Dr Judith Orloff's Blog

Are You An Emotional Vampire? Don’t Worry We All Can Be Sometimes

Dr. Orloff - Monday, October 24, 2011
Are You An Emotional Vampire? Don’t Worry We All Can Be Sometimes

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In my medical practice, I’ve developed enormous respect for the art of relationships, what makes them work or fail. In all successful relationships, whether with family, friends, or co-workers it’s vital that each person honestly examine his or her behavior and be willing to discuss it and change.

In this spirit, I find it useful to regularly assess how we’re relating to others--specifically if our behavior may be draining. In my book “Emotional Freedom” I discuss different types of draining people you may encounter who I call “emotional vampires.” These include, for instance, the chronic talker, the narcissist, and the drama queen. (See my blog, “Who's the Emotional Vampire in Your Life?”) But inevitably, we’ve all got a bit of vampire in us, especially when we’re stressed. So, give yourself a break. It’s admirable to admit, “I think I’m draining my spouse. What can I do?” You can’t begin to make changes in your life without this type of honesty. The solution is to own up to where you may be draining--then change the behavior. As a psychiatrist, I believe it’s those with real power who can step up first to surrender their ego, admit shortcomings, all in service of loving communication.

For instance, one of my patients, in computer graphics, kept hammering his wife with a poor-me attitude about how he always got stuck with boring projects at work. Instead of trying to improve the situation, he just kvetched. She started dreading those conversations, and diplomatically mentioned it to him. This motivated my patient to address the issue with his supervisor, which got him more stimulating assignments. Similarly, whenever I slip into vampire mode, I try to examine and alter my behavior or else discuss the particulars with a friend or a therapist so I can change. Don’t hesitate to seek assistance when you’re stumped.

To find out if you’re behavior is draining take the Am I an Emotional Vampire Quiz (from Emotional Freedom )

Listed below are some common indications that you’re becoming an emotional vampire. Mark “Yes” or “No” for each of the questions and give yourself one point for every “Yes” response.

  • Do people avoid you or glaze over during a conversation? Yes / No
  • Are you self-obsessed? Yes / No
  • Are you often negative? Yes / No
  • Do you gossip or bad-mouth people? Yes / No
  • Are you critical, and/or controlling? Yes / No
  • Are you a drama queen or king? Yes / No
  • Do you corner people and tell them your whole life story? Yes / No
  • Are you in an emotional black hole, but won’t get help? Yes / No
  • Results of the Quiz:
    Give each “yes” response one point and count up your score.

    Your Score: 0
    Congratulations! There are no signs that you are being an emotional vampire.

    Your Score: 1
    This behavior could be draining others. Start being mindful of when you do this and begin to shift the behavior. Then see if people are relieved.

    Your Score: 2
    These are warning signs that you may becoming emotionally draining to others. Ask yourself what is motivating you to engage is these draining behaviors and move forward to make positive changes.

    Your Score: 3
    You are showing some emotional vampire tendencies. It is time to compassionately examine your behaviors and begin to make a change. Do not beat yourself up. Be proud that you can be emotionally honest and want to be more positive.

    Your Score: 4
    You are showing moderate emotional vampire tendencies. Take a breath. Begin to tackle each behavior individually over time and take baby steps to change. For instance, if you tend to be self-obsessed you can begin to ask others about themselves. Celebrate every change you make to be supportive.

    Your Score: 5
    You are showing moderate-strong emotional vampire behaviors. You may ask your loved ones if they feel drained by a specific behavior--such as nagging or being critical. Then you can begin to be mindful of when you fall into it and start to change.

    Your Score: 6
    You are showing strong emotional vampire behaviors. You may ask your loved ones if they feel drained by a specific behavior--such as being negative but being unwilling to get help. Seriously consider their suggestions about how to improve your communication. Be compassionate with yourself all along the way.

    Your Score: 7
    You are showing strong to extremely strong emotional vampire behaviors. Be kind to yourself and set out to make small changes to improve one behavior at a time.

    Your Score: 8
    You have extremely strong emotional vampire behaviors that can be draining others in your life. Commend yourself for your honesty, but begin to understand what motivates you. Is it fear? Feeling less-than? Anger? Don't hesitate to ask for help--from friends who can offer honest feedback or a therapist. People around you will appreciate the positive changes you make.

    The remedy for these draining behaviors is to start shifting your attitude. Journaling about this can help. Ask yourself, “Is there a particular trigger that creates the situation? If so, then how can you avoid the trigger? How can you become aware of when you fall into this attitude? Are there people you respect who could help you?” Now write out an action plan to shift these attitudes. Remember to be kind to yourself and begin with small changes – baby steps. Taking action can help solve the problem quickly as opposed to many emotional vampires who stay stuck in patterns for years. I promise: your relatives, friends, and coworkers will appreciate your efforts and your relationships will dramatically improve!

    Click on link to watch video on How to Spot Energy Vampires


    Comments
    Tammy Small commented on 25-Oct-2011 12:41 PM
    I remember reading a version of this piece many years back by you- and it spoke just as loudly then as now! As a school counselor - and "ear" for many adults, I am always sruggling how to communicate to people to step away from debilitating complaining
    - toward empowered solution. Had to click on this reminder today as a way to nudge people back to their greatness intention - building relatiionship and increasing transformational awareness. Thanks!
    Anonymous commented on 25-Oct-2011 01:02 PM
    What a great checklist! It should probably be hung in the staff lounge of many businesses. Unfortunately, I think many of us have one or two of these to work on, but now we have some food for thought. Thanks!
    Brain Green commented on 25-Oct-2011 01:29 PM
    Hi. Many years ago, after a relationship broke up, I wrote about it. What came out in the writing was that she was an emotional vampire. I was so filled with self doubt at the time I was not sure this was real. A friend said,"I could never understand why
    you were with her, she is a tarantula." More a praying mantis in retrospect. In the following year or so two books on sexual/emotional vampirism by Psychotherapists were published, which validated my observations in detail. I think it is important to distinguish
    this from neediness, however severe, which may overlap. True emotional vampirism is a way of being, an addiction to feeding on others energy as a way of life. Working with some street level individuals I have encountered other parasites, such as ticks and
    leeches. Again as a way of being and way of life, not a temporary aberration. Best, hypnohotshot.
    Bob Kimble commented on 25-Oct-2011 04:43 PM
    I have not dated in years after going through a divorce. It seems every woman is a blood sucking, emotional draining PITAss. I'm beginning to think is it worth it because I'm content with my dogs and visiting my children. If I didn't have to deal with
    the drama garbage things might be different. I find this drama to be worthless and I am intolerate of pettiness. Is it the age of the women, all the worthless baggage they carry around? I suppose I'm a bit set in my ways and I am aware of that but can change.
    Is there anything out there but drama queens?
    Ian Cameron commented on 25-Oct-2011 09:57 PM
    I am self obsessed!!! There I said it, confession done. I have a chronic illness and am always trying to listen to my intuition to get well. I am getting well but at present I cannot lose myself in converstaion or a good book. Hopefully I will soon because
    losing oneself in life is freedom. I write a lot and in those periods I do lose myself. I'm always looking for the next therapy that may work. Dear God, help me get healthy and let me relax more in the moment more, Amen.
    An unnamed source commented on 27-Oct-2011 12:06 PM
    I used to attend 12 step groups for ACOA and Codpendents and this discussion and topic prompted me to recall a saying I first encountered there. "When you point the finger at someone to blame them remember there are three fingers pointing back at you!"
    As someone who has spent a lifetime growing out of narcissism and parentage by two people with similar challenges, I try to recall this saying whenever I encounter an emotional vampire so I can look at both sides and react lovingly. Sometimes it works and
    sometimes not. I've got along way to go.........
    don smith M.D. commented on 27-Oct-2011 02:13 PM
    In response to the inquiry 'are there only drama queens out there' I do feel there is something to be said for our own internal emotional state, and what we can sometimes bring into our lives...I think that if you look at experiences both good and bad
    as lessons that we learn from ...then you learn exactly what it is you don't want if you are involved with an emotionally draining, self aggrandizing drama queen; and hopefully we learn something better about ourselves so that we can change whatever behaviors,
    or other elements in our lives that draw these types of persons into our lives...My suggestion having been through it myself is first true forgiveness for that person and what they may have put you through, and secondly being able to let it go and move foward...there
    is some truth to the star wars cliche fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to the darkside....by remaining preoccupied with all the negative 'vibes' and emotional baggage from a painful and/or destructive relationship we invariably draw to
    us that which we seek to avoid, or become the very thing we fear...by moving on and staying positive you're saying thanks for that lesson it sucked but i've learned from it im going on to better and more positive things in my life, and that it/you have no
    control over me anymore....I really believe that which we put out(thought patterns, beliefs) is what we draw into our lives...so stay, be, live positive, let the past go and you will meet a nice woman on the positive side that's right for you ...and stop attracting
    accolytes of the dark side..
    Rebecca Mary Clarkson commented on 04-Nov-2011 11:32 AM
    I find the whole emotional vampire dynamic fascinating. I'm going to be brave and fess up to the fact I score 7 out of 8 in your quiz. Before I read Emotional Freedom, it was something I had long suspected about myself, but never imagined that a psychiatrist
    would identify the phenomena. I suppose one goes along with the spiritual expanation and thinks of it as a defect of the soul. What I realise now is that it is more of a systemic 'disorder' of the body/mind/spirit. Being bipolar and highly intelligent I always
    assumed that it was kind of natural prejudice against my illness and the intellectual demands I placed on people which alienated them from me. I now realise how taxing my company can actually be as a consequence of my refusal to deal with certain emotional
    issues! Thanks Dr. judith!
    Karen commented on 06-Nov-2011 07:34 PM
    Dr. Orloff - great quiz! Know thyself...If we are not aware of our "vampire" behaviors then we would not know what to correct. Intuitively (if we listen) then we know and or feel something is OFF....Thanks you for bringing some added awareness to my day
    :) Much Love, Karen
    MPC commented on 07-Nov-2011 02:15 PM
    I was married to an emotional vampire for 26 years. It was around the 17th year of the marriage that I got help for myself to improve my self esteem and awareness, and since that time never looked back and keep moving forward (and help others). I know
    these people think so little of themselves deep within that they have to "grandize" everything - and I do mean everything (mostly negative things). I will no longer tolerate or be victim of such a person. I can be kind, but do not have to put up with their
    stuff. They suck any positive air out of the room. I wouldn't want to be in their skin and I have learned, as well, any tendencies of my own weakness for vampire behavior. Thank you for this article!
    Thomas commented on 18-Nov-2011 07:13 PM
    I had a friend who I had break up with because just being around her for at least 15 minutes was draining the life out of me. I did set boundaries with her and she constantly violated them. I had to say no more. She is in a place at the bottle of a dark
    hole and I am looking down from the edge and I do not want to go there. It gets to point where I do not have the mental or emotional stability to follow her there without me losing my mind. She needs more that I can offer.

