Joshua Tree Counseling

Do You Have the Character to Go through the Next Open Door?

Anvil and SwordBefore we ride the elephant to “shake that bridge,” (like the mouse thought he did in our last blog), here’s an important truth to consider: Are you ready for your next God-sized dream?

Britt Chole is brutally honest with herself in “Anonymous” about this issue:

“But there is quite a bit of room between self-promotion and utter passivity in our stewardship of God-size dreams.  At present, I am attempting to rest in alert availability.  ‘Alert’ because I am not living in denial of the dreams in my heart. ‘Available’ because God is a gentleman and I am quite comfortable waiting for him to open doors.  Truth is, I do not have enough character to walk through doors I open for myself.”

Think of how we usually receive new blessings after dealing with difficult challenges.  Christ said that “no one pours new wine into old wineskins.  If he does, the wine will burst the skins, and both the wine and the wineskins will be ruined.  No, he pours new wine into new wineskins.”  When receiving the “new wine,” we want to make sure that the wine skins (our lives or our readiness or are character) are new, too.

Sometimes we have to ask ourselves if we’re concentrating more on the destination and less on the journey.  If we’re focused on the destination then the lessons of the journey will be lost upon us.

Important questions: What lessons have you learned in the last week?  What lessons did you learn today?  Are you noticeably closer to God now than you were six months ago?  Do you have a clearer sense of your identity now than you did six months ago?

Knowing who we are and having right priorities is necessary in order to “ride the elephant.”  If where we’re going is worth anything at all, I think we need to be sure of our identity and have the character to deal with whatever comes our way.

In the next blog we’ll talk about how elephants have traditionally carried royalty on their backs.  If you know that through faith in Christ, you are royalty in God’s sight, and if you’re letting God make you more like Him every day, you probably have the character to go through the next open door in order to receive all the good things that God has for you!

Ride the Elephant, Shake the Bridge!

elephant

Many of you have heard the tale of the mouse who rode the elephant across a bridge.  After getting to the other side, the mouse said, “We really shook that bridge!”

Of course, it’s the elephant that shook the bridge, but the mouse rode the power!

We know that momentum is mass times velocity. The elephant has several thousand times more mass than the mouse, and the elephant can also run faster. In fact, for the two to have the same momentum, the mouse would have to travel faster than sound!   But if the mouse simply rides the elephant, the mouse can rapidly plow through a jungle of obstacles.

I had a professor who said, “Just stay on the bus, and the bus will take you where you want to go.  But you have to stay on the bus.”  Holding onto this truth helped me to get through a tough doctoral program.  Taking this saying to heart is similar to believing in one of my favorite scriptures: “See, I am sending an angel ahead of you to guard you along the way and to bring you to the place I have prepared” (Exodus 23:20).  To get to where we’re going, it’s important to simply keep our eyes on Christ and trust that He’ll bring us victories that we anticipate.

As a therapist and marriage counselor for over 30 years, I’ve seen hundreds of “underdogs” take charge of their lives.  Many of us have been underestimated and even treated unfairly.  Others have been abused, have run afoul of the law, have been born with chemical imbalances, or have faced unimaginable family-of-origin horrors.  Some people have simply had set-backs to their well-ordered lives and high expectations.  None of this is easy and it takes a toll on us.  So I try to remember that life isn’t fair, but God is MORE than fair.  Sometimes we have yet to see what’s on the OTHER side of the bridge, “the place” that God has prepared.

Turmoil and confusion can be the beginning of creativity and victory.  With a passion for the fulfillment of dreams, for victories over any obstacle, and for service to Christ – oftentimes with many miracles! – many have risen from ash heaps to mountain tops, from believing lies to believing the truth, from confusion to vision, and from defeat to victory.  We can be just like that mouse!  All we have to do is ride the elephant.  And at the end of the ride we can say, “Wow, we really shook that bridge!”

Points to Ponder:

Before I shake the bridge, I want to know four things:

● It’s the right bridge (a call of God or one of my missions in life).

● It’s the right time.

● I’m ready for greater obstacles on the other side of the bridge.

