With an open mind and an endless stream of wellness scripts, I explore and explain useful bits for your pursuit of a strong body, mind, soul, spirit, pocketbook, and relationship. You're unique, so "write your own script" and live the abundant life you were intended to live (John 10:10). Johnna Troglin, MA HSER/MFT
30 June 2017
Accountability Poem: Original
It's time to move out
Of this muddy milieu
We've mis-stepped,
Mistaken, meandered into.
"Where do we go from here,"
We may wonder aloud,
"When the work we've been doing
Should have made us proud?"
Indeed, it's a struggle
Both to goal and beyond.
No one said it was easy;
But this "hard" just seems wrong.
Attending the meetings,
Using tiny spoons and forks;
We know how to work this,
And we've proven it works.
So, then why the increase
On the scale's weekly number?
All else being equal,
Those gains are a bummer.
We are stronger, older, wiser,
We're even more self-aware;
But when the jeans get tighter,
Even good girls want to swear.
No, let's not be nasty,
Bitter words won't suffice.
Better find hope and faith
And to ourselves be nice.
To hearts, wild and tender,
The world is unkind.
Insulating with food walls
Will not help, we all find.
It seems natural comfort
When life throws its darts.
But leaves us, still hungry,
With gaping holes in our hearts.
Step out of the darkness
You are not alone.
I'm there for you, Sister,
As near as your phone.
We can pull through together,
Conquer this present foe.
Please hold me accountable
As, with strength, forward, we go!
Johnna Troglin, MA HSER/MFT
@JoysMyStrength
www.ScriptedWellness.com
Stay focused. Stay tuned. Stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
www.FitBitty.myPlexusProducts.com
21 June 2017
3 of 3 Summer Slimmer Solstice Series Journal Prompts
Third of three Summer Slimmer Solstice Series journal prompts:
Thursday, 22 June 2017
The new moon is coming, and with it another opportunity for a fresh start...and six months to Christmas. True story.
We prepare accommodations for a guest in our home; but what of the new version of ourselves? When we shop, we seek out the sizes we wore in our larger pasts. When we look in the mirror, we still expect the heavier image to greet us. I termed this "phantom-fat" years ago; and it's a phenomenon that can haunt us decades into maintenance (mine has).
Our self-identity usually gets stuck, even when we change our lifestyle, our look, and our waistlines. In effect, we bind ourselves to a past life we really don't desire, but won't let expire. Let's work on this Phantom.
• How can you untether your phantom-fatter self-identity so you can make room for our hard earned fitter one?
• What security might you be finding in that sense of self identifying with your less-healthy life?
• Do you feel anxiety, a stirring, or any uneasiness in your body thinking of giving up the larger-you identity - if so, where in your body & why do you think you feel it there?
• Finally, think about the role you want to play - after all, you're writing your own script - describe the way you want to feel (not look), and be specific.
#writeyourownscript
#youaresoveryworthy
www.ScriptedWellness.com
Thursday, 22 June 2017
The new moon is coming, and with it another opportunity for a fresh start...and six months to Christmas. True story.
We prepare accommodations for a guest in our home; but what of the new version of ourselves? When we shop, we seek out the sizes we wore in our larger pasts. When we look in the mirror, we still expect the heavier image to greet us. I termed this "phantom-fat" years ago; and it's a phenomenon that can haunt us decades into maintenance (mine has).
Our self-identity usually gets stuck, even when we change our lifestyle, our look, and our waistlines. In effect, we bind ourselves to a past life we really don't desire, but won't let expire. Let's work on this Phantom.
• How can you untether your phantom-fatter self-identity so you can make room for our hard earned fitter one?
• What security might you be finding in that sense of self identifying with your less-healthy life?
• Do you feel anxiety, a stirring, or any uneasiness in your body thinking of giving up the larger-you identity - if so, where in your body & why do you think you feel it there?
• Finally, think about the role you want to play - after all, you're writing your own script - describe the way you want to feel (not look), and be specific.
#writeyourownscript
#youaresoveryworthy
www.ScriptedWellness.com
2 of 3 Summer Slimmer Solstice Journal Prompts
Here's the second journal challenge Summer Slimmer Solstice journal prompts series installment
Wednesday, 21 June 2017
In any acting cast, there are leading actors/actresses, supporting roles, and extras. They'll play the roles of protagonist, antagonist, villain, hero, sidekick, faceless every-man, and countless other parts in your story.
You are the writer-director of your adult life; and - like it or not -you're playing the starring role.
What alternate role(s) have you played?
What role(s) do you need to re-cast?
What actors/actresses are type-cast in your life whose relationship boundaries you need to re-negotiate & write a better script?
What would it look like to be the hero/heroine of your own story?
What do you need to change to make that happen?
#writeyourownscript
#youaresoveryworthy
www.ScriptedWellness.com
Wednesday, 21 June 2017
In any acting cast, there are leading actors/actresses, supporting roles, and extras. They'll play the roles of protagonist, antagonist, villain, hero, sidekick, faceless every-man, and countless other parts in your story.