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    Telling the Difference Between Intuition and Fear

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, October 17, 2011
    Telling the Difference Between Intuition and Fear

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    In "Emotional Freedom" my approach to transforming fear has two stages. First, take stock of what makes you afraid and distinguish irrational fears from legitimate intuitions. Second, take appropriate steps to heed protective fears and transform the others with courage. At times you may foresee real danger, but more frequently unproductive fears clobber you. Therefore as a general rule, train yourself to question fears tied to low self-esteem; we’re all worthy of what’s extraordinary. For example, it’s right to question the fear that you’re too emotionally damaged to love; even the severely wounded can have their hearts opened again. True intuitions will never put you down or support destructive attitudes or behavior. Here are some guidelines for distinguishing legitimate fears from irrational ones:

    How To Tell Fear From Intuition

    Signs of a Reliable Intuition

  • Conveys information neutrally, unemotionally  
  • Feels right in your gut
  • Has a compassionate, affirming tone
  • Gives crisp, clear impressions that are “seen” first, then felt
  • Conveys a detached sensation, like you’re in a theater watching a movie
  • Signs of an Irrational Fear

  • Is highly emotionally charged
  • Has cruel, demeaning, or delusional content
  • Conveys no gut-centered confirmation or on-target feeling
  • Reflects past psychological wounds
  • Diminishes centeredness and perspective
  • For comparison’s sake, I’ll share radically different examples of how I use the above criteria. One morning I got two calls from frightened patients who both claimed to be hearing voices. Truly a typical day in my office! The first came from Bill, a schizophrenic who’d been skimping on his meds. Bill’s inner “voice” kept haranguing him, insisting he was a bad person, that his food was poisoned, that his son was being raped again by the grandmotherly babysitter. Believing these “delusions” (false beliefs unsubstantiated by fact), he was absolutely unhinged. So Bill kept calling the cops, who sent a squad car out twice, but found no threat. Tolerant but tiring of this, the officers warned that if he contacted them again, they’d haul him off to a psychiatric hospital. My other patient, Jean, had been coping with despair about her brother suffering from end-stage AIDS. Jean’s inner “voice” said to immediately fly to New York to join him, though he’d recently been stable. True of authentic intuitions, it came through clear-as-a-bell, oddly matter-of-fact and followed the typical progression of being “seen first,” then felt.

    Both patients asked me, “What should I do?’ I urged Bill to take his meds and offered reassurance about his safety, a tack that had lessened his fear many times in our decade of working together. Jean, however, I supported in buying a plane ticket because her intuition felt so imminent, so right. Fortunately, she did, despite the expense and inconvenience to her job. That week her brother took a sudden turn for the worse, slipped into a coma and died within hours. Heart-breaking as witnessing his death was for Jean, she was able to be at her brother’s side in those precious last moments.  

    Try to separate unhealthy fears from intuition. Though Bill’s case was extreme, you may also have some fears that belittle you or cause you to misinterpret danger. Perhaps in a fit of anger your ex-wife called you “useless” and you believed it. This is not intuition. Nor is being frightened of having cancer whenever a brown spot appears on your skin. Also, be skeptical of long-standing fears, say of heights; these are typically not premonitions.

    If you’re en emotional empath, it can be especially tricky to ascertain which fears are authentic, helpful intuitions. Because you tend to absorb other people’s emotions, you may pick up their fear and think it’s your own. To avoid this, always ask yourself, “Is the fear mine or someone else’s?” One dependable way to find out is to distance yourself from the source. Move at least twenty feet away. If you experience relief, it’s likely you’re perceiving another’s fear. Although it’s fine to absorb courage and all positive emotions from others because they’ll strengthen you, you don’t want to absorb negativity. Move away, and keep releasing extraneous fear by exhaling it until the feeling passes.

    While some apprehensions may be empathically linked to another’s feelings or, like Jean’s, are distinct intuitive warnings, the more garden variety ones reflect ingrained negative psychological patterns. To resolve these, you must know where they come from and do what’s necessary to loosen their hold.

    Watch Dr. Orloff's Video on How to Transform Fear


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    The 4 Laws of Energetic Attraction

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, October 10, 2011
    The 4 Laws of Energetic Attraction

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    Are you longing for relationships that do your heart good and generate stronger connections? In my book, Positive Energy I discuss how to radically improve your health and relationships by bringing positive people and situations into your life. Knowing about energy can transform your ability to build positive relationships, prevent loneliness and ward off fatigue. By making the energetic shifts described here, you can draw good things to you.

    Law No. 1: We attract who we are.

    The more positive energy we give off, the more we’ll receive. Ditto for negativity. It works like this: Love attracts love. Grumpiness attracts grumpiness. Passion attracts passion. Rage attracts rage.

    First, define what being positive does and doesn’t mean for you in terms of attitude and behavior. Don’t worry if you’re far from a positive place. It’s an evolution. Give thought to what you value most in yourself or other. You can then strengthen these traits in yourself, and attract the same.

    The idea is to find reciprocally nourishing interactions, not to win a popularity contest. (Of course, it feels good to be liked. But I’ve seen this need turn into addiction.) The following exercise will help you boost your positive signals.

  • Identify your best qualities and project them to the world. Before meeting new people or going to important events, prime yourself. Think, “I’m not going to focus on my insecurity but on a strength like my sensitivity, compassion or humor; I’m going to feel and trust the positive energy inside me. I’m going to claim my full power.” Such selective attention puts your best parts front and center.
  • Law No. 2: Intuition clarifies smart choices.

    Relationships are tricky; they can be a big blur even when your eyes are open. We’ve learned to draw conclusions from surface data: how nice someone seems, looks or is educated, or how a situation adds up on paper. But attraction goes deeper; to make it work for you, other ingredients must be considered. Respect your intuitions about relationships and identify those that highlight compatible matches.

    What may obscure the picture is anxiety or intense sexual attraction. If so, go slow until you get a keener intuitive read. In my book, Positive Energy I give exercises to help train you to act from instinct, not impulse.

  • Tune in. Choose a relationship or situation that needs clarification – perhaps you’re confused about a friendship or vacation. Run it by your intuition criteria: Do you feel troubled and nervous or energized and safe?
  • Act on vibes. Insecurity, ego, lust or stubbornness can obscure your better judgment. If a person feels positive, explore the possibilities. If the vibes are mixed, take a pass or at least wait. If all you sense is negative, have the courage to walk away, no matter how tempting the option seems. Then observe how listening to energy in this way leads you to the juiciest opportunities.
  • Law No. 3: Seeing the best in people magnetizes them.

    Instead of reflexively accentuating the worst in a person or situation, choose to energize positive qualities. The object isn’t to flatter, make nice, be politically correct or ignore intuitive red flags – nor to deny someone’s dark side or placate abusers. Your goal is to mine the gold in positive relationships and elevate the communication in more difficult ones.

    We want to have the goodness in us acknowledges. If you want to connect with someone, notice his or her assets. Let’s say a co-worker is snitty. Realize that happy people don’t act this way. So instead of being snitty back or constantly miffed, redirect the energy. Comment on the long hours she puts in, or her dynamite shoes. Use this approach for a week – as well as the ones below – and watch the vibes change.

  • Tell at least two people you love what you’re grateful for about them.
  • Tell at least two people you don’t love what you’re grateful for about them.
  • Adjust your perception. Spend an afternoon noticing the positive qualities of everyone you meet.
  • Praise other people’s abilities.
  • Law No. 4: Soulful giving generates abundance.

    Giving is supposed to feel good; if not, something’s wrong. Soulful giving enlarges your capacity to be more caring – you give for the joy of it, expecting nothing in return. In contrast, codependent giving bleeds life force; it’s driven by obligation, guilt or a martyr-complex, and it leaves the giver feeling sucked dry, unappreciated and put upon.

    You want to give for reasons that energize you, not because you’re taking inappropriate responsibility for others. The following strategies will generate bountiful vibes for you and the receiver. If you give from your heart, your vitality will soar.

