A Practical Guide to Staying Present in Daily Life by HENRIK EDBERG
A Practical Guide to Staying Present in Daily Life
There
is only one time and place where you can be and have any control over. The
present moment.
But
most of us still spend a lot of our regular days lost in memories, reliving a
sunny vacation or maybe more commonly repeating an old conflict or negative
situation over and over in our thoughts.
Or we
get lost in scenarios about what could happen in the future. Maybe through
wishful daydreams. Or maybe by building monsters in our minds as thoughts go
round and round and create scary and dangerous mountains out of molehills or
just air.
Or the
mind may become split and unfocused between several different things and tasks.
If you
spend a lot of your everyday moments and time in the future or the past – or
both of them – or you have difficulty focusing and you feel this may have a
negative effect on your life then maybe you want to learn to live more in the
present moment.
I first
tried it several years ago and it has had some huge benefits for me. Some the
most important ones are:
§ Less
negativity and more action. Too much time in the past or future
tends to create a lot of fear, worry, lowers your self-confidence and you’ll
get less of the very most important and often difficult stuff done.
§ Less
stress. When you try to do things but put a lot of pressure on
yourself by reliving past failures that you want to avoid now then that adds a
lot of stress to anything.
§ You’ll
find more fun and excitement in what you do. Rather than feeling
stressed and like you just have to get to the finish line as quickly as you
can. Doing something and just being focused on that and nothing else makes the
doing more joyful. Or it at least feels more OK to do it.
§ Sharper
and more relaxed socially. Learning to be present has had a huge
positive effect on my social skills. When you are just in the present moment in
a conversation then you don’t fear what could go wrong based on bad previous
experiences. You won’t build up a big negative future scenario before your date
or meeting at work. You may do a bit of planning. But when you are in the conversation
or meeting you are just there to 100%. And that makes it so much easier to
think fast, to be witty, to listen well and to have a great and relaxed
interaction.
§
Those
are some of the biggest benefits.
Here’s
what works for me. Just a few simple things that I use in my normal day.
Don’t
aim for staying present all the time though. Because that is probably
impossible and perfectionism tears self-esteem apart.
Just
focus on improving. That is what I have done. Little by little I have learned
to stay present more and more during my day. I hope this guide can help you to
do the same.
Single-task not only your work.
I and
many others have often written and talked about the importance of
single-tasking your work to get it done more effectively.
I have
found that it becomes easier for me to stay present for more time throughout my
day if I single-task everything as best I can.
That
means to not use tabs when I browse the internet but to just be fully engaged
with one thing online at a time. It means to not use my Smartphone or my
computer as I also try to watch the TV. Or to use any of those internet-devices
during a conversation.
Get a
good start to your day and set the tone for it by single-tasking as soon as you
wake up.
If you
have to multitask, then try to set off some specific time for it during your
day. Maybe an hour or so in the afternoon.
Do it slowly.
When
you wake up and starting doing your first thing of the day, then slow it down a
bit.
Do it
and the next few things at a relaxed and calm pace. It will probably not take
that much longer than if you do it fast. And you’ll be able to stay present
more easily, to focus on each thing you do and to find a simple joy or
stillness in it.
Do that
instead of increasing your stress right away and getting stuck in worries or
though loops about what may happen today before you even have had your
breakfast.
As you
move through your day, try to do it slowly when you can. Walk or ride your
bicycle a little slower. Talk slower (this not only makes you feel calmer but I
have also found that people tend to listen better to what you say when you talk
a little slower).
Tell yourself: now I am…
This is
something I have started using quite recently and it helps my thoughts to not
wander off.
As I do
something I simply tell myself this in my mind: Now I am X.
For
example, if I am brushing my teeth, then I tell myself: Now I am brushing my
teeth.
This
habit is maybe most important when doing things where it is easy to drift away
to the future or past. It could be when you brush your hair or teeth or when
you are taking a walk to the supermarket.
I don’t
tell myself this line all the time, but I pepper it a bunch of times throughout
my day.
Minimize the input to have less thoughts running around in your
head.
If I check
the email, Face book and three newspaper websites online early in the day then
I have found that I will have more thoughts bouncing around in my head. And so
it becomes a lot harder to concentrate on anything, to stay present and to not
be dragged away into some negative thought loop.
So the
kind option towards me has become to not check anything early in the day. And
to check things as few times as I can. If I minimize such things then my day
becomes lighter and simpler and I not only stay present more easily but I also
tend to get more things of importance done.
No, no, no + reconnect with the here and now
The
four tips above make it easier to stay in the present moment and to use it and
enjoy it fully. But each day I still drift into the past or the future. Or my
thoughts become split between different things.
If you have read any of my stuff on self -esteem then
you know that I often use a stop-word to quickly disrupt and stop the inner
critic or a self-esteem damaging train of thought. I do the same thing here. As
quickly as I notice that my thoughts have drifted away I say to myself: No, no,
no.
Then I
quickly follow that up with focusing on just my breathing or just on what is happening
around me right now with all my senses for a minute or two to draw myself back
to the present moment.

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