally begins to take place sometime in early childhood, and by the time we are adults, we have spent decades slowly and consistently denying ourselves access to our own spontaneity and joy, believing that this type of freedom is a product of innocence and youth, rather than who we really are.

For those who wish to break free of their own inner prison and regularly experience joy, a lot of unlearning must take place. We must be willing to discover the pain, trauma, and insecurities that we learned to identify with and unknowingly allowed to fester over the years. Recovering one’s freedom is not for the meek of heart, as it requires consistently allowing oneself to feel one’s own unconsciously self-imposed limitations. After all, the blocks that we create become part of our self-image and our personalities. This is what’s meant when people describe “ego death.” It is the shedding of the layers of protection that we have put on ourselves. While brief moments of satori (sudden enlightenment) may happen, fully transforming requires years of dedicated practice in self-awareness.

The reward for the committed soul is the ability to access deep joy and freedom even in some of the darkest and most challenging situations. That is something that no amount of money can buy.

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Your Sanity Is for Sale (Here’s How to Get it Back) https://zenwarriortraining.com/your-sanity-is-for-sale-heres-how-to-get-it-back/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:13:45 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=198 Your sanity is for sale, and, if you are like most people, it will be increasingly difficult to buy it back. The culprits responsible are the tech behemoths who analyze your every move and every public thought (please don’t think those privacy settings on Facebook make any difference) in order to keep you hooked on the screen. Before you dismiss the title of this blog as hyperbole and clickbait, let me explain why it is not.
Sanity is the ability to respond with reasonable and rational behavior to one’s inner and outer environment. Responding in such a manner is predicated upon having the ability at any given moment in time to make a decision to direct your mind towards that which is in your own highest good. If you are a social media user (most people reading this are), and you can’t relate to scrolling through your newsfeed mindlessly and without a clear intention, then you are probably in denial. So why would you be doing something that you have no intention to be doing?
Tristan Harris, a former product manager at Google, recently did a TED Talk on this topic. Harris is now directing his time and attention to helping technology companies consciously and ethically shape human potential (that’s a potentially controversial subject for a different post). He has the inside scoop on what many of us intuit but which most of us do not fully grasp in terms of the severity of the situation. In the present paradigm, the success of any social media platform or search engine depends on its ability to keep your attention and to keep you coming back as frequently as possible.
Many of us are old enough to remember the “don’t touch that dial!” voice that would pop in at the beginning of the ad break on TV shows enthusiastically encouraging us to keep watching, and then midway through the ads, we would be told that the show would be “right back,” if we just stayed tuned. They knew they had a limited amount of time to feed us ads before we would need some encouragement to keep watching. In some ways, this is no different, but the personal data that is collected about you is being used to keep your attention in a far more insidious and manipulative way than it was during “Three’s Company.” Increasingly, it is like having an online avatar that knows you inside and out and can easily convince you to keep scrolling, liking and commenting by customizing the content you see in order to bypass your logical thinking and appeal directly to your emotions. But what emotions are they designed to appeal to? As Harris says in his TED Talk, content that makes you feel calm is a lot less compelling to your emotional mind than content that makes you feel outraged. Anyone feel like you are more frequently outraged these days than you were a few years ago? Let’s just say this, it’s not a coincidence. You are being played. Now, does that cause you outrage? Great, I grabbed your attention. Keep reading.
So what does this have to do with me and Zen Warrior Training®? The practice of Zen gives us a process by which to better understand the nature of the mind so as to not be a victim of its own unconscious thinking and patterns of behavior. This is an important skill to develop no matter what era you are living in, but particularly during times when you, me and the rest of the developed world are being preyed upon by outside influences vying for control over our attention. With a mindfulness practice, you can separate from your own thinking and behaviors and see your mental tendencies neutrally and objectively. You develop impulse control and find a peaceful centeredness that prevents you from getting caught in mental traps. The battle to be in charge of your own focus of attention and quality of mind is the most challenging battle of all, which is where the warrior part of Zen Warrior Training comes in. It takes consistent, dedicated practice to do so, which is why I predict that most people will not make it through this era of attention hijack with a high degree of self-control.
Physical addictions are fairly obvious; it’s pretty easy to see the devastating effects of alcoholism, drug use, etc. Much less obvious are the mental addictions, particularly when the excuse that we tell ourselves is that we are using social media to “stay informed” and maintain good relationships with friends. These cut to the very core of our emotional needs to feel informed and loved.
The good news is that this is a wakeup call. If we recognize how we are being manipulated and take action to deal with situation, we can see that this is simply a reminder of how important it is to build and maintain authentic relationships with people, speak from truth as opposed to from unbridled emotion, and perhaps make the world a safer, more peaceful place for all.