  • Give spontaneously. Any time is right to offer simple tokens of appreciation to friends or colleagues; a candle, rose, small plant, fragrant soap or funny card.
  • Give anonymously. Walk an old lady across the street; hold open an elevator; let a car go before you in traffic; or do something nice behind the scenes for someone, but don’t get found out. Such good deeds add light to your energy field and ultimately draw the same goodness back to you. As a 14-year-old friend told me, “The best way to cheer yourself up is to cheer up someone else.”
  • Use these “laws” to mobilize excellence and kindness in your relationships. Emphatically say “no” to anything that doesn’t further the heart. Cheer each success. Don’t cheat your joy by jumping too quickly to the next ambition. Instead, pledge to value even the tiniest of triumphs. That’s what the art of positive living is about.


    Comments
    Lisa commented on 17-Nov-2011 04:26 PM
    I LOVE this advice, and it is so true, the best way to cheer up yourself is to cheer up someone else. GIVE from the heart! I rehabilitate horses, and that kind of giving produces so much love, happiness, trust and peace...I've never known that with humans
    but with animals, its all right there in front of me. I knit hats for preemie babies and cancer patients, I never know who receives them but I know I give love, I give warmth, and it gives me joy and peace.
    Sonja commented on 17-Nov-2011 04:32 PM
    Awesome advice! Thank you for helping me stay positive :)
    Rick Malinowski commented on 17-Nov-2011 04:38 PM
    Thank you for reminding me how powerful being positive can be for me and those around me. Yesterday, I practiced this with a person close to me and wow did it make a difference. Instead of dwelling on her negative qualities, I activley complimented her
    on genuine positive things I was grateful for and what she did well. Honestly, it made me feel better. When she made a negative comment, I ignored it and looked for a positive thing to say shortly after. The difference was rapid and astounding. Her mood lightened
    and she seemed to enjoy herself a lot more. I really enjoyed reading Emotional Freedom and look forward to reading Positive Energy. It is also especially helpful that you have experienced and are willing to share your own challenges and successes. Best, Rick
    christy commented on 17-Nov-2011 07:00 PM
    I absolutly agree ! Thank you once again Judith.
    Bernard-Charles commented on 17-Nov-2011 11:02 PM
    Judith, This has been a great reminder of how much we can actually do to transform our lives. Very insightful. Certainly, I have practiced some of these tips. They do work. Positive emotion can shapeshift your most crucial downfall. It is a beautiful concept.
    Thank you.
    Wendy commented on 17-Nov-2011 11:34 PM
    Wow!! This post really helped me to reframe and refocus my intentions about what I put out there in the big wide world as well as what I seek and notice in other people. I had briefly forgotten how to embrace the positive in the midst of the hustle/bustle
    of my life's details. Love this. Thank you for this reminder.
    Eleanor Newton commented on 18-Nov-2011 01:26 AM
    Beautiful wise words from an inspiring women, i could not have gone through my awakening experience without your books to become a healer. And realize although my perception of the world as i know it had changed others have similar experiences. Thank you
    from the bottom of my heart you are more important than you know Kindest Regards Eleanor newton
    Jackie commented on 18-Nov-2011 04:28 AM
    This is so timely. Your article has helped me clarify the meaning of certain 'vibes' I've picked up from contacts I have made yesterday. I have recently read your emotional freedom book and have been amazed at how it how easy your words 'flow into me'
    Having read this article I think it's time for me to buy another book of yours. Thank you so much!
    Ted Leonido commented on 18-Nov-2011 06:09 PM
    Thank you for this wonderful confirmation! I have been appreciating my coworkers with unconditional words and acts of appreciation and the program I work at has recently won an award based on patient survey. Like attracts like:)
    Nancy Windheart commented on 21-Nov-2011 11:15 AM
    Thank you so much for this post. I find myself recommending your work to my animal communication students and clients so often, and will share this post as well. Many blessings to you!
    Raquel commented on 25-Nov-2011 09:33 AM
    Thank you for sharing so much good information with us. It is very helpful. You encourage me each time not to loose hope but to continue putting into practice the tools you have recommended. Thanks once again! Lots of love and blessings Judith!
    Walt Gottesman commented on 12-Dec-2011 09:35 PM
    Thank you Judith, for the joy of reading your freely given words of mindful wisdom once again. When I found your book Second Sight, in a Borders Bookstore, in 1998, I couldn't put it down. Borders is gone now but your uplifting insights, like all wise
    words, endure. May you be gifted with peace, much love and many blessings!
    Sherrie commented on 21-Jan-2012 06:32 PM
    It�s very effortless to find out any topic on net as compared to textbooks, as I found this post at this site.

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    The Grace of Forgiveness: Even on 9/11

    Dr. Orloff - Thursday, September 08, 2011
    The Grace of Forgiveness: Even on 911

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    Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff’s New York Times Bestseller “Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life” (Three Rivers Press, 2011)

    In my book “EMOTIONAL FREEDOM” I emphasize the importance of forgiveness and why revenge doesn’t work. Forgiveness is the act of compassionately releasing the desire to punish someone or yourself for an offense. It’s a state of grace, nothing you can force or pretend. There are no short cuts. Mistakenly, some of my patients, wanting to be “spiritual,” have prematurely tried to forgive after someone emotionally knifes them in the gut. First, you must feel anger before you can begin to forgive. I gradually guide patients to the large-heartedness of forgiving injuries either caused by others or self-inflicted.

    Revenge is the desire to get even when someone does you wrong. It’s natural to feel angry, to say “I’m not going to let that **** get away with this,” whatever “this” is. However, revenge reduces you to your worst self, puts you on the same level with those spiteful people we claim to abhor. Additionally, studies have shown that revenge increases stress and impairs health and immunity. Sure, if someone hits you with a stick, you have the impulse to hit them back--the basis for wars. To thrive personally and as a species, we must resist this predictable lust for revenge, and seek to right wrongs more positively. This doesn’t make you a pushover; you’re just refusing to act in a tediously destructive way antithetical to ever finding peace. As Confucious says, "Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig two graves."

    What I’m suggesting is a version of “turn the other check” yet still doing everything to preserve what’s important to you. The hard part, though, is watching someone “get away with something” when there’s nothing you can do about it. Yes, your wife left you for the yoga instructor. Yes, your colleague sold you out. With situations like this in my life, I take solace in the notion of karma, that sooner or later, what goes around comes around. Also know that the best revenge is your success, happiness, and the triumph of not giving vindictive people any dominion over your peace of mind.

    Forgiveness refers to the actor not the act. Not to the offense but the woundedness of the offender. This doesn’t mean you’ll run back to your battering spouse because of compassion for the damaged person he or she is. Of course you want to spare yourself mistreatment. However, from a distance, you can try to forgive the conscious or unconscious suffering that motivates people. Our desire to transform anger is a summoning of peace, well worth the necessary soul stretching.

    To experience forgiveness, try this exercise from “EMOTIONAL FREEDOM’

    Emotional Action Step. Be Bigger Than Anger--Practice Forgiveness Now

  • Identify one person you’re angry with. Start with someone low on your list, not your rage-aholic father. Then you can get a taste of forgiveness quickly. After that you can proceed to tackle more challenging targets.
  • Honestly address your feelings. Talk to friends, your therapist, or other supportive people, but get the anger out. I also recommend writing your feelings down in a journal to purge negativity. Then, decide whether you want to raise the issue with someone.
  • Begin to forgive. Hold the person you’re angry with clearly in your mind. Then ask yourself, “What emotional shortcomings caused him or her to treat me poorly?” This is what you want to have compassion for, the area to forgive. Definitely, don’t subject yourself to shabby treatment, but reach for compassion for the person’s emotional blindness or cold heart.
  • Here’s how forgiveness can work in a range of situations where you’d have every right to be angry. It establishes a kinder mindset whether or not you decide to confront someone.

  • A good friend acts inconsiderately when she’s having a bad day. Remember, nobody’s perfect. You may want to let the incident slide. If you do mention it, don’t make this one-time slight into a big deal. Give your friend a break--forgive the lapse.
  • A coworker takes credit for your ideas. Do damage control, whether it means mentioning this situation to the coworker, your boss, or Human Resources, and don’t trust her with ideas in the future. However, try to forgive the coworker for being such a greedy, insecure, mean-spirited person that she has to stoop so low as to steal from you.
  • Your mother-in-law is needy or demanding. Keep setting kind but firm boundaries so over time you can reach palatable compromises. But also have mercy on the insecurities beneath her neediness and demands--perhaps fear of being alone, of aging, of being excluded from the family, of not being heard. This will soften your response to her.
  • You suffered childhood abuse. The healing process of recovering from abuse requires enormous compassion for yourself and is facilitated by support from other abuse survivors, family, friends, or a therapist. Still, if you feel ready to work towards forgiveness of an abuser, it necessitates seeing the brokenness and suffering that would make the person want to commit such grievous harm. You’re not excusing the behavior or returning to it, but grasping how emotionally crippled he or she is, a huge stretch of compassion, but the path to freedom.
  • Forgiveness is a paradigm-shifting solution for transforming anger. It liberates you from the trap of endless revenge so that you can experience more joy and connection. Forgiveness does more for you than anyone else because it liberates you from negativity and lets you move forward. Forgiving might not make anger totally dissolve but it will give you the freedom of knowing you are so much more.


    CLICK ON LINK TO WATCH A VIDEO ON HOW TO TRANSFORM FRUSTRATION WITH PATIENCE.