You are the writer-director of your adult life; and - like it or not -you're playing the starring role.
What alternate role(s) have you played?
What role(s) do you need to re-cast?
What actors/actresses are type-cast in your life whose relationship boundaries you need to re-negotiate & write a better script?
What would it look like to be the hero/heroine of your own story?
What do you need to change to make that happen?
#writeyourownscript
#youaresoveryworthy
www.ScriptedWellness.com
20 June 2017
Worksheets! Begin your Draft.
I've handwritten some worksheets based on the quiz in our first book exploration, Weight Watchers® 1998 publication, Stop Stuffing Yourself: 7 Steps to Conquering Overeating. These are handwritten to encourage you to begin a handwritten journaling experience. If that's not your preference, that's absolutely fine; but there is solid science behind the brain's response to its own thoughts in its own penmanship - even the messiest. Type, doodle, paint, scribble - but take a few minutes to engage with these three scanned pages, and you will discover or clarify something about yourself that is likely to assist you on your wellness quest, physically, psychologically, and maybe in other ways too.
Heads up: this is intended for adults, and a couple of the questions asks about marital issues. I was surprised when I ran across it; but as I'm trained as a marriage and family therapist and have been on my own wellness journey for decades, it made sense for the topic to be discussed. Many of us have food related issues as a result of the sexual misconduct or shame-teachings we were the powerless recipients of in our pasts. Please consider that and proceed with calm awareness that you can handle this.
You'll likely want to be in a quiet, secure location and have some time to permit yourself to reflect and respond. The answers are intended to be on a continuum of zero to ten, zero being not relatable to you at all, and ten being an absolute constant in your life.
Should this link to the pdf in Google fail to open, please copy/paste and comment so I can amend the situation. We are all in this together and I truly wish to provide a viable resource to you!
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0Bxz75N_elxE_Wm9ZbjhfYXE4a2M
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#YouAreSoVeryWorthy
Johnna
Heads up: this is intended for adults, and a couple of the questions asks about marital issues. I was surprised when I ran across it; but as I'm trained as a marriage and family therapist and have been on my own wellness journey for decades, it made sense for the topic to be discussed. Many of us have food related issues as a result of the sexual misconduct or shame-teachings we were the powerless recipients of in our pasts. Please consider that and proceed with calm awareness that you can handle this.
You'll likely want to be in a quiet, secure location and have some time to permit yourself to reflect and respond. The answers are intended to be on a continuum of zero to ten, zero being not relatable to you at all, and ten being an absolute constant in your life.
Should this link to the pdf in Google fail to open, please copy/paste and comment so I can amend the situation. We are all in this together and I truly wish to provide a viable resource to you!
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0Bxz75N_elxE_Wm9ZbjhfYXE4a2M
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#YouAreSoVeryWorthy
Johnna
19 June 2017
1 of 3 Summer Solstice Journal Prompts
1 of 3 Summer Solstice Journal Prompts
Tuesday, 20 June 2017
The article cited below states, "According to legend, Galileo was, rather ironically, forced to recant his theory that Earth revolves around the sun on the summer solstice of 1633."
Most of us have attempted things that we decided weren't working for us; and in the process, we've learned bits about ourselves we can use to write our own wellness scripts. This summer solstice is followed by a new moon, a symbol of fresh starts. As we close the official season of spring, briefly review your history to uncover clues for the new season.
• How might you revisit the wisdom you gleaned from previous attempts to compose your own wellness script?
• What resources would you include?
• How would you make the script feel like your own?
https://www.treehugger.com/natural-sciences/summer-solstice-coming-heres-what-know.html
www.ScriptedWellness.com
Tuesday, 20 June 2017
The article cited below states, "According to legend, Galileo was, rather ironically, forced to recant his theory that Earth revolves around the sun on the summer solstice of 1633."
Most of us have attempted things that we decided weren't working for us; and in the process, we've learned bits about ourselves we can use to write our own wellness scripts. This summer solstice is followed by a new moon, a symbol of fresh starts. As we close the official season of spring, briefly review your history to uncover clues for the new season.
• How might you revisit the wisdom you gleaned from previous attempts to compose your own wellness script?
• What resources would you include?
• How would you make the script feel like your own?
https://www.treehugger.com/natural-sciences/summer-solstice-coming-heres-what-know.html
www.ScriptedWellness.com
17 June 2017
Stop Stuffing Yourself (Book Explored)
Scripted Wellness Book Exploration
Stop Stuffing Yourself: 7 Steps to Conquering Overeating
Weight Watchers Publishing Group, 1998; ISBN: 0-02-862759-8
ScriptedWellness is not (yet) affiliated; but you can find it on Amazon via search.
