“How
to take charge of your emotions”
Did you know that you have three parts to
your brain? There is brain #1 that is in charge of your
reflexes and instincts, brain #2 that is in charge of
making appropriate decisions and actions, and brain #3
that is in charge of your being able to understand the
consequences of your decisions before you act upon them.
These three brain parts must work together if you are to
function in a balanced way. When these parts are not
balanced you can be reactive, unaware or uncaring of
consequences, unmanaged or disconnected emotions,
worrying, anxious and fearful, overanalyze, and poor
communication with ourselves and others.
In order to have an effective life with our
mental-emotional-physical health, in our relationships,
our careers and our community, we need to have a healthy
balance between the emotional and logical centers of our
brain.
The brain holds emotional memories from the past,
remembering a variety of sights, smells, tastes, sounds
and other experiences. These memories can be triggered
by events in the present. When this happens you react,
feeling a variety of feelings like: nervousness, worry,
anxiety, frustration, anger or other emotions that are
similar to the stored memory. When these various
emotions from the past are triggered, your body releases
stress hormones; this affects your perception of a
present situation, causing you to react emotionally and
chemically as if it were happening again – even if it
isn’t.
Your emotional memories affect your perceptions which
affect your present emotions, and this can cause you to
think in a limited or fearful way about present
situations. Because of this, you are at risk of being
misjudging people and circumstances and projecting the
past onto the present and future.
Your emotions affect your nervous system. Negative
emotions can cause your heart to move in irregular
rhythms causing you to have difficulty to think straight
and make healthy decisions and actions. Your brain and
heart are connected through the nervous system. You have
a central nervous system and an autonomic nervous
system. The later is very important as it controls all
your functions at the subconscious level; it also
controls your emotions and acts as a connector for the
brain, heart and body.
When you are angry your sympathetic nervous system
increases and your parasympathetic nervous system
decreases; this interferes with the normal function of
these systems and they become out of balance with one
another, stressing the body. This can cause you to have
difficulty with: thinking clearly, decision-making,
communication, body coordination, suppressed immune
system, respiratory problems, colds/flu, high blood
pressure, heart disease, and possible heart attacks in
the future.
The positive emotions of love, nurturance, kindness,
compassion, and appreciation send different signals
through the body allowing the nervous system to be
balanced, and therefore the body and all of its
functions becomes more balanced. When this occurs you
have effective problem-solving, decision-making,
effective performance, clearer and creative thinking
processes, an enhanced immune system and hormonal
balance and a generally healthier and happier life
experience.
There is a brain and heart connection in your body that
sends messages back and forth through your nervous
system. These messages or signals affect how you feel,
perceive things and then respond to them. The first
recognition of something is experienced in your heart
and then the heart sends a message to your brain about
what is perceived where it is then processed as a
certain type of feeling or experience.
Your heart affects your ability to think clearly by
either giving you feedback in the form of balanced heart
rhythms that gives you the ability to think clearly,
problem-solve and make decisions effectively, have more
coordinated and faster reflexes. The unbalanced heart
rhythms give you a slower mind, poor memory and focus,
difficulty hearing what is being said (taking in new
information, understanding, and negatively affecting
learning), and causes your body to have less energy and
slower reflexes that negatively affect your performance.
You can learn to be in control of your emotions and
delete the emotional memories from the past that can so
easily be triggered by present day events. You can
manage everyday situations, annoyances, anxieties,
depression, and frustrations – by learning to take
charge of your emotions and filling up your emotional
bank account and reenergizing your nervous system. Start
to reduce and delete these emotional memories that keep
you back from being in balance in your body, mind,
emotions, relationships, career, and all areas of your
life. Learn how to create greater happiness and
emotional balance as well as how you can balance the
three centers of your brain and your nervous system
while deleting old emotional programs.
(Read more about the transformational
CD’s and Exercise Booklets to take control of your
experience!)
How you can easily transform any negative
program to a positive one!
To help you delete negative conditioning,
experiences, thoughts, beliefs, expectations,
and behaviors, it is important to be in a very
relaxed state, while listening to positive
statements that are specifically set up to be
easily taken in by your subconscious mind over a
period of time. When the conscious mind is more
relaxed or going into a less conscious state,
there is less resistance to a new and healthier
program that may not be what the conscious mind
is use to thinking or believing. As the
subconscious mind takes in the new and healthier
program, it saves this new information until it
eventually is accepted. Over time the conscious
mind also accepts this new and healthier
program, and healthier set of beliefs, thoughts,
feelings and behaviors.
The Self Empowerment Every Day: SEED Program has
been designed to help you create this inner and
outer healthy program. Many people like to
listen to it as they go to sleep every night,
and find that they have a deep sleep and awaken
refreshed, alert, and calmer in the morning.
They find that throughout their day they are
less reactive and more calmly responding to the
events in their day. People find that they are
making healthier choices, setting healthier
goals and achieving them.
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