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Positive
Energy
By Judith Orloff, M.D.
Digested for Intuitive-Connections by Lorrie Kazan
The message of Positive Energy is to be mindful and from mindfulness
comes a new kind of freedom, both in knowing one's self fully and
in being fully present in one's life.
Dr. Judith Orloff is a practicing psychiatrist, author, lecturer
and empath. The book opens with the idea that we are all rushing
about while being inundated with information/energy from faxes, TVs,
cell phones, and random vibrations from all over the world. We've
numbed ourselves in order to function in an environment that rewards
striving and accomplishing.
Dr. Orloff uses the phrase "Energy Psychiatry" to describe
her work. Energy Psychiatry differs from other energy medicine because
it is not based in a chiropractic understanding of the body, but
in a tradition of empathy, mindfulness, intuition and psychiatric
knowledge.
Her intent is to help readers become more sensitive to themselves,
other people, and the environment. -- There's an energy
field, or vibe emanating from everything we encounter, from foods
to friends to current events. How we respond to these vibrations
can enliven or undermine our senses of vitality. Subtle energy can
be described as chi, mana, prana, and has been valued by other cultures
for eons. If we are more sensitive to the subtle, ultimately we will
have more power in tending and maximizing our life forces.
Dr. Orloff provides ten prescriptions, which lead to enhanced wellbeing.
The first seven prescriptions are about building your energy and
the last three detail her methods for "Creating Positive Relationships
and combating Energy Vampires." Chapters include exercises
and suggestions to help the reader obtain a richer experience. If
you are already an intuitive empath, it will remind you to value
the depth of your own gifts.
First Prescription:
Intuition is the language of energy, a direct link to the God force
and ourselves. To remind us what energy feels like, she asks us to
sit beside a person who is lying on the floor. We then cup our hands
a few feet above the person's head, bringing the hands in closer
or drawing them back as we feel the warmth and texture of the energy
field. She advises us to observe the friend as we scan her energy
so that we can be aware of visual cues, such as changing colors of
an aura.
The idea is that once you know something no one can take it away
from you and once you've experienced feeling energy vibration,
you can take that out into the world and notice your subtle reactions
to people, places and things. Once perception has begun, it's
quite likely to increase.
One of the first steps is to determine your sensitivity level. Are
you an empath? Empaths process all stress in their bodies,
are more prone to take in personal or global trauma's energetic residue.
Vulnerable to negativity, whether miniscule or horrendous, many empaths
have chronically low energy. Empaths experience "intuitive
overload" which causes depression, psychosomatic symptoms
and addictive behavior. A questionnaire is included to help the reader
determine whether this is an issue.
If you are an empath, you absorb everything and you may have learned
to practice maladaptive ways, such as overeating to shut things out.
Her counter technique to armoring is centering.
Centering Meditation: Sit in a quiet and relaxed space, maintaining
consciousness of the flow of breath. Breathing is the lifeline stressed
throughout this book, and is certainly the basis of mindfulness from
which she draws much of her information. Extend the breath downward,
picturing it going deeply into the earth's core. Imagine a root from
your spine going deep within the earth and drawing its nourishment.
"When we do too much multi-tasking, we end up energetically
floating above our body rather than fully inhabiting it, a limbo
that promotes chronic drain."
Second Prescription: Find a Nourishing Spiritual Path
Meditate, pray, incorporate silence, let go, and breathe. Awakening
the heart is the key to our survival, personally and globally. Giving
yourself the gift of spirituality is a radical act of self-love.
Third Prescription: Design An Energy-Aware Approach to Diet, Fitness
and Health
By and large, eating disorders are energy-based. This is something
Dr. Orloff believes she has discovered but I think it's an
idea that's been accepted for some time. People, especially
highly sensitive people, will often eat to ground themselves or block
out unsettling energies.
"Extraordinary times require extraordinary health. To actualize
the best in ourselves and humanity, our immune system must be robust."
This may ring true for many people; for empaths it's a necessity.
Pinpoint your stressors, even the smallest ones. Breathe negative
vibes out of your system. Pray to release your craving, take a bath,
burn sage. (I would add, if you have an eating disorder, seek out
a group such as OA How, which works the 12-Steps on that issue.)