    Comments
    cyndi commented on 10-Sep-2011 09:52 AM
    I think this is so hard to do but when you do it you are filled with a huge sense of freedom.
    Judith commented on 12-Sep-2011 12:37 AM
    Hope you enjoy my blog on forgiveness! It is hard but it's worth the effort!
    shipra commented on 12-Sep-2011 07:31 AM
    I have read your book FIVE steps ....10 years back.It helped me in my life ,when i needed support.I became self confident person ...I always wanted to express my thanks to you. Simply reading you work calm`s me inside ..It feels great.Many many thanks
    for enlightning us with ur work. LUV YOU.. shipra
    Lisa Giordano commented on 12-Sep-2011 11:14 AM
    Forgiveness keeps your heart young. Thank you for these guidelines, Dr. Orloff.
    Katie Haley commented on 13-Sep-2011 12:59 PM
    I have heard the quote several times recently that not forgiving someone is like drinking poison yourself and hoping the other person will die. Forgiveness is the path to freedom: Yours.
    Lisa commented on 13-Sep-2011 01:11 PM
    I needed to read this today. Over the past week, I've realized I have some forgiveness work to do around a situation. I thought I was done. I suppose there are layers of forgiveness that help to heal. I once read that forgiveness is more doing it for yourself
    versus for the other person. Yet, that didn't sit right with me. I think the other person/people will feel it when you work on yourself since we're all One and connected. Thanks for this post :) Great reminders.
    Gina Passini commented on 13-Sep-2011 01:41 PM
    I've read your book and thought that I moved on and forgave my ex-husband for all the hurt and wrong that he did while married to him for almost twenty five years, in fact, if I hadn't forgiven him I wouldn't have been able to drive 18 hours in the same
    car to bring our only child to college together. I'm proud of myself for being able to accomplish that. I was strong! It was what we had to do for our daughter and I'm glad I did but somewhere after returning home, all that anger and resentment boiled back
    up that I said I would never put myself through so I'm slowly getting my ground again. I was mad at myself for putting myself through that hurt once again. But I have to keep telling myself that what he does is not a reflection on me nor does it control me
    or will it ever control me again. I make my own decisions and I choose to be happy without his control. He is not my problem. He was not the right person for me and everything I am putting myself through, he doesn't know nor does he care so why should I? It
    is possible to get past all of this if you allow yourself to feel it and know that your emotions are true. Acknowledge it but you don't need to carry that with you wherever you go in life.
    Karen Sebastian commented on 13-Sep-2011 01:45 PM
    Thank you so much for this! It comes to me just when I am beside myself about another person's maliciousness which is hurting me a lot. I read this on my birthday..thank you so much for your gift! I'm getting your book off the shelf to read. Katie, thanks
    for your quote about drinking poison yourself..I had not heard that one before. God bless each person here. Thank you again, Dr. Orloff!
    Kim commented on 13-Sep-2011 01:46 PM
    But how do you do it when you are angry at the organization that laid you off? It involves many people.
    Osvaldo commented on 13-Sep-2011 01:58 PM
    I believe to be the right gift to pass through generations. It is so beautiful to see most people embracing this attitude. Thank you for such inspiring messages. Best wishes.
    DULCEMARIA ORELLANA commented on 13-Sep-2011 04:25 PM
    Forgiveness leads to freedom and also to the revovery of our holistic health, since we stop thinking, feeling and acting in relation to the person who caused us suffering. I do consider it is the best gift we can all give to ourselves. There is nothing
    that we do by taking revenge, because that is not going to change what happened. However, we can transform our lives thru the interpretation of the meanings of any painful experience, reconstructing our future with a new perspective of life and ourselves.
    Carol commented on 13-Sep-2011 06:56 PM
    I think I have experienced more trauma than most, and the only path towards healing and freedom is forgiveness. But this is something I could not do by myself. After much therapy by psychologists and even after reading all of Judith's books and listening
    to her CDs, I still struggled with bitterness, resentment and thoughts of revenge. I finally turned to the Lord Jesus Christ, and took it to Him, He has given me the grace to forgive, which is through His spirit living in me. I highly recommend trying that
    for those who struggle with forgiveness.
    Anne Dalton commented on 13-Sep-2011 07:01 PM
    Sometimes NOT forgiving someone is appropriate if it is not accompanied by feelings of revenge, etc. However, all people operate at the level of their 'own' understanding from their own conditioning or life experiences. It's rather like "forgiving" a dog
    that bites us. I like to ask for help from God/guides/angels/etc to "feel better" about some people from time to time. I'll often have a dream that gives me the ability to feel more love, understanding and compassion for the one I perceive as having harmed
    me. However, repeat offenders are difficult to deal with but perhaps that comes back to the dog that bites. Stay away from them! :D
    KKK commented on 14-Sep-2011 02:03 AM
    Reading this has helped me so much. I am single and I have a co-worker (who I also have to share a residence with as we are seasonal workers in different cities to where we live) who is in a serious relationship with another woman but who has been pressuring
    me for over a year now to have an affair with him and lying to his girlfriend who is very insecure. I continuely say NO cos he has a gf but also cos I'm just not attracted to him but I have played along with it trying to make a joke of it as my job is so important
    to my way of life. We have maintained a friendship and he always says to me that we will be friends even though I say no to sleeping with him BUT a few months ago I met a man and since that time this co-worker has been a total @sshole and has treated me so
    badly and I'm just so angry...I presume he is jealous! I have been considering revenge by sending a letter to his gf and telling her what a horrible man he is. I have written the letter and I'm so close to posting it but the whole idea of getting revenge just
    doesn't sit right with me... I have been trying to rise above it and not stoop to his level. I strongly believe in Karma and I feel that a man who is so deceiving and horrible and repulsive will one day get what he deserves. So reading this blog has given
    me some comfort. Thanks :)
    Teffany commented on 15-Sep-2011 12:14 AM
    The bible simply states to forgive but I believe that Dr.Judith is an angel sent from heaven to explain what forgiveness really is. Thank you so much Dr. Judith for helping me so much in understanding what forgiveness really is. God is a God of Justice
    but his Compassion is more that his Justice, WHich is a relief for all of us if we look also at our own failures. Thanks again and God BLess Teffant
    Rachel commented on 15-Sep-2011 08:06 AM
    Forgiveness can sometimes take a long time to work through the layers of emotions that are attached to the situation.Be gentle and kind to yourself,it will happen when you're ready.Sometimes it's gradually,other times more quickly.Once you achieve forgiveness
    feel proud of yourself for it.You,ve done it once,next time you'll be equipped and ready to forgive again.Now that's emotional freedom!!.Thankyou for your wisdom Judith.It's been invaluble to me.;)
    Holly commented on 15-Sep-2011 09:17 AM
    from experience, I know that forgivness comes more naturally to some than to others. My Mother was this way. She was amazing, a very Christ like person. I inherited many of her traits and it is also a more natural thing for me to forgive. I have also seen
    the damaging effects of an unforgiving heart. It is ugly and toxic. My Husband is one of those who is self destructive with his anger and unforgivness. This is also a generational thing. He not only destroys himself but anyone close to him. I have lived and
    experienced the extreme of both sides. I feel sorrow and compassion for those who enclose themselves in a self made prison. Trust in what Dr. Orloff says. We truly will find the freedom and the person we truly are inside. Good, loving compassionate, joyful
    beings.
    Brain Green commented on 16-Sep-2011 03:05 PM
    So much of the anger and bitterness/resentment is based on feeling like a victim or martyr, the latter being a subsection of the former. The cry of the victim is, "You did this To ME." The cry of the martyr is, "After all I've done for you." Basically
    it is re-acting as a hurt child/teen. As a young woman said to me, "It's so hard to give up the moral superiority of the victim." Clinging to this gives a sense of self righteousness and an illusion of power. Letting go, with or without forgiveness, involves
    giving up illusions and delusions of (future) power and control, and accepting the "hurt" and feelings of powerlessness. Brian.
    scotty commented on 20-Sep-2011 01:14 PM
    hi i'm scotty here in santa monica famous 3rd street promenade know your friend mark "the whale" he's waiting to have contact from you or see you soon. we see each other at starbucks on 3rd street promenade & santa monica blvd. he's a great man with a
    cause & speaks highly of you
    Andrea commented on 20-Sep-2011 03:46 PM
    What more can I say? Please share my thoughts I outlined in my blog posted in May this year: Today I want to talk about forgiveness. I met with my friend Rob today and as we got chatting he told me about an incident where a friend had hurt his feelings
    and he had now written her off and cut her off for life. I challenged him on his thinking and it led me to document my thoughts. What if that were to happen to me each time I offended someone; would I have any friends or family left? I don’t think so. We are
    often too quick to condemn others, to write them off because of some small mistake. We need to remember that we are not perfect ourselves. "Forgiveness is not an occasional act: it is an attitude" (Dr Martin Luther King, Jr). We are not photocopies of each
    other; we will hurt each other from time to time. Do we not want to be forgiven? Forgiveness – the willingness to let go of pain, resentment, bitterness and anger – is the beginning of a healing process. Often those who caused the pain are long gone, oblivious
    or uncaring of the effects of their actions. The healing therefore takes place in the person who has the strength to forgive and move on. This healing is holistic – mind, body and soul; for our thoughts, bodies and behaviour are all interconnected and in they
    in turn affect our soul. Nothing dries sooner than tears (Latin proverb). Life has enough hills to climb; we do not need any more baggage. A refusal to forgive can lead to hatred and “hatred has no medicine” (Ghanian proverb). It eats at your body and soul.
    What role does forgiveness play in business? Throughout my study of business I have never encountered any theory that explored corporate error. Is there no place for mistake and forgiveness in business? Sure there is! Do you not forgive your co-worker who
    fails miserably in pitching for an important contract or a boss who makes bad decisions? In one of my previous roles I was working with a senior colleague who totally lost focus and started to neglect the business because of a dangerous romantic liaison. He
    was totally blind to the fact that this was hurting the business badly. Consequently, the business struggled and eventually failed, resulting in the loss of employment to several people. Did I forgive my colleague? No one should deny that it hurts tremendously
    when things like that happen and people deal with those situations differently, taking more or less time as necessary. I can’t deny the fact that for a while I felt disgusted at my colleague’s behaviour and blamed him for the chaos that ensued but I engaged
    with him and eventually forgave his actions and we are still friends today. The act of forgiving demands immense courage. It is freely given to people, whether they deserve it or not. It is not mere words but bold actions that support and bring meaning to
    those words. In the workplace it is particularly important to forgive. Your employee may be late because of a host of issues unknown to you: domestic abuse, childcare issues, basic needs, lack of key resources or support. Sometimes our reality is so far removed
    from the experience of the other person that we simply cannot appreciate the challenges. The Jamaican proverb “A stone at the bottom of the river doesn’t know how hot it is at the surface” encapsulates it well – if you are not au fait with a situation, you
    cannot truly understand the dynamics. Chances are there is a lot going on that is impacting on that person’s behaviour. If you are affected, express your concerns and offer assistance where possible. Forgiveness in organisations is also important because customers,
    clients, suppliers and other stakeholders can suspect discord within the company and may not want to do business with you. Allowing ‘bad blood’ to fester will adversely impact on the company image, staff morale, production levels and ultimately, revenue. You
    may find it difficult to forgive. I’ll tell you what works for me: I focus on the good times. I think about moments when that person was good to me in some small way and I recall the good qualities of the person (we all have some!). I focus on the positive
    and it becomes bigger and bigger until the negative is insignificant. I’ll give you a personal example: one evening, several years ago my partner and I were robbed by armed men as we returned from a stroll. The men were particularly threatening with their
    long guns and knives. They took our stuff, tied up my partner and commanded him not to move. They then disappeared as fast as they had emerged. We both dashed for home. My relatives were enraged when they heard what had happened. I, however, had a different
    mindset - I was pleased that I was not physically scarred. I forgave them instantly concluding that I did not know their reality – why they embarked on such an action – but I was happy to have my life. It might have been divine intervention or it could be
    a case of “cats and dogs don't have the same luck” (Jamaican proverb). As far as I was concerned they had the power to kill and maim and they chose not to use it. Not many people in such situations live to tell the tale. Needless to say, my family thought
    I had lost my mind but to this day I hold that view. The ability to forgive says a lot about us. It shows our maturity, sensibility and humanity. It appreciates diversity and promotes tolerance, personal growth and emotional development. We learn to forgive
    ourselves for our own failures; we learn the significance of an apology. It helps us to rise above the blame culture and find solutions. There is a Spanish proverb Haz el bien, y no mires a quién - Do what is right, not what will gain approval. Just let it
    go.
    Bob Moyers commented on 21-Sep-2011 07:20 AM
    On 9.11.11 we presented a world-wide "The Event 9.11.11" broadcast which started a 50 Days Of Forgiveness campaign (9.11 to 10.29)designed to ask good people to "set themselves free from being under the emotional control of other people, situations, and
    past events, by exercising a "Prayer Of Forgiveness" and sharing copies of a "Be Healthy" plan of love and forgiveness with as many people as possible by e-mails, e-newsletters, social networks, etc. Please visit our web site, download the forgiveness "Be
    Healthy" information and help us reach between 5 and 50 million people with this information. You will not be disappointed. Please reply. Be Jesus to everyone you meet. See Jesus in everyone you meet. Love to all. Our prayer is as follows: Please forgive them.
    Please help me to forgive them. Please forgive me. Please help me to forgive myself. Please take away my bitterness and unforgiveness. Please restore my joy. Amen.
    John Schinnerer Ph.D. commented on 21-Sep-2011 11:25 AM
    I absolutely agree. In my online anger management course, I teach the importance of forgiveness and how to do it based on Dr. Fred Luskin's work (out of Stanford). It's massively important to learn this skill for a more peaceful, satisfying and less angry
    life. Thanks for the reminder!