-
Disclosure: Your intrepid introducer of these Wellness Scripts is a Lifetime WeightWatchers® Member at Goal. I achieved Lifetime Membership in 2004; and I still attend weekly meetings. It's an important part of my wellness journey because it keeps me accountable and it keeps me aware of the compass needle and whether or not I need to make a course correction. I fully believe in the program, and I've modified it to make it work for me - I've *written my own Wellness Script* by quilting together scraps from various scripts I've collected. You can too.
-
Fittingly, this first book review is an oldie but a goodie, published in 1998. Its pearls of wisdom are still sparkly, even if we know a few more things about nutrition than we did twenty years ago. Like old lace, some pieces are worth salvaging.
The text's tenor is that of an advocate, reminding the reader that regardless of the self-incriminating feelings s/he may experience when eating behaviors go awry, there are "countless reasons why people overeat." On the matter of the intended audience, this text was penned at a time prior to the company's more gender-inclusive marketing strategies. While men have always been welcome officially, the literature didn't reflect that stance when this publication hit the shelves. That doesn't make the information less relevant to our more ruggedly handsome members, though; so bear with us here, bearded buddies.
We are driven to dine by all manner of stimuli, sensory, memory, stress, sleep-deprivation, depression, suggestion, tradition, timing, lack of minerals or other actual nutrients [even when we're "stuffed," our bodies can actually be "starved" for nourishment; but that science came along later & we'll discuss that in Hungry for Change]. If you can figure out your particular ways of behaving, and some of the stimuli that trigger those responses, you can choose differently; and you can change as you choose differently more and more often until it becomes less and less awkward. Soon, your new habits become - simply - your habits. Awareness is the beginning.
Enter your first assignment, a quiz and journal combination you'll review at the end of a week to have personalized feedback as to your own trouble zones, times, and even relationships where healthy boundaries may need established. This enlightening self-test can help you navigate the remaining chapters with a problem solving mindset, rather than continuing to troubleshoot (because we have all spent enough time wondering what is "wrong" with us).
The first place the editors look after that evaluation is family, as Erma Bombeck termed it, "the ties that bind...and gag." Seriously though, this is where we learn all the basic stuff, right? Trust, fear, provision, nurturing, self-soothing, who's got your back, what kind of judgment to expect...see how it gets tangled? No wonder folks grab the fridge handle instead of another person's hand: the fridge may shine an accusing light in your face, but it only lasts a moment; while the condemning look of a loved one leaves burn marks on the heart.
We may be pressed to eat to "not waste," or "grow strong," or avoid punishment or gain praise. We learn to "clean" our plate at the table; and it is nearly impossible to unlearn it in adulthood, isn't it? Even as adults, the food-pushing or diet-pushing or belly-bullying persists. But another bit of homework can help you with that too: "Rewrite Your Family Food History" is your next big assignment in the lineup loosening the chains from the overeating baggage. You can see the attitudes, patterns, and personalities present at family functions - including your own, and write your own "plays" before you go "out on the field." You can pen a letter - no sending & don't use email or text because sending *accidentally* is far too easy, besides you don't want that saved & sticking around - explaining your feelings, rehearsing how you need things to happen, whatever...and yeah, destroy it. Maybe you make a list of things you discover you actually need or may find useful; but that letter has gotta go. You can prepare an exit strategy or plan of attack for trigger situations like dessert time (great chance for a walk). The point is to play your own game (nicely) because even if Aunt Mitzi puts cake on your plate, you are an adult who chooses what goes on your fork.
Another segment, "The Care and Feeding of the Self" lines out several ways to nurture well-being of mind and body. Toward building healthy self esteem, they suggest writing a "Want List" comprised of "even those that seem impossible." Once the initial list is created, without self-censorship, then you can line-through those that are likely a bit outside the realm of reason in the near future. As you see the accomplishments and dreams realized, your euphoric and efficacious feelings will empower further efforts!
Those ups and happies are great! But we don't stay on mountaintops. Sad times come too. Loss happens. Sickness happens. Injuries happen. Jobs end. This life has ups and downs; and if that wasn't enough to have you running for tissues, a sizable portion of us have clinical depression, seasonal affective disorder, other mental illness, or monthly bouts of hormonal woes. This book goes "there" too; and it offers yet another helpful section on "Mood Soothing." We could all use a little more sunshine, right?
Speaking of stress: yes, we have it; nope, it's not going anywhere. Well, maybe.
{I've gotta Go Off Script Here. #GOSH}
We can choose differently than we do; but we don't.
We can say "no, thank you;" but we won't.
We often volunteer ourselves to be exhausted for various reasons and I know this because I spent the first four decades of my life (prior to widowhood) in that lifestyle. It is not necessary like I thought it was; nor is it virtuous like I thought it was. I help far more people far more effectively with far more presence and far more meaningful exchange by serving within my giftedness with intention following my intuition than I did by saying "I'll be there" every time I thought anyone I cared about might need or want anything I might be able to provide. I am not the Savior and neither are you - only One of us could be that and He's coming again soon; but He knows who He is already. None of us can help anyone by destroying ourselves; and that's what happens when we don't have healthy Boundaries (that Cloud & Townsend book will be another review to come).