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Let’s Talk About Forgiveness https://zenwarriortraining.com/lets-talk-about-forgiveness/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:13:04 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=196 Forgiveness is a subject that has never gone out of style. It seems to be encoded into our human DNA to take on resentments and then hold tightly to them, as though we no longer think that we will be okay without them. For many people, once someone has “done them wrong” once in life (and this someone can be one’s own self), everything that person does from that point on only adds to the accumulation of resentments. Like spiky leaves growing around the heart of an avocado, we add layers of protection to keep us from experiencing the vulnerability of our own hearts.

Most people know at least something about forgiveness. Breakups, divorces, being picked on and getting fired from jobs are all pretty common experiences, after all. Some people forgive reluctantly because they feel that it is something they “should” do, which, in my opinion, actually isn’t real forgiveness. Others genuinely forgive and move on. Some even forgive for the most extraordinary atrocities imaginable (don’t take my word for it, watch the extraordinary story of Eva Kor, Auschwitz survivor, here – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxqQbXoDtIc)

Eva Kor’s story is beyond what I or anyone who is likely to read this can relate to. That being said, I have definitely earned my title as an authority on the subject of forgiveness. My life was permanently altered at the age of twenty-four, when a drunk driver caused me to become paralyzed from the waist down. There were two directions I could have gone – unimaginable suffering, or towards the power of forgiveness. I say towards because, in my experience, forgiveness rarely just happens all in one moment. Our hearts have to gradually learn to make more space for the feelings we harbor.

My process of forgiveness started shortly after my accident, when I first saw the perpetrator (who wasn’t harmed, everyone always asks) in the hospital. If I hadn’t been on morphine, I might not have had the courage to forgive him, but since I was, I did. At least I began to. My forgiveness of him was a process that took many years. It was much easier to forgive him when I was having fun with friends or sit skiing in Colorado. It was much harder to forgive him when I was spending over two years collectively in hospital beds.

What I have come to discover about resentment is, like anything, it exists as a phenomenon of energy within our physical and emotional bodies. It is part of us, but only as much as we relate to it as being a necessary part of our experience. In its purest form, anger, sadness and resentment are simply raw energy. For me, my practice of meditation and breathwork forced me to experience this raw energy firsthand. In the beginning stages of my meditation practice, the feelings would be so intense that I would lose focus and space out and fall asleep. This was my mind’s way of protecting me from the trauma. Everyone I’ve ever worked with does this to a degree to avoid feeling their own traumas.

With time, I learned to take this raw energy and move with it, let it move through my body and filter through my breath. What I discovered is that when this raw energy is circulated, it could actually be used productively and intentionally for creating more of what I desired in my life. All that was required was for the energy to move through my energy centers (or chakras, as they are called in yogic traditions). When the energy moved through my heart, at first it was painful, but eventually, it was met with love. When the energy moved through my head, it initially created nightmares, but, eventually, it began to open up my intuitive channels. Now, I am in no way implying that this has been easy. It has been the challenge of a lifetime. But it is possible, and that’s why I feel so compelled to share this as a learnable skill.

In this year of 2017, there is a tension in the air that people seem to be feeling around the world. Many people feel that human civilization itself may even be on the brink of total collapse. If you’re following the news, you may feel that the hope you still have is being eroded every day. This naturally leads to anger and resentment towards those who are causing the greatest harm. If this anger is allowed to fester unconsciously in your mind and body, you will inevitably seal off your energy centers in an attempt to protect yourself. This will then diminish your capacity to experience love in your heart, groundedness in your being, and intentional focus in your mind. However, if you learn to harness the power of this raw energy and transform it with forgiveness, you can take the necessary steps towards creating the world your heart envisions.