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    How to Tell the Difference Between Lust and Love

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, August 08, 2011
    How to Tell the Difference Between Lust and Love

    Share

    Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff's Guide to Intuitive Healing: 5 Steps to Physical, Emotional, and Sexual Wellness

    As a psychiatrist, I’ve seen how intense sexual attraction is notorious for obliterating common sense and intuition in the most sensible people. Why? Lust is an altered state of consciousness programmed by the primal urge to procreate. Studies suggest that the brain in this phase is much like a brain on drugs. MRI scans illustrate that the same area lights up when an addict gets a fix of cocaine as when a person is experiencing the intense lust of physical attraction. Also in the early stage of a relationship, when the sex hormones are raging, lust is fueled by idealization and projection--you see what you hope someone will be or need them to be--rather than seeing the real person, flaws and all.

    In my book “Guide to Intuitive Healing” I discuss the difference between lust and love as well as techniques to enhance sexual wellness. Pure lust is based solely on physical attraction and fantasy--it often dissipates when the “real person” surfaces. It’s the stage of wearing rose colored glasses when he or she “can do no wrong.” Being in love doesn’t exclude lust. In fact, lust can lead to love. However, real love, not based on idealization or projection, requires time to get to know each other. Here are some signs to watch for to differentiate pure lust from love.

    SIGNS OF LUST
  • You’re totally focused on a person’s looks and body.
  • You’re interested in having sex, but not in having conversations.
  • You’d rather keep the relationship on a fantasy level, not discuss real feelings.
  • You want to leave soon after sex rather than cuddling or breakfast the next morning.
  • You are lovers, but not friends.
  • SIGNS OF LOVE
  • You want to spend quality time together other than sex.
  • You get lost in conversations and forget about the hours passing.
  • You want to honestly listen to each other’s feelings, make each other happy.
  • He or she motivates you to be a better person.
  • You want to get to meet his or her family and friends.
  • Another challenge of sexual attraction is learning to stay centered and listen to your gut in the early stages of being with someone. This isn’t easy in the midst of hormones surging, but it’s essential to make healthy relationship decisions. Here are some tips to help you keep your presence of mind when you’re attracted to someone. This needn’t pull the plug on passion, but it’ll make you more aware so you don’t go looking for trouble.

    FOUR NEGATIVE GUT FEELINGS ABOUT RELATIONSHIPS (from Guide to Intuitive Healing )

    Watch for:

  • A little voice in your gut says “danger” or “beware.”
  • You have a sense of malaise, discomfort, or feeling drained after you’re together.
  • Your attraction feels destructive or dark.
  • You’re uncomfortable with how this person is treating you, but you’re afraid that if you mention it, you’ll push him or her away.
  • Over the years, I’ve spoken at women’s prisons and domestic violence centers. My talk, "How Listening to Your Gut Can Prevent Domestic Violence," focuses on showing women how to identify and act on their inner voice. The gut senses a potential for kindness and violence. Many women who'd been in abusive relationships admitted, "My gut initially told me something was wrong--but I ignored it." The pattern was consistent. They'd say, "I'd meet a man. At first he'd be charming, sexy, sweep me off my feet. The electricity between us was amazing. I'd write off the voice in my gut that said 'you better watch out' as fear of getting involved. When later the abuse began, I was already hooked." Some gut instincts though, are anything but subtle. On a first date, one woman landed in the hospital with an IV, retching from "psychosomatic" abdominal pain. But did that stop her from seeing the guy? No. From these women we gain a real-world lesson: no matter how irresistibly attractive someone appears, close attention to your gut will enable you to see beneath exteriors.

    It’s so much nicer to be involved with someone your gut likes. Then you’re not always guarding against a basic suspicion or incompatibility. You must also give yourself permission to listen to your gut when it says, “This person is healthy for you. You are going to make each other happy.” To be happy, take a risk, but also pay attention to the warning signs I presented. This allows you to wisely go for the fulfilling relationships you deserve.


    CLICK ON LINK TO WATCH A VIDEO ON HOW TO MAKE INTUITIVE DECISIONS.