Okay... If you're still here...
{Look: Almost To The End! #LATTE}
...yes, those are my cheesy out-and-in sidebars. Just made 'em. I'm retired Air Force & we like acronyms. Go figure.
Their suggestions for mitigating chronic stress are no surprise: organize, manage time, delegate, and think realistically. These are great strategies, actually; but most of us are so overstimulated, overcommitted, and overwhelmed we see these as more to-do tasks we feel that much worse for being unable to accomplish as the hours in a day seem to flicker out like so many tea lights. The tip sheet for this, however, is less disappointing. Deep breathing is something that has gotten quite a lot of press even now - twenty years later, I'm typing this with my Fitbit Blaze on my wrist which has its own guided breathing relaxation screen! Anytime, anywhere, this is something you can put into action: inhale slowly through your nose, pulling the air down toward your navel, pause a moment, then exhale through your relaxed lips, releasing all the air you can (imagine wringing out a towel or pushing air from a bellows). Do this just a few times and you will notice a difference in how you feel.
Anger can be hazardous to your health in plenty of ways, we're likely all aware; but many of us eat when we feel angry because anger was unacceptable or because we fear conflict or for whatever reason, anger is something we need to suppress or stifle. Food is something we can control when everything around (or within) us feels out of control. Suggestions from the "Anger Manager" segment include seeking solace in solitude for calm, nurturing connection to Source and spiritual inner life, meditation, leisure reading, and finally pursuing a less hurried life.
Loneliness and boredom send many foraging in the pantries or drive through windows in search of what I call EATertainment. In my own case, it's not usually loneliness or boredom - this girl has plenty to do - it's putting things off, what I call procrastinEATing. And in those times (especially the first year of widowhood, after two years of caregiving) of grief, I did some of what I call self-medicEATing with food; but it wasn't so much loneliness then, more like being homesick for a place that no longer existed. So I "get it," why we EATertain, procrastinEAT, and self-medicEAT; and part of the reason I am using this as my first book to extrapolate is to help intervene. It'll take more than this though, for us to compose our individual Wellness Scripts; but it's a beginning.
Speaking of beginnings, at the end of the book, "Changing for Life" is the focus. Implementation of the insights and strategies you develop in the book's quizzes, journal, and exercises brings you to a point of an (elementary) customized playbook. From here, you can cut and paste your way to a tailored Script made for you - no stage makeup required. But it will require a rewiring of sorts when it comes to your food lifestyle lenses.
Think mindset + skillset.
You know what you desire to accomplish and why - make it compelling! You know what to do, or at least you're learning what has not worked for you so far (and that's something). But what can keep you rooted in that solid ground when the winds blow in bagels? Anchoring can do that.
Just as we have triggers to eat, or even overeat; we can create for ourselves triggers that bolster our resolve, fortitude, confidence. It's called anchoring the feeling or positive sensation to a sensory item, an object, a song, a Bible verse, a mantra, a word, a bracelet or pendant, a poem, or whatever works to bring your mind into alignment with your wellness goals and values. It might even be as simple as water.
Here's an example of how it might work:
- Decide how you want to feel (calm, secure, steady, etc.).
- Recall a previous experience of that state of mind, with as many sensory details as you can fully remember.
- Select your anchor (let's say it's a bottle of still, clear water today).
- Think again of the sensations and state of mind you seek to anchor, and touch, smell, say, listen to (or in our example, sip) the anchoring item of your choosing and remind yourself that you are ascribing the meaning of that good, safe, happy feeling to whatever that is.
- Mentally come back into present focus and then try and recreate the experience (it will take practice, feel funny, and even seem silly, but stay with it).
- Whenever thoughts of anxiety, loneliness, boredom, overwhelm, or other such triggering notions come calling, tap into this resource to remind yourself that, while we may not be in control of everything, we always have a choice over something. Choose to tune into that anchored, positive well-being state of mind; and make the best choice you can in the moment.
The prologue goes on to add parting wisdom from Dr. James O. Prochaska, PhD.:
- Review, revise, and remind yourself of your reason and resolve.
- Substitute helpful behaviors for harmful ones, termed "countering."
- Program your environment for success (keep junk outa your trunk).
- Build a tribe of supportive, helpful people (and be resourceful).
- Reward yourself (not with food - you are not a dog) for all victories!
In the end, the best part is that the final page admits there's no "cure" that will finally "fix it all." We all indulge occasionally - sometimes it's significant - but the writers here encourage to get back to it with the next choice you make. Really, isn't that the best anyone can do?
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
Stop Stuffing Yourself: 7 Steps to Conquering Overeating
Weight Watchers Publishing Group, 1998; ISBN: 0-02-862759-8
ScriptedWellness is not (yet) affiliated; but you can find it on Amazon via search.