● I’m ready to live a victorious life.

Welcome to 2013!

New Year's Bells

I’m excited about entering into another year of counseling couples and individuals and loving all whom God puts in my path!

I believe that God’s favor will rest upon me and my family in the New Year.  But I want to focus on what I can proactively do for others, as I do in the counseling office.   Here are some thoughts.  You may want to make your own list.

● I can let myself be interrupted more often.

● I can return a frown with a smile more often.

● I can pray more for the child in Kenya that my wife and I sponsor.

● I can drive defensively and let a rude driver cut in front of me without becoming angry.

● While “guarding my heart,” I can think the best of everyone I meet.

● I can encourage others to “go out on a limb” and try something they’ve been afraid to do.  I can do the same for myself!

● I can slow down and talk to people at work a little more (I’m already pretty good at this, but I can get better at slowing down!).

● I can surprise my wife with flowers more than I do now.

● I can give a free seminar on marriage, depression, or another issue.

I think that if I keep my focus on others, somehow there will be spiritual and psychological benefits to me, too.  But that doesn’t affect my focus.

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves.  Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others” (Philippians 2:3-4).

Hold A Crown Over Someone’s Head!

CrownI’m starting a blog in order to encourage people to excel.  There is no heavier burden than “potential.”   Why carry all of our potential around with us?

It’s important to turn our gifts into actions that bring meaning to our lives and blessings to the lives of others.  Our strongest ally to make it all happen is God.

My favorite thing to do: “Hold a crown over people’s heads.”  Try to see them as God sees them.  If you hold a crown over someone’s head, that person will often grow into it.  Try noticing the crown that God holds over your head and see what happens!

I look at it like this: “Everyone has something I want.”  I Googled that phrase and all that came up was, “I want something free.”  That’s not what I’m talking about!

I can tell you a quality about anyone I’ve ever met that I would like to have.  Isn’t that incredible that so many people have so many gifts and positive qualities?!

In my blog, I’ll often encourage you to excel and to positively influence others. I’ll encourage you to act on your faith in God, no matter how small your faith.  I want to hold a crown over your head!

So when you click on my blog, get ready to be challenged with noble ideas, to be encouraged, and to grow in faith.

If you want to interact with what I’m saying, please speak up!  This is the kind of fun that will guarantee our mutual growth.  I hope to see you at my “web log!”

Book Review: The Three C’s of Anxiety Recovery by Stanley Hibbs

Anxiety Gone by Stanley Hibbs Book Review by Chet Weld

Unless you’re reading this with a flashlight from six feet under, you probably experience worry or anxiety. Everyone does! But once we understand how we’re making ourselves worried, we can teach ourselves to be free from worry.

If you don’t have a tendency to worry, get ready to learn how to help others overcome their vulnerability to worry too much! Just to get you going, here’s an example of something practical to help someone defeat worry: If you catch a worrisome thought trying to get inside your brain, just imagine that Donald Duck is speaking that thought to you. Who listens to Donald’s negativity? No one! He’ll always be a grump!

First, if you’re worrying, ask yourself, “What specific thoughts am I thinking?” Since God isn’t worried, these thoughts are probably lies or distortions of the truth. There are ways and there is a time and place to challenge unhealthy thoughts, but try this first. Rather than challenge these thoughts, just note them: A worrisome thought is simply a mental event. Thoughts get on the bus, and thoughts get off the bus!

Once you’ve identified the thoughts, you can imagine that they’re temporarily projected onto a movie screen – in black and white sentences. The movie is a “short” and can’t do anything to you but come to an end! Usually, there’s more than one worrisome thought.

Picture the words running forward and then running backwards. Run them forward in five seconds, then backwards in five seconds. Pretty soon, you’ll become accustomed to the powerless black and white thoughts speeding back and forth. You’ll also notice that nothing has changed about the bus ride! Look at the vivid colors out the window and realize that you are a permanent spiritual being with a vulnerability to thinking temporary worrisome thoughts – just like everybody else! Did the thoughts get off the bus yet? I wouldn’t be surprised!