    Comments
    Kristen commented on 10-Aug-2011 03:14 PM
    I agree with this. I remember dating someone that I was in lust with and my solar plexus area would NOT stop bothering me. I even knew what it was telling me, and I told my stomach to "stop it" but it would not. Not until I dumped him after he treated
    me like shit for a few months (ie: not a friend and not wanting to spend quality time with me). I learned to follow my intuition closely from that moment on.
    Paul Mycroft commented on 10-Aug-2011 03:35 PM
    This is a great article - thank you.
    peggy kelley commented on 10-Aug-2011 03:41 PM
    I am 50 years old and it has taken me this long to learn to listen to my gut in all relationships. It would be wonderful to meet someone to be in a relationship with but I have fears of not trusting myself still. How do I get over my fears and how do I
    meet healthy men given that I am a single mother- divorced now for 7 years and have rarely dated! HELP! Thank you- Peg
    Carol commented on 10-Aug-2011 03:55 PM
    Being in touch with intuition...coming along. Learning how to effectively *act* on it is something I am really, really working on while going through the slow process of letting go of my Mom. Strangely, the intense and complicated feelings related to anticipatory
    grief have affected how I move through decision making (regarding love intuition). One thing I really appreciate about your writings--the warmth that always comes through. It's a comfort! And Kristen, totally relate to the solar plexus thing when I was in
    my 20s and 30s. Now it hits me in chakra 2 and 4 more, for some reason.
    Dee commented on 10-Aug-2011 04:08 PM
    After celibacy by choice for 12 yrs this guy come along and woos me for 8 months, there were signs I saw, things I knew weren't right but he reasoned away my concerns (actually not to my satisfaction). I wanted to believe but I knew I was in lust and we
    even talked about the difference between lust & love. He gave me a great explanation plus he had a beautiful body (not face-body). Then I understood what I couldn't ignore...he was a narsisisst and I wanted him anyway, he turned out to be cruel. FOLLOW YOUR
    GUT-IT NEVER LIES!
    Daniel Mbugua commented on 10-Aug-2011 04:09 PM
    The information above is one that every one in a relationship should know. Never should anyone, either a lady or a man should ignore these signs because ignoring them is just like hiding a time bomb which will ultimately explode with damaging effects.
    Its a very good article I like it.
    Diana commented on 10-Aug-2011 04:24 PM
    I find your work absolutely brilliant!! Thank you for making a difference in so many peoples lives! I am off to buy the book "Guide to Intuitive Healing"!! :) Have a fabulous day....it's Hump day....imagine my disappointment when I discovered what that
    actually meant! ;) ;)
    Gale commented on 10-Aug-2011 04:40 PM
    I have always summed it up for me or young girls who loved to hang around my house, lust is felt in the loins and is superficial, only the shell is seen and felt. Love is felt in the heart and the brain, giving you feelings of support, caring, appreciation,
    humour and more, and those feelings are reciprocated. I have loved 2 men in my life. Both died on me. I may have friends of the male persuasion, but I will never have love again... losing them is too hard.
    Mia commented on 10-Aug-2011 05:13 PM
    I have spent 'way too many years of my life trying to please people that were narcissists and worse. It makes me sad, but it also makes me happy now because I actually get it. Your first book was a big help to me and also my adult children because I'd
    send them quotes in emails. I wish you could see how fast I get rid of dangerous and draining people now. It's almost comical... I am polite but firm, and waste no time trying to please them. Finally, I get it. Thanks so much for your help!
    Humberto Velasquez V. commented on 10-Aug-2011 06:22 PM
    Perfect but when is difficult to contact the other ...How you express the love ?
    Humberto Velasquez V. commented on 10-Aug-2011 06:22 PM
    Perfect but when is difficult to contact the other ...How you express the love ?
    Helen commented on 10-Aug-2011 07:11 PM
    Thank you again Judith. I am 68 and being single for 13 years thought I fell in love again but my gut told me that I was not going to be able to handle this new woman who had emotional and physical problems galore. But I didn't listen and became a pawn
    in a game of lies. After 17 months I finally made the break and healed to forgiveness and compassion with the help of your book, "Emotional Freedsom". You are a wise woman Judith and thank you again.
    prescilla commented on 10-Aug-2011 09:47 PM
    i have a mixed feelings with the man i am attracted with right now. we both love to converse as well as we are attracted to each others looks. but when i am listening to my guts, i felt some fears and the feelings is sexual. so, i am a bit hesitant to
    pursue the relationship. but when i read that lust can lead to love, then i am still hopeful i can overcome that fear and hesistance.
    CB commented on 11-Aug-2011 01:14 AM
    As a poly man, I have more than one area to distinguish real intuition from emotion. I have a tendency to want to trust my wife's choices, but in the past, when I've allowed that desire to trust to override a bad feeling in my gut, I've been wrong to do
    so. We now have the agreement that if either of us has a bad feeling in any of our chakras, we will pay attention and least talk openly about it. We use pendulum dowsing to help us distinguish when an emotional discomfort is coming from inside either of us
    or being captured from outside, and if it is from inside of us, from which part of us it originates. This practice has given us both an increasing appreciation for the value of pendulum dowsing, and we increasingly trust it as accurate or at least pointing
    in the right direction.
    Brain Green commented on 11-Aug-2011 01:37 AM
    Love the definitions for discriminating between lust and love. Works for me. hypnohotshot.
    Gil Bar-On commented on 11-Aug-2011 01:39 AM
    Dear Precilla! :-) I think that you're making the Exact mistake that Dr. Judith & all of the commnenters have warned you about! Your gut feeling & intuition is NEVER wrong! Never means Never.. so why not trust it? It trys to Warn you and Protect you, so
    why do you refuse to listen? Have the courage to Act Now.. Be Honest with yourself.. And release Yourself- BE Free! :-) Believe you deserve a much pure & better Love! I believe in you.. :-) Lots of Love, & Thank You dear Judith! Gil :-)
    Jim Hallowes commented on 11-Aug-2011 02:52 AM
    Hi Judith, I am intrigued with this whole concept of Love vs. Lust... I find many, many "wounded women" especially because of their childhood abuse that leaves them with more dopamine receptors and the "Long for Lust, not Love" based on this... they yearn
    and long for "passion" (which of course "burns out") and not love which doesn't have enough excitement for them... I remember a presenter last year up in San Mateo at a TA conference and he said "If you hear bells and whistles and there are fireworks going
    off... he suggests running! It seems from my work coaching hundreds of Highly Sensitive People over the years... it seems the more "passion" or lust at the beginning of a relationship the less chance there is of it will holding up, continuing and them staying
    together. Sad, but true. HSP's think (or more correctly "feel" they are so intuitive that they just know they've met their "soul mate" and they often move too fast! As I say about HSPs in relationships on my HighlySensitivePeople.com website, quoting the old
    Frank Sinatra's song, "Slow and easy does it every time!" Thank you for bringing up and discussing this subject!! All the best, Jim Hallowes
    Dorian Gray commented on 11-Aug-2011 04:30 AM
    I now understand the difference between lust and love. I can definitely tell how I feel for someone I am with. Thank you so much for opening my eyes and mind on this topic. More power to you, Doc!
    Renata Kolbus commented on 11-Aug-2011 10:08 AM
    Perfect timing for this blog - is what my gut is saying - a feeling and a trigger to examine or audit where ones relationship is currently at. The teacher always shows even though on an intuitive level a relationship may be past this phase and into the
    guts of developing a real foundation of strong lasting love. No matter the tempature of ones relationship, in the moment, the base root of any healthy relationship is open and honest communication. Not all relationships are perfect and we must remember that
    each individual comes in with unhealthy history or patternization. Each individual seeking to be in a loving relationship must first understand themselves and how yes - past relationships - did affect and how they effect you now. Being aware is key for HSP's
    and open expression to your partner is an absolute necessity. We as HSP's must create an atmosphere in the relationship to determine wether or not the person we are with has the capacity and faculties to respectfully understand our nature and live with our
    moments. In return, we must respect our partner enough to turn off and let things be. It is our responsibility at any given moment to show up and know when to speak and when to hold. I say "hold" not withhold cause withholding can be a form of abuse or lying
    to another. We must remember to always give your partner time to come to their own conclusions and allow for the evolution and development of a trusting foundation. Learning to communicate in a way that allows the other to express their emotions and feelings
    equally. Bulldozing and believing that we are right all the time does not work regardless of what our gut is saying. Laughter and making light of our feelings even though expressing, takes the heavy off of our communication style. Thus we are not nailing the
    other to the board so to speak. While intuition can send us in many directions -I strongly inject here, that again, it is up to us to BREATH and allow the true answer to come - not just top of mind. I am fortunate to have found a partner who is willing to
    work in relationship with me this way and together we work from our hearts and minds as a means of truly understanding eachother on a much deeper level. Believe me when I say... It is worth the time and energy because once that connection and understanding
    is made on a very basic level, many expansive opportunities for expression and sharing of genuine emotions and creativity begins to emerge. To me it has enhanced my perceptions of relationships in the world and how to interact in any given situation. The strengths
    and weaknesses show and I have learned I don't always have to be on. In saying that - when you hit a point in your life that you know what you want and need in a partner and put it out there - it does come to you. God and Mother Nature do design the right
    person for you. The lesson here for any HSP's is do your work first - know yourself and determine what you need to feel safe and heard - than be prepared to walk your talk and show up and follow through, no matter the level of where your relationship is at.
    Lust to love or love to lust or the interplay that exists between the 2 modalities. It's all exciting and expansive when you are in the right frame of mind to receive genuine connection. The rest just naturally follows as a relationship evolves into what it
    is meant to be as designed by God and Mother Nature. Knowing and discovering how your individual unique puzzle pieces fit together and trusting the knowing of the bigger picture verses getting bogged down in the small petty stuff that sucks the life right
    out of you, is always the challenge in any relationship. Stepping back from fear and forging forward into genuine realness is where love exists. Be willing to Give space for each to evolve into that knowing and communicating and respecting eachothers emotions
    in the moment. Be willing to hear what the other is saying even if you are hearing and interpreting it differently. How one hears, observes or interpretes what is being said is the key in determining the level of connection one has with another. Be willing
    to ask for clarity and by being honest with how you hear or interpret what the other is saying is paramount for clear understanding. Be willing to share what you think and are observing. As HSP's we may tend to jump verses flow with and that can rock another
    out of sorts. That is not the goal. The goal is to create a trusting environment where the other can relax in knowing they are not being judged but just read well. I have found when another is being genuinely honest with me they don't want to hide - they want
    to be seen and heard providing they do know themselves and what they genuinely want. That can be scary for a partner who has never experienced that before but at the same time liberating. Breaking the old patterns and discovering what works for one another
    is the road to developing a healthy loving relationship. When you know You know........
    Pat Rice commented on 11-Aug-2011 01:23 PM
    My body ALWAYS knows: I recall years ago I got what appeared as food poisoning on a first date, though he and I shared the same food! (after a conversation during which I asked "is (the promising things he said and did) from best behavior or is that what
    you actually do normally in a relationship? and he admitted it was not in fact his norm.) With another man, however, I learned the hard way to finally distinguish in my body what the feeling of physical attraction tinged with danger / stay away feels like;
    fortunately I'm still alive and now that I've distinguished that one I wil NEVER proceed with anyone (male or female) when those sensations are present. Finally, I've noticed that when the intensity of my attraction to someone goes up, my presence and careful
    consideration go down, so since the latest (minor) incident I'm practising taking pauses and writing out all that I do NOT know about the person which helps me regain perspective. Fortunately the work I've done with cognitive awareness(Ten Days to Self Esteem
    workbook by David Burns is AWESOME for this) I'm more often than not catching the distorted thoughts that, if unchecked, would carry me further into relationships that are not in my highest and best interest. Only last month I extracted myself after only a
    few weeks with a man who had many of the qualities I value but who was self-critical and therefore critical of others. Because of the depth of conversations, shared interests and physical attraction, it was only through noticing the energy drain after we were
    together and then writing my thoughts and feelings that I became conscious of the subtle ways he critized and questioned me (I had noticed and felt compassion for the more obvious ways he was self-critical.) Thanks to the teachers, mentors and friends I'v
    had over the years who've taught and modeled and encouraged healthier, conscious awareness and choices. Mahalo
    Vicky commented on 11-Aug-2011 04:11 PM
    Well you nailed it. I used to think that when a man sesired you all of the time that was love the went on for 10 years with my husband. Now 24 years later I found out 4 years ago after my gut said HUGE problem that he was sleeping with hookers every day
    after work and then at odd times on weekends. LUST can really make a person sick. Besides spending $1000s of dollars I was exposed to every STD there is. He was caught my a family member and has tuned his life around. Had I gone with my gut feeling this could
    have been avoided or at lease nipped in the bud alot sooner.
    David commented on 12-Aug-2011 02:53 AM
    I've always felt that if you involve yourself physically with someone inappropriately, then you lose your vision to see the situation clearly. I think a good relationship needs the dance of a courtship with all of its color, charm, grace, and effort. Over
    time it brings out those deeper feelings of love.
    Pst. Abraham Sunday commented on 12-Aug-2011 04:23 AM
    Dear Judith Orloff M.D. I am A serving pastor with The Seed of Israel Christian Mission, Abuja, Nigeria. My short comment is that, Judith continue in this might, and you will save many lives and marriages. God Bless you real good. Pst. Abraham S.
    Linda commented on 12-Aug-2011 09:47 AM
    Dear Judith Orloff M.D I absolutely agree with your views in this article , Genuine love always begins with The Mind and Heart and never with The Shell...I know understand why the earlier generations of people used to court each other and get to know each
    other well over a proper period of time before getting involved emotionally and physically...It makes so much scence ..There is a harmony there that must be attained...in order for a relationship to endure ..Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom with all
    who seek it out...>(^-^)< The Lady SkyKatt RavenTail
    Caylene commented on 14-Aug-2011 06:17 PM
    Love Vrs Lust, I guess the whole concept goes to using your "intuition" The only question that I pose to Judith, is how do you break the addiction? Often a person is attracted to someone out of lonliness and the encounter wether it is sexual or otherwise
    generates a desire to be with someone irrespective of the internal bells going off inside, and some people rationalise this with "someone is better than no-one" despite the "risk" involved in taking this journey. Once on the journey when rationale kicks in
    a person ends up justifying that staying with him/her despite their failings are better than being on my own! How do you teach people to get out of this addictive cycle?
    judith commented on 24-Aug-2011 12:18 PM
    Thank everyone for all theirs insightful comments!
    Someone male commented on 27-Nov-2011 01:54 PM
    What's Wrong with me? Been in love with this wonderfull woman for two years now. I desire her i love her and i get broken. How Can i leave someone i love deeply? Her collection of issues are miles long. I Care for her i want her to heal..and i want out
    without hurting her.....
    Mara Enid commented on 16-Dec-2011 09:39 PM
    Love this post. I like to think of it as paying it forward or creating some good karma. Both love and money work that way, I find. When you give both freely, you get them back in spades.
    jones commented on 10-Feb-2012 07:14 PM
    Hey..Am Adams..Well having waiting long time to date this girl since 2008 when we in college but she really dislike me because i dress up cool but later on 2011 she final accept i really love her alot and when she first tell me shes not dating me again
    i cry alot but she tell me she want to date me again i do care about her and i try to make her happy and shes my first girlfriend i use to tell her all the time but she dont trust me am a shy person i dont talk to girl alot but she alway think i does but i
    alway tell her how i feel but think am playing her whenever she call me when she boring i will leave what am doing i will go there but am alway shy when i get to the place finally again she broke up with me without any reason and all her friend tell me everything
    i had for her it lust if feel confuse and i cry i dont know how i feel