-
Disclosure: Your intrepid introducer of these Wellness Scripts is a Lifetime WeightWatchers® Member at Goal. I achieved Lifetime Membership in 2004; and I still attend weekly meetings. It's an important part of my wellness journey because it keeps me accountable and it keeps me aware of the compass needle and whether or not I need to make a course correction. I fully believe in the program, and I've modified it to make it work for me - I've *written my own Wellness Script* by quilting together scraps from various scripts I've collected. You can too.
-
Fittingly, this first book review is an oldie but a goodie, published in 1998. Its pearls of wisdom are still sparkly, even if we know a few more things about nutrition than we did twenty years ago. Like old lace, some pieces are worth salvaging.
The text's tenor is that of an advocate, reminding the reader that regardless of the self-incriminating feelings s/he may experience when eating behaviors go awry, there are "countless reasons why people overeat." On the matter of the intended audience, this text was penned at a time prior to the company's more gender-inclusive marketing strategies. While men have always been welcome officially, the literature didn't reflect that stance when this publication hit the shelves. That doesn't make the information less relevant to our more ruggedly handsome members, though; so bear with us here, bearded buddies.
We are driven to dine by all manner of stimuli, sensory, memory, stress, sleep-deprivation, depression, suggestion, tradition, timing, lack of minerals or other actual nutrients [even when we're "stuffed," our bodies can actually be "starved" for nourishment; but that science came along later & we'll discuss that in Hungry for Change]. If you can figure out your particular ways of behaving, and some of the stimuli that trigger those responses, you can choose differently; and you can change as you choose differently more and more often until it becomes less and less awkward. Soon, your new habits become - simply - your habits. Awareness is the beginning.
Enter your first assignment, a quiz and journal combination you'll review at the end of a week to have personalized feedback as to your own trouble zones, times, and even relationships where healthy boundaries may need established. This enlightening self-test can help you navigate the remaining chapters with a problem solving mindset, rather than continuing to troubleshoot (because we have all spent enough time wondering what is "wrong" with us).
The first place the editors look after that evaluation is family, as Erma Bombeck termed it, "the ties that bind...and gag." Seriously though, this is where we learn all the basic stuff, right? Trust, fear, provision, nurturing, self-soothing, who's got your back, what kind of judgment to expect...see how it gets tangled? No wonder folks grab the fridge handle instead of another person's hand: the fridge may shine an accusing light in your face, but it only lasts a moment; while the condemning look of a loved one leaves burn marks on the heart.
We may be pressed to eat to "not waste," or "grow strong," or avoid punishment or gain praise. We learn to "clean" our plate at the table; and it is nearly impossible to unlearn it in adulthood, isn't it? Even as adults, the food-pushing or diet-pushing or belly-bullying persists. But another bit of homework can help you with that too: "Rewrite Your Family Food History" is your next big assignment in the lineup loosening the chains from the overeating baggage. You can see the attitudes, patterns, and personalities present at family functions - including your own, and write your own "plays" before you go "out on the field." You can pen a letter - no sending & don't use email or text because sending *accidentally* is far too easy, besides you don't want that saved & sticking around - explaining your feelings, rehearsing how you need things to happen, whatever...and yeah, destroy it. Maybe you make a list of things you discover you actually need or may find useful; but that letter has gotta go. You can prepare an exit strategy or plan of attack for trigger situations like dessert time (great chance for a walk). The point is to play your own game (nicely) because even if Aunt Mitzi puts cake on your plate, you are an adult who chooses what goes on your fork.
Another segment, "The Care and Feeding of the Self" lines out several ways to nurture well-being of mind and body. Toward building healthy self esteem, they suggest writing a "Want List" comprised of "even those that seem impossible." Once the initial list is created, without self-censorship, then you can line-through those that are likely a bit outside the realm of reason in the near future. As you see the accomplishments and dreams realized, your euphoric and efficacious feelings will empower further efforts!
Those ups and happies are great! But we don't stay on mountaintops. Sad times come too. Loss happens. Sickness happens. Injuries happen. Jobs end. This life has ups and downs; and if that wasn't enough to have you running for tissues, a sizable portion of us have clinical depression, seasonal affective disorder, other mental illness, or monthly bouts of hormonal woes. This book goes "there" too; and it offers yet another helpful section on "Mood Soothing." We could all use a little more sunshine, right?
Speaking of stress: yes, we have it; nope, it's not going anywhere. Well, maybe.
{I've gotta Go Off Script Here. #GOSH}
We can choose differently than we do; but we don't.
We can say "no, thank you;" but we won't.
