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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Making a Self-Awareness Journal

 

Good Morning!

Making a Self-Awareness Journal

1. For two weeks, make notations whenever you have a mood swing, emotional upheaval or change in energy (such as hyperactivity or lethargy).

2. Note the date and time of the event.

3. Note what actions you take to bring yourself back to balance. Do you sit down and do yoga, stretch, meditate. Do you recite an affirmation? Do you binge eat, purge, have a drink or do other actions revolving around food?

4. If you react with food, what do you eat? Find comfort in?

5. Note what you appeared to by unaware of, just 24 hours ago.

6. The Self Awareness Journal is NOT a judgment tool. It is a way for you to go back to it, AFTER a week is done and look at habits you may not even realize you are doing in response to change.

7. After committing to two weeks of journaling, take a look at the overall process. Was it somehow helpful to you? In retrospect, did you gain valuable information from it?

8. If so, consider writing in it for another week.

9. You can use this journal to write down "positive progress" as well. Did you make any changes after your first two weeks?

10. Your Self Awareness Journal can just be the tool you need to take you to a new plateau of understanding your emotional connection to either you lack of awareness or current state and how you can actually take control and do something about it!

Andrew Pacholyk MS L.Ac
http://www.peacefulmind.com/metaphysics.htm
Therapies for healing
mind, body, spirit


__.

Re: Making a Self-Awareness Journal

 

thank you<3

On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 9:48 AM, Andrew Pacholyk yogiguruji@aol.com> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Good Morning!
>
> Making a Self-Awareness Journal
>
> 1. For two weeks, make notations whenever you have a mood swing, emotional
> upheaval or change in energy (such as hyperactivity or lethargy).
>
> 2. Note the date and time of the event.
>
> 3. Note what actions you take to bring yourself back to balance. Do you
> sit down and do yoga, stretch, meditate. Do you recite an affirmation? Do
> you binge eat, purge, have a drink or do other actions revolving around
> food?
>
> 4. If you react with food, what do you eat? Find comfort in?
>
> 5. Note what you appeared to by unaware of, just 24 hours ago.
>
> 6. The Self Awareness Journal is NOT a judgment tool. It is a way for you
> to go back to it, AFTER a week is done and look at habits you may not even
> realize you are doing in response to change.
>
> 7. After committing to two weeks of journaling, take a look at the overall
> process. Was it somehow helpful to you? In retrospect, did you gain
> valuable information from it?
>
> 8. If so, consider writing in it for another week.
>
> 9. You can use this journal to write down "positive progress" as well. Did
> you make any changes after your first two weeks?
>
> 10. Your Self Awareness Journal can just be the tool you need to take you
> to a new plateau of understanding your emotional connection to either you
> lack of awareness or current state and how you can actually take control
> and do something about it!
>
> Andrew Pacholyk MS L.Ac
> http://www.peacefulmind.com/metaphysics.htm
> Therapies for healing
> mind, body, spirit
>
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


_

Trauma/Anxiety

 

Hi Victoria,

If you resolve your trauma, your anxiety will evaporate. I"ve been
practicing a technique called EFT for 10yrs. professionally
and I'm still amazed how quickly physical and emotional distress
disappear when we acknowledge them. Mind , body, and spirit
are one, and cannot be seperated.

Here is my webite to get more information: www.eftwellnesstl.com
http://eftwellnesstl..com>

All the best in life,
Ken

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]