Or imagine that your mind is a chessboard. Picture the board. Picture that the thoughts are pieces that move around the board. If these thoughts engender worrisome emotions, are you going to make choices based on these emotions? Are you going to rehearse them in your head and speak them out, as if they’re true? Or are you going to make choices based on your conviction of who you are on your faith in God, on your values, on your plans, and on your hopes and dreams?

Worry or anxiety is a form of fear. Let’s spend a moment thinking about the causes of worry. Here’s a clever acrostic that gives us some clues:

F – Fusion – We tend to think that our thoughts are real. We fuse them with our emotions and with our false and unresearched thoughts about reality.

E – Evaluation – We label according to our preconceived notions. Stephen Covey: We see the world not as it is, but as WE are. Thoughts come and go and so do my evaluations.

A – Avoidance – When we avoid, we add to our misery. We tell ourselves, “I must not feel any anxiety.”

R – Reason giving: We make emotion-based decisions.

Here’s a well-rounded approach for defeating worry:

1. Physiological: Calm your body. Breathe slowly and concentrate on your breathing. Picture times when you felt very peaceful. I call these “peaceful scenes.” We all go into a “trance” 3-4 times a day, anyway. Go to your peaceful scene for a few minutes. Discuss with a psychiatrist or with a Primary Care Physician who is familiar with psychiatric medication and consider the benefit of balancing the chemicals of your neurotransmitters. If the worry is moderate to severe, you may benefit from certain antidepressants that also have anti-anxiety effects and from an “as needed” sedative. If other chemical issues are involved, other medications may be necessary, e.g., mood stabilizers.

2. Cognitive: Correct your thinking. I tell people to “re-tread your head” with the word of God or with what you know to be the truth. If you don’t know the truth, make it your research project to discover the truth. You might consult with friends that you trust.

3. Behavioral: Confront your fears. When you don’t confront them, you make them even more intense. Perhaps, ask yourself, “What have I done that was scary that eventually wasn’t scary?”

4. Spiritual: Pour out your heart to God; pursue normal discipleship such as reading the Bible, praying, fellowshipping with other Christians, absorbing Christian and wholesome music into your soul, and listening to your favorite pastors. If you’re already doing this – or trying to do this – and nothing seems to be working, then simply be mindful of God whenever you’re doing something you enjoy. Start including thoughts of God in your jogging, your painting, your writing, your talking with others, or with anything that you enjoy.

5. Survey method: Ask friends to tell you their experiences. They’re probably not much different from yours!

6. Double-standard technique: Pretend that a friend is having the same problem that you are and talk to him or her in a compassionate way, as you normally would, anyway!

7. Feared fantasy: Play out the nightmare scenario. Face the fear and see what happens!

8. Self-disclosure: Don’t hide your anxiety. Share it with others!

9. Develop a hierarchy and gradually confront avoided situations.

10. Teach yourself conversational skills. This means talking to your family, colleagues, those you work out with, or other social situations. You’ve just changed the focus from worry to skill development!

11. Ask yourself, “What can I control and what can’t I control.” If you focus on what you can control, your circle of influence will expand.

12. Have a menu of more positive things to think about. For example, “peaceful scenes” can be on the menu!

13. Designate a specific time to worry. Simply set aside ten minutes to play the negative movie backwards and forwards or even just to worry as hard as you can and get it over with. You may not even be able to do it!

14. Sing out the worrisome thought(s). Your thought(s) may become quite entertaining!

15. Comedy channel: Imagine that somebody silly is telling you these things. Once you get

tired of all the silliness, you can always change the channel.

16. Scale your worry: “On a scale of zero to ten, how high would my worry be if I were about to jump out of a plane?” Now you’re concentrating on the scale instead of your worry. Watch the number go up and down and notice what you’re doing or thinking and doing differently when the number is lower.

17. Make it a point to notice when you feel relaxed. Enjoy these times. Ask yourself what you’re doing and thinking differently. Try to expand these times. Get used to them!

18. Try this experiment: Try to make something happen by thinking it. Keep yourself posted on how successful you are!

19. Practice “mindfulness”: Step back from your experience. Be an observer. “I’m on the bank of a river, leaves are floating by, and I’m putting thoughts and feelings on leaves as they’re floating by.”