We often volunteer ourselves to be exhausted for various reasons and I know this because I spent the first four decades of my life (prior to widowhood) in that lifestyle. It is not necessary like I thought it was; nor is it virtuous like I thought it was. I help far more people far more effectively with far more presence and far more meaningful exchange by serving within my giftedness with intention following my intuition than I did by saying "I'll be there" every time I thought anyone I cared about might need or want anything I might be able to provide. I am not the Savior and neither are you - only One of us could be that and He's coming again soon; but He knows who He is already. None of us can help anyone by destroying ourselves; and that's what happens when we don't have healthy Boundaries (that Cloud & Townsend book will be another review to come).
Okay... If you're still here...
{Look: Almost To The End! #LATTE}
...yes, those are my cheesy out-and-in sidebars. Just made 'em. I'm retired Air Force & we like acronyms. Go figure.
Their suggestions for mitigating chronic stress are no surprise: organize, manage time, delegate, and think realistically. These are great strategies, actually; but most of us are so overstimulated, overcommitted, and overwhelmed we see these as more to-do tasks we feel that much worse for being unable to accomplish as the hours in a day seem to flicker out like so many tea lights. The tip sheet for this, however, is less disappointing. Deep breathing is something that has gotten quite a lot of press even now - twenty years later, I'm typing this with my Fitbit Blaze on my wrist which has its own guided breathing relaxation screen! Anytime, anywhere, this is something you can put into action: inhale slowly through your nose, pulling the air down toward your navel, pause a moment, then exhale through your relaxed lips, releasing all the air you can (imagine wringing out a towel or pushing air from a bellows). Do this just a few times and you will notice a difference in how you feel.
Anger can be hazardous to your health in plenty of ways, we're likely all aware; but many of us eat when we feel angry because anger was unacceptable or because we fear conflict or for whatever reason, anger is something we need to suppress or stifle. Food is something we can control when everything around (or within) us feels out of control. Suggestions from the "Anger Manager" segment include seeking solace in solitude for calm, nurturing connection to Source and spiritual inner life, meditation, leisure reading, and finally pursuing a less hurried life.
Loneliness and boredom send many foraging in the pantries or drive through windows in search of what I call EATertainment. In my own case, it's not usually loneliness or boredom - this girl has plenty to do - it's putting things off, what I call procrastinEATing. And in those times (especially the first year of widowhood, after two years of caregiving) of grief, I did some of what I call self-medicEATing with food; but it wasn't so much loneliness then, more like being homesick for a place that no longer existed. So I "get it," why we EATertain, procrastinEAT, and self-medicEAT; and part of the reason I am using this as my first book to extrapolate is to help intervene. It'll take more than this though, for us to compose our individual Wellness Scripts; but it's a beginning.
Speaking of beginnings, at the end of the book, "Changing for Life" is the focus. Implementation of the insights and strategies you develop in the book's quizzes, journal, and exercises brings you to a point of an (elementary) customized playbook. From here, you can cut and paste your way to a tailored Script made for you - no stage makeup required. But it will require a rewiring of sorts when it comes to your food lifestyle lenses.
Think mindset + skillset.
You know what you desire to accomplish and why - make it compelling! You know what to do, or at least you're learning what has not worked for you so far (and that's something). But what can keep you rooted in that solid ground when the winds blow in bagels? Anchoring can do that.
Just as we have triggers to eat, or even overeat; we can create for ourselves triggers that bolster our resolve, fortitude, confidence. It's called anchoring the feeling or positive sensation to a sensory item, an object, a song, a Bible verse, a mantra, a word, a bracelet or pendant, a poem, or whatever works to bring your mind into alignment with your wellness goals and values. It might even be as simple as water.
Here's an example of how it might work:
- Decide how you want to feel (calm, secure, steady, etc.).
- Recall a previous experience of that state of mind, with as many sensory details as you can fully remember.
- Select your anchor (let's say it's a bottle of still, clear water today).
- Think again of the sensations and state of mind you seek to anchor, and touch, smell, say, listen to (or in our example, sip) the anchoring item of your choosing and remind yourself that you are ascribing the meaning of that good, safe, happy feeling to whatever that is.
- Mentally come back into present focus and then try and recreate the experience (it will take practice, feel funny, and even seem silly, but stay with it).
- Whenever thoughts of anxiety, loneliness, boredom, overwhelm, or other such triggering notions come calling, tap into this resource to remind yourself that, while we may not be in control of everything, we always have a choice over something. Choose to tune into that anchored, positive well-being state of mind; and make the best choice you can in the moment.
The prologue goes on to add parting wisdom from Dr. James O. Prochaska, PhD.:
- Review, revise, and remind yourself of your reason and resolve.
- Substitute helpful behaviors for harmful ones, termed "countering."
- Program your environment for success (keep junk outa your trunk).
- Build a tribe of supportive, helpful people (and be resourceful).
- Reward yourself (not with food - you are not a dog) for all victories!
In the end, the best part is that the final page admits there's no "cure" that will finally "fix it all." We all indulge occasionally - sometimes it's significant - but the writers here encourage to get back to it with the next choice you make. Really, isn't that the best anyone can do?