Find foods that energize your body. Take the time to taste, sense,
smell and notice your reaction to each substance. The body and spirit
crave high energy foods. For example, would your body prefer an organically
grown salad, made with tomatoes harvested from non-hybrid seeds or
something processed? What if that salad were made with love, the
energy further intensified by the preparer praying over it?
Choosing Foods: Observe the outer appearance, smell the food, sense
the vibes, notice how your energy responds to the presence of this
food.
Add exercise: Find an atmosphere that nourishes you and a form of
exercise that feels good to your body. Make it a moving meditation. Frame
exercise time as a holy moment. Endorphins will boost you
and new habits will enliven you. We are meant to move, flow and breathe.
Sleep: Find out how much your body needs. Take time to allow for
extra sleep; notice whether extra sleep stimulates or decreases your
energy. Create a nourishing, relaxing sleep area that induces a sense
of peace.
Fourth Prescription: Generate Positive Emotional Energy to Counter
Negativity
Write down your fears. Answer them. Tune into deeper truths, pray,
make a gratitude list. Visit an energetically uplifting place. Old
traumas lodge in our energy fields. Seek out energy work, healing
massage, acupuncture. Avoid absorbing other people's fears.
Ask yourself whose fear you're feeling? Physically distance
yourself by 10 feet from the person. Use the centering breath described
earlier to ground, and inhale calm. Place your palms on your solar
plexus and breathe into it, pumping love from your heart.
Release anger, self-loathing and other negative states. Forgiveness
frees your energy and enhances your life force. Make amends. Tell
the truth.
Fifth Prescription: Heart Centered Sexuality
Find your soul and the rest follows. Heart-centered sexually emerges
from the connection with our true selves.
Dr. Orloff stresses that there is no need to surrender sensuality
if you're not in a relationship. When you're sensually
in love with all of life (this azalea, that Siamese cat, the foam
on a cresting wave), you'll feel more passion, individually
and with a partner.
Included in this chapter are a number of exercises for awakening
the senses. There is also guidance on such topics as Repelling
Unwanted Sexual Energy. The advice: Eliminate clear-cut
predators, speak up, set boundaries, recruit outside help, don't
give negative behavior your emotions, and trust your intuition.
To connect in a deeper way we must release old wounds, strengthen
our own health, explore greater self-expression and open the heart.
Energetic ties establish between people and with our higher source.
This chapter focuses on ways to experience and express this. Sometimes
ties between people need to be symbolically cut.
Sixth Prescription: Open Yourself to the Flow of Inspiration and
Creativity
Energy and creativity are master motivators. Writing, expressing,
creating, being inspired are natural antidotes to depression. To
be truly authentic, one should be inwardly moved before executing
an action. If one is inwardly connected, the outward expression will
simply flow and not require struggle. Dr. Orloff reminds us that "no
creative act is insignificant."
Longings are energy. Notice your longings and mindfully investigate
and experience rather than suppress them. You can use dream work:
for instance, ask a question of your unconscious mind before you
go to sleep, and upon awakening, write the dream down. Notice if
there is an answer in that dream. Of course, we can even take our
dream explorations further but that is not in the scope of this book.
Find your inspiration. Inspiration will catalyze your life in such
a way that you become a beacon of light. To find this inspiration,
Dr. Orloff combines techniques often used in 12-Step Programs. For
example, she suggests taking an Inspiration Inventory. The
intent is to recognize your passions and begin living them.
She breaks the inventory into action steps. The goal is to relish
the miraculous, even in the smallest moments. She encourages the
cultivation of Zen consciousness so that even the experience of going
to the supermarket can become a sacred ritual rather than a burden. There's
no way to be creative and bored, she wisely reminds us.
Spend time in power spots, wherever those are for you, i.e., places
in nature, bookstores, museums, etc. Interestingly, we're reminded
that observation needn't be a passive act. You can glean
energy from observing airtight ready to receive. Breathe deep. We
are always in relationship. The more conscious we are the more we
recognize and resonate with subtle energies. Consciousness breeds
consciousness. All art has the power to heal because it helps
us see who we are, and we exist.
A sample exercise:
"Make Changes Now: Set out on a Creative Search
Pick a person or place that creatively intrigues you; spend time
basking in that energy. Don't intellectualize -- feel it.