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Sailing the Seas of Stress Effectively https://zenwarriortraining.com/sailing-the-seas-of-stress-effectively/ Fri, 09 Dec 2022 13:12:06 +0000 https://zenwarriortraining.com/?p=194 It is very common for people who are experiencing excessive stress in their lives to dig for answers from their past. In many respects, this is what the therapy profession emphasizes. We look under every stone that our imaginations can find, accessing the library of memories from the past to see who did what to us and how that may have affected our development and made us think and behave the way that we do.

This type of self-reflection is not without its merits. Sometimes, we can get a clearer picture of how our minds were influenced and conditioned by experiences outside of our control and how we adopted certain patterns of thinking as a result. Shedding light on the past can help us to rewrite our present moment thinking and avoid some of the pitfalls associated with adopting these dysfunctional patterns in the future.

However, if we are only to examine the past through a new lens, we often end up in the same basic dilemma. Even with a clearer picture of the past, we can think, “well, now what?” Having more clarity alone will rarely solve the problem. A lot of the time, people find themselves ruminating on the same issue just as much but from a slightly different perspective. Even if we find it in our hearts to forgive ourselves and others for the ways in which these impressions have affected us, we can still feel stuck.

This is when we need to remember that our bodies and minds are still having a present moment experience, it’s just that we are using that present moment experience to relive the past and maybe considering different hypothetical outcomes for what might have been had the past been different.

Our present moment experience will never be constructed entirely of thoughts. In fact, our thoughts will always be related to the remembered past and the predicted or hypothetical future. What is actually present is the sensory experience of the body and the body’s energy. It is the sensation of breath flowing through the body, the heart beating, etc.

Let’s use the analogy of a sailboat for the physical and energetic body. When the sailboat is sailing effectively, it is doing so because the sales are taut and the wind is able to push it along. There is what we could refer to as a “positive, intentional stress mechanism” at work. Without this mechanism in place, the boat is drifting listlessly at sea.

When we experience excessive stress in our lives, this positive, intentional stress mechanism suffers. We may develop rips in our sails or the sails might begin to loosen and have too much slack. The next thing we know, the sail is no longer functional. There is no longer a positive, intentional stress mechanism working to guide the boat in its intended direction. The boat is now adrift at sea without direction and it is at the mercy of whatever waves hit it.

The waves, in this analogy, are the outside circumstances of our lives; the phone call with bad news we weren’t expecting, the relationship issue we’ve been struggling with, the pile of paperwork that just showed up on our desk at work.

Without the sail functioning properly (remember the “boat” in this analogy is the physical body), the boat just gets slammed by every wave, taking on water and going nowhere. As this happens, the sailors (our minds) are in a constant state of reaction just trying to keep the damn thing afloat, never mind going in a positive direction. The longer this happens, the more exhausted and directionless we become.

Now, here’s the good news. There is a new sail down in the cabin. Rather than try to fix the tears in the old sail (reviewing our thoughts about the past and trying to think differently), we have the option of just tossing the old sail off the boat and grabbing the new sail. But in order to get that new sail up and taut so that it can function properly, it needs our physical energy. If you’ve ever cranked a sail up on a mast, you know that it is really hard physical work. It takes a lot of energy to get that sail up. It doesn’t just go up easily. It is physical work, not mental work. It involves breathing deeply, engaging our muscles and not stopping until the sail is all the way up.

Once the sail is up, we can aim the boat in the direction we intend to be going, but we have to remember to keep the sail taut. Every new challenge is a potential threat to the integrity of our sail, but if we keep breathing fully and engaging our physical bodies, we can keep the sail taut and keep moving in the direction we want to be going.

When the boat is functioning properly, we can examine our patterns of thinking and behaviors from a more neutral and less emotional disposition, allowing us to assess our thinking without losing site of our goals.

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