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
10 June 2017
Powerful Podcast, Profound Timing
On Air With Ella
I'm a Podcast Junkie. True story.
But I'm picky about my juice.
And Ella brings it, especially this time: http://onairwithella.com/117
Episode 117 speaks on the influence of others and alignment to our own intuition, purpose, values, and designs for our own lives. The fact I am hearing this on the day after ScriptedWellness was born is no coincidence. I believe it is divinely appointed so that I will live out the admonition Paul wrote to Timothy when he scripted that "...God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline."
A book I'll be extrapolating in the future discusses our Concentric Circles, and Ella's got her own version of this decades-old idea in her Life Wheel. The nucleus is your relationship to Source, however you elect to reference our Creator & Sustainer. Your soul connection to the Divine is the most intimate influence you have. Next is your interaction with those deathbed-dearest, they'll-be-nearest folks with skin-on (including chance-given family and choice-gathered family). These people will be there through the most gruesome and grief-filled times; but they're also the ones great and gracious about your glorious moments too. Finally. External to this egg-white-ish layer that surrounds that Soul-yolk nucleus, we find the social realm of friends whose influence matters, but isnt as non-starter as the runnier-messier-stickier parts of that egg analogy.
Thing is, to pursue a big dream and publicly push past that paralyzing peer fear, you must crack that egg, or at least drop the whole thing in boiling water.
Otherwise...well...
Ever leave an egg too long outside the nest without any baking, boiling, scrambling...you get the idea...? It gets stinky. It begins to make everyone around it miserable. Oh - and remember - this egg analogy is your co-spherical layers of influence. Not a good thing to make funky. Crack it already.
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
•••
Thanks for visiting!
~ Johnna Kay Troglin, MA, HSER/MFT
Owner of ScriptedWellness.com
OIF/OEF Veteran • USAF, Retired
You can find me here, and never miss an issue by subscribing via the link to the right; and you'll also occasionally see me elsewhere on the Web:
Facebook & WWConnect @JoysMyStrength
Twitter: @OkieYogini
Instagram: @ScriptedWellness
Tumblr: @ScriptedWellness
Google: @ScriptedWellness
For gluten free, natural supplement support, visit: www.FitBitty.myPlexusProducts.com
While you're there, if asked utilize my Plexus ID # 297028.
Contact me with any questions, suggestions, or concerns at: Johnna.Troglin@ScriptedWellness.com
I'm a Podcast Junkie. True story.
But I'm picky about my juice.
And Ella brings it, especially this time: http://onairwithella.com/117
Episode 117 speaks on the influence of others and alignment to our own intuition, purpose, values, and designs for our own lives. The fact I am hearing this on the day after ScriptedWellness was born is no coincidence. I believe it is divinely appointed so that I will live out the admonition Paul wrote to Timothy when he scripted that "...God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline."
A book I'll be extrapolating in the future discusses our Concentric Circles, and Ella's got her own version of this decades-old idea in her Life Wheel. The nucleus is your relationship to Source, however you elect to reference our Creator & Sustainer. Your soul connection to the Divine is the most intimate influence you have. Next is your interaction with those deathbed-dearest, they'll-be-nearest folks with skin-on (including chance-given family and choice-gathered family). These people will be there through the most gruesome and grief-filled times; but they're also the ones great and gracious about your glorious moments too. Finally. External to this egg-white-ish layer that surrounds that Soul-yolk nucleus, we find the social realm of friends whose influence matters, but isnt as non-starter as the runnier-messier-stickier parts of that egg analogy.
Thing is, to pursue a big dream and publicly push past that paralyzing peer fear, you must crack that egg, or at least drop the whole thing in boiling water.
Otherwise...well...
Ever leave an egg too long outside the nest without any baking, boiling, scrambling...you get the idea...? It gets stinky. It begins to make everyone around it miserable. Oh - and remember - this egg analogy is your co-spherical layers of influence. Not a good thing to make funky. Crack it already.
Stay tuned, stay focused, stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
•••
Thanks for visiting!
~ Johnna Kay Troglin, MA, HSER/MFT
Owner of ScriptedWellness.com
OIF/OEF Veteran • USAF, Retired
You can find me here, and never miss an issue by subscribing via the link to the right; and you'll also occasionally see me elsewhere on the Web:
Facebook & WWConnect @JoysMyStrength
Twitter: @OkieYogini
Instagram: @ScriptedWellness
Tumblr: @ScriptedWellness
Google: @ScriptedWellness
For gluten free, natural supplement support, visit: www.FitBitty.myPlexusProducts.com
While you're there, if asked utilize my Plexus ID # 297028.
Contact me with any questions, suggestions, or concerns at: Johnna.Troglin@ScriptedWellness.com
09 June 2017
Welcome to the Home of Scripted Wellness!
Welcome to ScriptedWellness!