Then see what's stimulated in you. Fresh ideas. Flashes. Dreams.
Record them in your journal so they don't evaporate. Next,
try an insight out. This is how creativity is born."
Dialogue with the negative inner voices which tell you it's
too late or you're too old. Breathe deeply, nurture and console
yourself and allow yourself to take creative actions whether the
inner voice critiques or not. The miracle of the mind relaxing
is that your body experiences accelerated subtle energy flow."
Seventh Prescription: Celebrate the Sacredness of Laughter, Pampering,
the Replenishment of Retreat
We all need breaks. Laughter frees the spirit and infuses us with
positive energy. We need to nurture our hearts and respect our subtle
bodies. A regular schedule of pampering allows the mind to relax.
Regular massages, warm baths, time in nature, creating sacred space.
Eight Prescription: Attract Positive People and Situations
First, energetically embody what you want to attract.
1. Know your strengths and focus on them. Use positive self-talk
to remind you of who you really are and not the façade you
came to accept.
2. Extend heart energy outward. Picture someone or
something for whom you feel tremendous love and feel that connection
from within your heart. Inwardly ask, Let love flow through
me, and sense the feeling as it moves through you and overflows
out into the world. Loving consciousness uplifts the environment. The
kinder we are to ourselves and others, the more love we communicate.
3. Meditate regularly. Consistent meditation will raise your consciousness
and overall quality and level of your moods.
4. Commit to emotional housecleaning. Don't let negativity
build up. Instead use the tools of psychotherapy, writing, talking,
self- exploration.
Become familiar with who you are and how you are. Notice how your
body reacts to different people. Are you energized or fatigued in
their presence? Take the time you need to observe. Seeing
the beauty and goodness in people magnetizes them.We are all
starving to have the goodness in us acknowledged.
Notice which physical spaces empower or disempower you.
Ninth Prescription: Protect Yourself from Energy Vampires
Vampires suck energy. When in the midst of them, you might feel tired,
compulsive, or drained. Vampires are generally unconscious of the
damage they inflict. They often suffer from an unquenchable need
to be fed due to energy leaks that developed during a neglected or
in some way disruptive childhood.
Common Vampire Methods:
1. Sob Sister: Perennial victim and complainer
Antidote: Set clear boundaries, limit your available time. If the
person is truly someone you value, lovingly say, I really
value our relationship, but when you keep rehashing the same points,
it wears me out. I can listen for 10 minutes; that's my limit.
However, when you want to talk solutions, I'm here for you.‚
2. The Blamer: Constantly barrages you with negative criticism
Antidote: Shield yourself in a cocoon of light.
3. Drama Queen: Lives in emotional extremes. Typically, her
parents equated trumped up disasters with intimacy.
Antidote: Stay calm and set limits. Don't feed the vampire
by getting emotional.
4. Constant talker or Joke-Teller: Compulsively talks and is oblivious
to body language.
Antidote: Breath into a space of neutrality. Verbally assert something
to the affect of, I am a very quiet person, so excuse me for
not talking a long time.
5. The Fixer-Upper: You're always playing therapist or advisor
to them. They have so much potential but no commitment to realize
it.
Antidote: Explore your own codependent needs.
6. Outwardly nice socializer: You notice an energy drain in this
person's space.
Antidote: Make a definitive statement such as, Excuse me but
I really have to go to the bathroom. Step at least 20 feet
away from the person and notice if your own energy shifts for the
better.
7. The Go-For-the-Jugular Friend: Deflates your energy with hurtful
and well-placed caustic insults as a way of venting their own envy
or unmet needs.
Antidote: Break eye contact. Use breathing exercises. Exhale negative
vibes out the back of your lower spine and breathe in sunlight. Bathe,
shower, burn sage.
8. Crowds that drain
Antidote: Keep healthy snacks to balance blood sugar, limit your
contact and build your tolerance. Step into a quiet space, or find
a room with a door, such as a bathroom.
9. Unintentional Sappers: Families, kids, intrusions.
Antidote: Carve out your personal space.
Prescription 10: Create Abundance
Appreciate what you have, give generously, volunteer time, tithe
money, let go, do good deeds, often anonymously. Realize that we're
all tied together energetically so that what you give out mirrors
what you'll get back, and then release that formula and give
from the generosity of your heart.
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