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Conditioned Response Reactions To
Life Events
Our
experiences color everything. The events of the past can have a profound effect
on how we see our lives now and what we choose to believe about our world. Our
past experiences can also influence our emotional reactions and responses to
present events. Each of us reacts to stimulus based on what we have learned in
life. There is no right or wrong to it; it is simply the result of past
experience. Later, when our strong feelings have passed, we may be surprised at
our reactions. Yet when we face a similar situation, again our reactions may be
the same. When we understand those experiences, we can come that much closer to
understanding our reactions and consciously change them.
Between
stimulus and reaction exists a fleeting moment of thought. Often, that thought
is based on something that has happened to you in the past. When presented with
a similar situation later on, your natural impulse is to unconsciously regard it
in a similar light. For example, if you survived a traumatic automobile accident
as a youngster, the first thing you might feel upon witnessing even a minor
collision between vehicles may be intense panic. If you harbor unpleasant
associations with death from a past experience, you may find yourself unable to
think about death as a gentle release or the next step toward a new kind of
existence. You can, however, minimize the intensity of your reactions by
identifying the momentary thought that inspires your reaction. Then, next time,
replace that thought with a more positive one.
Modifying your reaction
by modifying your thoughts is difficult, but it can help you to see and
experience formerly unpleasant situations in a whole new light. It allows you to
stop reacting unconsciously. Learning the reason of your reactions may also help
you put aside a negative reaction long enough to respond in more positive and
empowered ways. Your reactions and responses then become about what's happening
in the present moment rather than about the past. As time passes, your negative
thoughts may lose strength, leaving only your positive thoughts to inform your
healthy reactions.
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Conditioned Response Reactions To Life
Events
Our experiences color everything. The events of
the past can have a profound effect on how we see our lives now and what we
choose to believe about our world. Our past experiences can also influence our
emotional reactions and responses to present events. Each of us reacts to
stimulus based on what we have learned in life. There is no right or wrong to
it; it is simply the result of past experience. Later, when our strong feelings
have passed, we may be surprised at our reactions. Yet when we face a similar
situation, again our reactions may be the same. When we understand those
experiences, we can come that much closer to understanding our reactions and
consciously change them.
Between stimulus and reaction exists a fleeting
moment of thought. Often, that thought is based on something that has happened
to you in the past. When presented with a similar situation later on, your
natural impulse is to unconsciously regard it in a similar light. For example,
if you survived a traumatic automobile accident as a youngster, the first thing
you might feel upon witnessing even a minor collision between vehicles may be
intense panic. If you harbor unpleasant associations with death from a past
experience, you may find yourself unable to think about death as a gentle
release or the next step toward a new kind of existence. You can, however,
minimize the intensity of your reactions by identifying the momentary thought
that inspires your reaction. Then, next time, replace that thought with a more
positive one.
Modifying your reaction by modifying your thoughts is
difficult, but it can help you to see and experience formerly unpleasant
situations in a whole new light. It allows you to stop reacting unconsciously.
Learning the reason of your reactions may also help you put aside a negative
reaction long enough to respond in more positive and empowered ways. Your
reactions and responses then become about what’s happening in the present moment
rather than about the past. As time passes, your negative thoughts may lose
strength, leaving only your positive thoughts to inform your healthy reactions.
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