This book makes an excellent, practical contribution to the literature related to defeating anxiety. Anxiety can be gone!

Other resources for this review:

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, by Stephen Covey

Anxiety Gone: The Three C’s of Anxiety Recovery, by Stanley Hibbs

Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy, by David D. Burns

Book Review: Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside by Katrina Firlik

Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside by Katrina Firlik

Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside, by Katrina Firlik

Review by Dr. Chet Weld (posted on Amazon.com)

Beginning with operating on a man with a nail through his forehead, this book contains riveting stories and information about the human brain. Firlik calls herself “part scientist, part mechanic.” If you need surgery, you want someone that’s so skilled that much or all of the operation is a matter of automatic mechanical skill. You also want someone so experienced that unexpected complications can be managed in the best way possible. If the mechanic is also a scientist, that’s all for the better, but not absolutely necessary. After all, as Firlik says with her usual humor, one day she looked at an insurance form and discovered that she was merely a “service provider.” She added that she’s a volume dependent service provider. Good humor and humility for a neurosurgeon.

Near the beginning of the book, Firlik refers to surgery as “controlled trauma.” As she describes various surgeries, emergency and otherwise, simple and complicated, the meaning of this phrase comes alive. There’s no end to the excitement and the trauma of each and every day in the O.R.

The most exciting stories are those that tell of operations that have the greatest risk and the best outcomes. Also, the dialogue between Firlik and the patients is often touching. At one point, Firlik completely breaks down and sobs with a patient whose brain tumor can never be completely excised. This patient checks himself out of the hospital, rather than endure another surgery that will still have to be repeated (due to a “glioblastoma”).

I appreciate, too, how Firlik gives us an inside look into how surgeons talk to each other, e.g., “Better lucky than good,” “Is this a guy (a potential colleague) you really want in your foxhole?”, “Ah, the sound of neurosurgery!” (due to the drills and tools), and many more “vernacular” sayings of this unusual culture of brain surgeons. After a long day’s night, Firlik returned home for sleep. But because her husband, a fellow neurosurgeon, smelled “bone dust” on her, she had to shower before turning in! I also appreciate learning tidbits of information about different lobes of the brain, as well as some of the elementary points she makes regarding the functions of the different parts, information about neuroplasticity, the dangers of certain operations, the futility of one operation in particular, and the victory stories of saved lives, due to the brain surgeon’s expertise.

Firlik does not claim to have all the answers. Quite to the contrary. She presents the issue of, “What is consciousness?” to which there is no certain answer. So the effect of the book is that the more you learn, the more you want to learn; and no matter what you learn, certain mysteries about the human brain remain or deepen.

Most of all, I like the humanness that Firlik reveals about herself and other surgeons. I’ve often told my own clients, “I don’t have perfect counseling sessions, but by session’s end, I’m confident that we will have accomplished what needed to happen today.” After over 30,000 sessions, I still believe this, and I can count on one hand the number of sessions that I had any doubts about which this might not be true.

Well, the surgeons don’t have perfect surgeries all the time, either, although they never cease to aim for perfection. This is an encouragement to a therapist whose “science” is less exact! But in some ways, though the dynamics of inner healing and the building a strong marriage are mysterious, I also have an exact paradigm with many exact parts that I know will be successful with motivated clients. I adapt to different personalities and different problems, but in some ways, I can truly relate to Firlik’s statement that she is “part mechanic.”

Also useful to my own therapy sessions has been additional knowledge about how the brain functions. Such technical knowledge simply helps me to increase my understanding of why Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and other counseling models work. When I encourage journaling, I give more exact assignments than I used to give. Knowing how the brain works helps a therapist to know the fastest way to help clients restructure thoughts which produce different feelings. Also, everything

I learn about the brain has helped to increase my faith in God. This is far from Firlik’s intention who professes no faith in God (oddly enough she has faith in the brain!), but for my clients who put God first in their lives, anything I’ve ever learned about the brain, including what Firlik teaches, reveals more of both the mystery and majesty of God.