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Home Page › Self Healing › Joy & Happiness
 

Eleven Guidelines for Pursuing Pleasure

 
Author: Moreah Vestan

As an ex-Catholic, Ive had to practice giving up guilt around the conscious pursuit of pleasure in my life. I tend to agree with Napoleon Hill in Think & Grow Rich: "Ask life for great gifts and you encourage life to deliver them to you." I made up the following list for both a speech I gave and a column I wrote. Im not elaborating much on any of my 11 principles here, because I hope you will put your own imagination to active use in seeing how they apply personally.

My 11 guidelines include:

1) Grab your pleasure when and where it shows up. Don't have a set idea of how it must look. If you have your schedule set to accomplish 17 things today, and you get a free ticket to a concert youd love to attend, drop those last 13 things if you must, and exult in your good luck. Do know and honor your & others' boundaries and values in the process.

2) When you see something you want, ask for it. Do it as easily as you'd place your order with the waiter. Assume if you want it, you're meant to have it. Ask Life to be your waiter from now on. Its easier to get a no than to wonder for the next three months whether you might have gotten your desire if you had asked.

3) Go for what you can have when you can't have it all. The sunny part of the rainy day; the friendship if not the lover; the soup when the entree is too expensive.

4) Get out of your serious adult and into your playful child every chance you get. How would that look for you? Who would you invite along? How can you make playfulness a regular fun habit? I hired the Bubble Man to do a bubble show in my back yard for my 59th birthday party; the five kids and 30 adults oohed and ahhed over his tricks and the tools he entertained us with. I mark in my annual calendar in April to find out which day Ben & Jerrys is giving away their free ice cream cones. Once a friend in a green foam sombrero and I in my rainbow colored wig gave away free tickets ("to nothing") at a local street festival. It was great fun for us and also for the receivers of the unusable tickets. What sounds playful to you?

5) Take pride in what does work for you instead of putting yourself down for your limitations. When I was in Siena, Italy, and geographically challenged, I feared I'd never find my travel partner Dee again when I went off looking for lodging. I retraced my route the long way, but found her. How can you reframe a criticism of yourself into an approval/ acceptance of you just as you are?

6) Plan for, and insist on, breaks or rests to make the demanding times less stressful. That goes for at work, on a hike, and meeting a deadline. What kind of breaks work for you? It could be a cup of tea, a three block walk, a trip to the store, five minutes of stretching, or even a nap.

7) Don't limit yourself by another's belief on what is enough. Go back for Life's seconds. Stop when you have had enough. Only your own self-judgment keeps you from going for what you want. In Conversations with God, God says I dont care what (work) you do; all I care is that you fully express all of who you are." Does that mean being active in six major projects? Going out to concerts and dinner and meetings four nights a week? You get to decide.

8) Don't make snap judgments about people or places. There is good and not so good in everything. Give it a chance to shine. When a man I met through the personals sent an inappropriate email card, I didnt ditch him, because I knew he had a good heart. Some people take time to open up.

9) Tune in to the little things. Look and listen for what soothes your spirit and quiets your busynessstar or cloud gazing, daydreaming, birds flying, lilacs, a water fountain, the variety in a garden center, or classical music.

10) Do whatever it takes to figure out what fulfills you. Then give yourself over to it. Examples that inspire or fulfill might include the artist Gaudi in Spain; Journaling; Barbara Sher's books; Tony Robbins, B. Kipfers 14,000 Things.to be Happy About and The Wish List.

11) When you experience bliss, wherever you are, embrace it. Don't put conditions on it. Let it come; let it go. When I was in Europe a couple years ago, I had only three days to spend in the Swiss Alps. I would have loved extra time. But I got total delight out of those three days. Preferences are fine, but delight in the day.

Author Bio:
Moreah Vestan is a proclaimed scripter. Moreah likes to write articles about this topic.
You can search for this article using: joy, happiness, happy happy joy joy, pride & joy, finding happiness, being happy, how to find happiness
 
 
 

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