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    How to Know if You're an Empath

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, July 25, 2011
    How to Know if You're an Empath by Judith Orloff M.D.

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    Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff’s New York Times Bestseller, Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life (Three Rivers Press, 2011)

    Empaths are highly sensitive, finely tuned instruments when it comes to emotions. They feel everything, sometimes to an extreme, and are less apt to intellectualize feelings. Intuition is the filter through which they experience the world. Empaths are naturally giving, spiritually attuned, and good listeners. If you want heart, empaths have got it. Through thick and thin, they’re there for you, world-class nurturers.

    The trademark of empaths is that they know where you’re coming from. Some can do this without taking on people’s feelings. However, for better or worse, others, like myself and many of my patients, can become angst-sucking sponges. This often overrides the sublime capacity to absorb positive emotions and all that is beautiful. If empaths are around peace and love, their bodies assimilate these and flourish. Negativity, though, often feels assaultive, exhausting. Thus, they’re particularly easy marks for emotional vampires, whose fear or rage can ravage empaths. As a subconscious defense, they may gain weight as a buffer. When thin, they’re more vulnerable to negativity, a missing cause of overeating explored in my book Positive Energy. Plus, an empath’s sensitivity can be overwhelming in romantic relationships; many stay single since they haven’t learned to negotiate their special cohabitation needs with a partner.

    When empaths absorb the impact of stressful emotions, it can trigger panic attacks, depression, food, sex and drug binges, and a plethora of physical symptoms that defy traditional medical diagnosis from fatigue to agorophobia. Since I’m an empath, I want to help all my empath-patients cultivate this capacity and be comfortable with it.

    Empathy doesn’t have to make you feel too much all the time. Now that I can center myself and refrain from shouldering civilization’s discontents, empathy continues to make me freer, igniting my compassion, vitality, and sense of the miraculous. To determine whether you’re an emotional empath, take the following quiz.

    QUIZ: AM I AN EMPATH?

    Ask yourself:

  • Have I been labeled as “too emotional” or overly sensitive?
  • If a friend is distraught, do I start feeling it too?
  • Are my feelings easily hurt?
  • Am I emotionally drained by crowds, require time alone to revive?
  • Do my nerves get frayed by noise, smells, or excessive talk?
  • Do I prefer taking my own car places so that I can leave when I please?
  • Do I overeat to cope with emotional stress?
  • Am I afraid of becoming engulfed by intimate relationships?
  • If you answer “yes” to 1-3 of these questions, you’re at least part empath. Responding “yes” to more than 3 indicates that you’ve found your emotional type.

    Recognizing that you’re an empath is the first step in taking charge of your emotions instead of constantly drowning in them. Staying on top of empathy will improve your self-care and relationships.

    Emotional Action Step. How To Find Balance

    Practice these strategies to center yourself.

  • Allow quiet time to emotionally decompress. Get in the habit of taking calming mini-breaks throughout the day. Breathe in some fresh air. Stretch. Take a short walk around the office. These interludes will reduce the excessive stimulation of going non-stop.
  • Practice guerilla meditation. To counter emotional overload, act fast and meditate for a few minutes. This centers your energy so you don’t take it on from others.
  • Define and honor your empathic needs. Safeguard your sensitivities. Here’s how.
  • If someone asks too much of you, politely tell them “no.” It’s not necessary to explain why. As the saying goes, “No is a complete sentence.”
  • If your comfort level is three hours max for socializing--even if you adore the people--take your own car or have an alternate transportation plan so you’re not stranded.
  • If crowds are overwhelming, eat a high-protein meal beforehand (this grounds you) and sit in the far corner of, say, a theatre or party, not dead center.
  • If you feel nuked by perfume, nicely request that your friends refrain from wearing it around you. If you can’t avoid it, stand near a window or take frequent breaks to catch a breath of fresh air outdoors.
  • If you overeat to numb negative emotions, practice the guerilla meditation mentioned above, before you’re lured to the refrigerator, a potential vortex of temptation. As an emergency measure, keep a cushion by the fridge so you can be poised to meditate instead of binge.
  • Carve out private space at home. Then you won’t be stricken by the feeling of too much togetherness. (Chapter 8 discusses nontraditional living settings compatible with an empath’s comfort zone.)
  • Over time, I suggest adding to this list to keep yourself covered. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel each time you’re on emotional overload. With pragmatic strategies to cope, empaths can have quicker retorts, feel safer, and their talents can blossom.


