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Facilitaded
by Diane Wilkins
Session - $70
What
is The Work?
The Work is a simple yet powerful process of inquiry that
teaches you to identify and question thoughts that cause
all the suffering in the world. It's a way to understand
what's hurting you, and to address your problems with clarity.
People who do The Work as an ongoing practice report life-changing
results.
• Alleviation of depression: Find resolution, and
even happiness, in situations that were once debilitating.
• Decreased stress: Learn how to live with less anxiety
or fear.
• Improved relationships: Experience deeper connection
and intimacy with your partner, your parents, your children,
your friends, and yourself.
• Reduced anger: Understand what makes you angry and
resentful, and become less reactive, less often, with less
intensity.
• Increased mental clarity: Live and work more intelligently
and effectively, with integrity.
• More energy: Experience a new sense of ongoing vigor
and well-being.
• More peace: Discover how to become "a lover
of what is."
How
to Do The Work
1
Judge Your Neighbor
For thousands of years we’ve been told not to judge,
but we still do it all the time—how our friends should
act, whom our children should care about, what our parents
should feel, do, or say. In The Work, rather than suppress
these judgments, we use them as starting points for self-realization.
By letting the judging mind have its life on paper, we discover
through the mirror of those around us what we haven't yet
realized about ourselves.
Fill in a Judge-Your-Neighbor Worksheet. You can download
one here.
2
The Four Questions
Investigate each of your statements from the Judge-Your-Neighbor
Worksheet using the four questions and the turnaround below.
The Work is meditation. It’s about awareness, not
about trying to change your thoughts. Ask the questions,
then take your time, go inside, and wait for the deeper
answers to surface. Download the blue sheet for use as a
facilitation guide.
In its most basic form, The Work consists of four questions
and a turnaround. For example, the first thought that you
might question on the above Worksheet is "Paul doesn't
listen to me." Find someone in your life about whom
you have had that thought, and let's do The Work. "[Name]
doesn't listen to me":
Is it true?
Can you absolutely know that it's true?
How do you react, what happens, when you believe that thought?
Who would you be without the thought?
Then turn it around (the concept you are questioning), and
don't forget to find three genuine examples of each turnaround.
3
Turn it Around
After you've investigated your statement with the four questions,
you're ready to turn it around (the concept you are questioning).
Each turnaround is an opportunity to experience the opposite
of your original statement and see what you and the person
you've judged have in common.
A statement can be turned around to the opposite, to the
other, and to the self (and sometimes to "my thinking,"
wherever that applies). Find a minimum of three genuine
examples in your life where each turnaround is true.
For example, "Paul doesn't understand me" can
be turned around to "Paul does understand me."
Another turnaround is "I don't understand Paul."
A third is "I don't understand myself."
Be creative with the turnarounds. They are revelations,
showing you previously unseen aspects of yourself reflected
back through others. Once you've found a turnaround, go
inside and let yourself feel it. Find a minimum of three
genuine examples where the turnaround is true in your life.
As I began living my turnarounds, I noticed that I was everything
I called you. You were merely my projection. Now, instead
of trying to change the world around me (this didn't work,
but only for 43 years), I can put the thoughts on paper,
investigate them, turn them around, and find that I am the
very thing I thought you were. In the moment I see you as
selfish, I am selfish (deciding how you should be). In the
moment I see you as unkind, I am unkind. If I believe you
should stop waging war, I am waging war on you in my mind.
The turnarounds are your prescription for happiness. Live
the medicine you have been prescribing for others. The world
is waiting for just one person to live it. You're the one.
Examples of Turnarounds
Here are a few more examples of turnarounds:
"He should understand me" turns around to:
- He shouldn't understand me. (This is reality.)
- I should understand him.
- I should understand myself.
"I need him to be kind to me" turns around to:
- I don't need him to be kind to me.
- I need me to be kind to him. (Can I live it?)
- I need me to be kind to myself.
"He is unloving to me" turns around to:
- He is loving to me. (To the best of his ability)
- I am unloving to him. (Can I find it?)
- I am unloving to me (When I don't inquire.)
"Paul shouldn't shout at me" turns around to:
- Paul should shout at me. (Obviously: In reality, he does
sometimes. Am I listening?)
- I shouldn't shout at Paul.
- I shouldn't shout at me.
(In my head, am I playing over and over again Paul's shouting?
Who's more merciful, Paul who shouted once, or me who replayed
it a 100 times?)
Embracing Reality
After you have turned around the judgments in your answers
to numbers 1 through 5 on the Worksheet (asking if they
are as true or truer), turn number 6 around using "I
am willing ..." and "I look forward to ..."
For example, "I don't ever want to experience an argument
with Paul" turns around to "I am willing to experience
an argument with Paul" and "I look forward to
experiencing an argument with Paul." Why would you
look forward to it?
Number
6 is about fully embracing all of mind and life without
fear, and being open to reality. If you experience an argument
with Paul again, good. If it hurts, you can put your thoughts
on paper and investigate them. Uncomfortable feelings are
merely the reminders that we've attached to something that
may not be true for us. They let us know that it's time
to do The Work.
Until you can see the enemy as a friend, your Work is not
done. This doesn't mean you must invite him to dinner. Friendship
is an internal experience. You may never see him again,
you may even divorce him, but as you think about him are
you feeling stress or peace?
In my experience, it takes only one person to have a successful
relationship. I like to say I have the perfect marriage,
and I can't really know what kind of marriage my husband
has (though he tells me he's happy too).
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