I'm Johnna: an avid reader, born writer, and compulsive collector of all things wellness - no, not just fitness! Whole, holistic wellness of the body, soul, mind, spirit, relationships, pocketbook, hopes, and passions. My heartfelt desire is to seek the very highest potential in demonstrated love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control as I set my mind on what is true, noble, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent, or praiseworthy (Galatians 5:22-23 & Philippians 4:8). If we can make those things our focus, and try to edify (equip, educate, encourage, and empower) others on their journey as well, just imagine what we can accomplish!
My masters is in counseling, and my life experiences have certainly given me more than plenty empathy. My personal physical wellness is something I'll disclose as we progress; but I've maintained my weight in a happy range for several years now. It's time for this work.
And what, pray tell, is "this work," we ask in the third paragraph (thank you for your forbearance)? This witty word-smith-ing - and a bit of photography, painting, and other whimsy I'm sure will work its way here - is a necessary result of the accumulation of many bodies of work by wise writers whose hours it is my quest to honor with book report/reviews, poetic and prose musings, and add my own writing from time to time as the Muse visits.
Also, there will be an option to participate in a Prompted Journalling Group. A weekly prompt will be provided once the group begins, and participants will have a safe space for dialogue on various wellness topics. Occasionally, this may take the form of a themed prompt series or a Book Club theme. Please also feel free to offer Prompt Suggestions at the link.
Update: I've become an affiliate with Amazon.com so I can help my readers find - or at least picture - some of the resources I've used or those to which I refer in blog posts. Links will be like this one:
I promise I won't "spam" you - I don't like my inbox cluttered either; nor will I "share" you - I want this to be a safe space in cyber-land you can play and work and laugh and learn securely.
This post was originally penned on 9 June 2017 and is being updated 4 March 2019.
Stay tuned. Stay focused. Stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
•••
Thanks for visiting!
~ Johnna Kay Troglin, MA, HSER/MFT
Owner of ScriptedWellness.com
OIF/OEF Veteran • USAF, Retired
On Facebook & WWConnect @JoysMyStrength
On Twitter: @OkieYogini
On Instagram: @ScriptedWellness
On Tumblr: @ScriptedWellness
On Google: @ScriptedWellness
For gluten free, natural supplement support, visit: www.FitBitty.myPlexusProducts.com
Utilize Plexus ID # 297028
Contact me with any questions, suggestions, or concerns at:
Johnna.Troglin@ScriptedWellness.com
I'm Johnna: an avid reader, born writer, and compulsive collector of all things wellness - no, not just fitness! Whole, holistic wellness of the body, soul, mind, spirit, relationships, pocketbook, hopes, and passions. My heartfelt desire is to seek the very highest potential in demonstrated love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control as I set my mind on what is true, noble, pure, lovely, admirable, excellent, or praiseworthy (Galatians 5:22-23 & Philippians 4:8). If we can make those things our focus, and try to edify (equip, educate, encourage, and empower) others on their journey as well, just imagine what we can accomplish!
My masters is in counseling, and my life experiences have certainly given me more than plenty empathy. My personal physical wellness is something I'll disclose as we progress; but I've maintained my weight in a happy range for several years now. It's time for this work.
And what, pray tell, is "this work," we ask in the third paragraph (thank you for your forbearance)? This witty word-smith-ing - and a bit of photography, painting, and other whimsy I'm sure will work its way here - is a necessary result of the accumulation of many bodies of work by wise writers whose hours it is my quest to honor with book report/reviews, poetic and prose musings, and add my own writing from time to time as the Muse visits.
Also, there will be an option to participate in a Prompted Journalling Group. A weekly prompt will be provided once the group begins, and participants will have a safe space for dialogue on various wellness topics. Occasionally, this may take the form of a themed prompt series or a Book Club theme. Please also feel free to offer Prompt Suggestions at the link.
Update: I've become an affiliate with Amazon.com so I can help my readers find - or at least picture - some of the resources I've used or those to which I refer in blog posts. Links will be like this one:
I promise I won't "spam" you - I don't like my inbox cluttered either; nor will I "share" you - I want this to be a safe space in cyber-land you can play and work and laugh and learn securely.
This post was originally penned on 9 June 2017 and is being updated 4 March 2019.
Stay tuned. Stay focused. Stay well.
#youaresoveryworthy
•••
Thanks for visiting!
~ Johnna Kay Troglin, MA, HSER/MFT
Owner of ScriptedWellness.com
OIF/OEF Veteran • USAF, Retired
On Facebook & WWConnect @JoysMyStrength
On Twitter: @OkieYogini
On Instagram: @ScriptedWellness
On Tumblr: @ScriptedWellness
On Google: @ScriptedWellness
For gluten free, natural supplement support, visit: www.FitBitty.myPlexusProducts.com
Utilize Plexus ID # 297028
Contact me with any questions, suggestions, or concerns at:
Johnna.Troglin@ScriptedWellness.com
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