Living in the moment is often a challenge, even for those who practice mindfulness regularly. In this animation from School of Life, Alain de Botton shares four ways you can reconnect with the present experience.
1. Recognize you may not always feel how you’re meant to—and that’s ok.
De Botton explains that life is full of moments where we are expected to feel certain things towards certain situations. On birthdays, we’re meant to feel happy. On funerals, we’re meant to feel sad. In reality, our emotions can be much more complex. “Our thoughts are seldom exactly in sync with outward events,” de Botton says. “They have tendencies to be vagabond, unfaithful and unruly. We rarely feel exactly what we’re meant to when we’re meant to.” Recognizing that your emotions may not naturally match your current circumstance can help you feel less detached, and more open to feeling exactly how it is you need to feel.
2. Explore the source of your emotions
While it may feel alarming to not have your emotions match your circumstances, there are many good reasons for this. For example, it could be that you’ve learned early on to guard your emotions and reactions. “Those among us who’ve suffered the most…have had to [become] masters of the art of occasional non-feeling,” de Botton notes. “No wonder then that, when the time comes for vulnerability and openness, we might not so easily be able to access our more tender emotions.” It’s not always painful experiences we struggle to connect with. Even during relaxing occasions, like going on holiday or spending a weekend with friends, you may find yourself straining to be more “in the moment.” There’s a simple reason for that, too. As creatures who have evolved by defending ourselves, we can’t always turn off our anxious mind—even when we have time off work and a sunny vacation at our disposal.
3. Give your mind time to catch up with your body
De Botton explains that our emotions tend to move far more slowly than life does. “The so-called right feelings may well show up, but rather later than one might expect,” he explains. “We do eventually feel grateful at the way the holiday went, but three months after we’ve returned. We do register that we are in love, or devastated or in mourning or scared, but not as soon as the world outside us might like.” Ultimately, it’s not that the emotions you’re feeling are “wrong”—but rather that they’re taking more time to develop than you might expect them to.
4. Finally, go easy on yourself
Spacing out every once and a while is natural. Instead of fighting back against a wandering mind, cut yourself—and others—more slack. “A lover who isn’t always there in the act might return if they aren’t pressured to do so too actively; someone who isn’t happy on holiday might grow a little more so if we don’t demand that they smile all the time,” de Botton says. Instead of forcing yourself to feel a certain way in the moment, notice how you feel as the event unfolds, regardless of how that may be. “Not being able to be in the moment isn’t a sign that we are strange or defective, but that we have started to be rightly faithful to ourselves.” de Botton concludes.
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