    Comments
    Paul M commented on 27-Jul-2011 01:21 PM
    This is a great article, Dr. Orloff, and something that could help others.
    Judy A. Kessinger commented on 30-Jul-2011 03:47 PM
    Hi Miss Orloff, Thank You for writing Positve Energy. I have now learned by reading this book why I have felt "different", taking on the energy of others, etc. I recognize and pay attention to my own intuition and know it is not me. I plan on reading your
    other writings to get me to my best own self!! Thank You and God Bless Judy
    Midwest M.D. commented on 30-Jul-2011 07:20 PM
    Eureka!!! Amazing! Thank God that I "chanced" upon your work while searching Amazon! You may have just saved my life, and I'm not understating in the slightest. I've been told since my Medical School years in the Southwest that I'm "empathic." I thought
    it just meant that I could really connect with my patients, but other times it seemed to be observed as a drawback. Now I finally get it. Take an empathic person, put them through years of childhood abuse, dissociation, forced intellectualization, and then
    watch them try to maintain when their natural bent puts them in the healing professions! This makes more sense to me than anything I've learned in my lifetime. Thank-you. I'm now a fan for life. PS: Wanted to leave an email address, but afraid it might be
    published.
    Denise Grenhart commented on 31-Jul-2011 09:32 AM
    Ms Orloff, thank you for your explanation of an empath. How long I have wondered what is "wrong" with me! I seem to attract those people who absolutely drain my energy. People see me as the strong one, but on the inside, I am absorbing the sadness and
    chaos that is all around me. Your empath quiz was a real eye opener - I could not have described myself better if I tried! Thank you for your work!
    Leanne commented on 06-Aug-2011 07:48 AM
    This is a breath of fresh air to me. I've been trying to figure my boyfriend of 3 years out. This really sums him up and knowing about some of his past I understand how this can be relative to him. We are moving in together and he wants a separate room
    and needs his space. I pesonally am a people person and would be happy together all the time and think nothing of it. He has always said that he can't explain it and does not understand himself so doesn't expect me to. If I can understand him, I can compromise
    more. Knowing what the issue may be helps. This blog my just turn my relationship around.... Thank you.
    Ann commented on 06-Aug-2011 05:44 PM
    69yrs it has taken me to realize I am an empath- now I can understand my relationships and the events in my life, my choices - and most of all how to deal with emotions and accept myself and enjoy being me. Thank you
    Carolyn commented on 27-Oct-2011 11:40 PM
    A chance comment and a quick search led me here and I am so relieved.
    kathleen commented on 01-Nov-2011 09:20 PM
    I am so stunned after reading this, I cant stress enough how a weight has been lifted of my shoulders,six months ago i went to the doctor in tears fearing i was losing my mind as i fitted in to so many categorises including depression, anxiety, antisocial
    and over sensitive,its so strange,i have taken time of work to try and figure out what is wrong with me and by pure chance i stumble across this page!! thanks so much!!
    Anonymous commented on 14-Nov-2011 02:07 PM
    Thank you!!! I now know what's "wrong" with me!
    Anonymous commented on 04-Dec-2011 07:14 PM
    Im your average teenager. And I found out about being an empath a few weeks ago. I guess learning I was an empath and how to control it really help me understand myself better! Thank You For Having This Website! It was one of my resources!
    Anonymous commented on 08-Jan-2012 06:01 PM
    I am thirteen and apparently an empath. Your website really helped me to manage it better.A thousand thanks!

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    Intuition & Healing: Tips To Find The Right Health Care Practitioner

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, July 18, 2011
    Intuition & Healing: Tips To Find The Right Health Care Practitioner

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    (Adapted from “Guide to Intuitive Healing: Five Steps to Physical, Emotional, and Sexual Wellness by Judith Orloff MD)

    I want to guide you through the process of selecting a health care practitioner to match your needs. I'll point out qualities to look for and those to avoid. Here are some guidelines to follow. Also use common sense combined with intuition to choose the right practitioner for you. Who you let touch your body, prescribe medications, and counsel you about vital health strategies is one of the most important decisions you'll ever make.

    In Guide to Intuitive Healing I discuss in detail the do’s and don’ts when evaluating or looking for a doctor. Many of us have stuck far too long with a health care practitioner when we didn't follow our intuition on whether they were a good fit for our needs. Seek out someone who blends intuitive and technical skills implementing as many of the following guidelines from my book as possible.

    QUALITIES TO LOOK FOR

    Notice if your doctor:
  • Takes time to listen to you
    Does he or she pay attention and let you fully explain why you are there? Is there good eye contact or is your doctor staring down at a clipboard or a computer screen?
  • Is technically qualified
    Does your practitioner have sold credentials? For example, an MD, Ph.D. or RN? Is he or she licensed? Is your alternative healer certified, and/or does your healer have a good track record with patients? Do you know anyone who can vouch for his or her high level of care?
  • Isn't offended if you ask for a second opinion
    If needed, is your doctor open and non-defensive about getting another point of view? Will he or she recommend a trustworthy colleague?
  • Presents you with options and is knowledgeable about (or at least open to) alternative health techniques
    Are you told the pros and cons of a few possible treatments? If you ask, for example, about acupuncture, will your doctor react with an open mind? If you say, "Here's an article about my condition, would you be willing to read it and discuss it with me?” How does your doctor respond?
  • Honors your intuitions and preferences about your body
    If you say, "My intuition doesn't feel good about this plan of action," does your doctor factor it into the decision making? Or will he or she chide you, "Be serious that's not very scientific?" Does your doctor encourage you to know your body's needs?
  • QUALITIES TO AVOID

    Notice if your doctor:
  • Rushes you through an office visit
    Are you interrupted by your doctor taking phone calls? Do you overhear him or her making dinner reservations or golf dates? Does your HMO doc really make those fifteen minutes count? Or is he or she abrupt? Distracted? Do you get cut off repeatedly or before you're finished explaining why you're there?
  • Approaches you with a demeaning "holier than thou" attitude, talking in jargon
    Are you told, "I'm the doctor. I know what's best for you?" Does he or she insist in using complex medical terminology even though you've said it confuses you? Does your doctor refuse to explain things in simple terms?
  • Isn't professionally accredited or technically skilled
    Is your doctor unlicensed? Has his or her license ever been revoked? Do you know of any complaints of wrong-doing from other patients?
  • Makes you feel guilty or foolish for asking questions
    Does your doctor dismiss or minimize your concerns remarking, "You're overly sensitive," or even worse, "You created your illness?" Is he or she patronizing, saying, "It's over your head. I can't explain your condition in a way you'd understand."
  • Doesn't return phone calls within twenty four hours
    When calling, are you told, "The doctor's busy and will have to get back to you," then doesn't? Is he or she hard to reach during an emergency? Do you have the sense that your doctor's always tied up with something more important than you?
  • It is your right to access who is the right health care practitioner for you. Taking responsibility for your choice by evaluating the above criteria will lead to a more positive and productive relationship with your doctor. The care and time you give to finding the right health care practitioner is very empowering. It allows you to become an integral part of your healing process. When you and your doctor are on the same wavelength, communication about all aspects of your health will be vastly improved.


    Comments
    Rebecca Muminovic, MD commented on 19-Jul-2011 03:33 PM
    I agree with many of the things you have listed here and I would add one more key point. Your doctor should be a partner in your health and overall well being. The face of medicine today is changing and with that change comes many new possibilities. Some
    doctors now are able to spend the time required to truly get to know their patients and thus act as a true partner in their health. They should be viewing their patients through more than one lens. Instead of seeing their patients as a body that needs fixing,
    they should see an individual aimed at excellent health through prevention of disease and integration of body, mind and spirit. This doctor is a true healer. This is the doctor you want as a partner in your health and well being.

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    5 Intuitive Warning Signs About Your Health (Video)

    Dr. Orloff - Tuesday, July 12, 2011
    5 Intuitive Warning Signs About Your Health (Video)

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    If you want to see what your body will look like tomorrow, look at your thoughts today.
                         --Navajo saying


    Your body is programmed for survival. Heeding early warnings protects your health.  Familiarize yourself with how your body speaks to you. It wants you to be well. It will tell you if you are not. Hippocrates wrote over two thousand years ago, "There is a measure of conscious thought throughout the body." This is practical wisdom you can live by.

    In my book “Dr. Orloff’s Guide to Intuitive Healing” I describe how your body is a richly nuanced intuitive receiver—and how you must be aware your body’s signals to completely heal. This may require some adjustment of how you think about health. As a physician, I’ve seen that many people are trained to function from the neck up denying the rest of their bodies. I want you to re-orient yourself, to respect the intellect, but attend to your body’s messages as well. Being aware of the body can open intuition because you’re focusing on your physicality, getting out of your head and into your sensual awareness. This may mean noticing the early signs of pain so you can act on them, trusting your gut about relationships, or awakening your sexuality. We can't afford to ignore life-informing signals your body sends. 

    It’s vital to re-train yourself to override mechanisms you’ve developed to push through discomfort. To prevent illness I’m going to show you how to pay special attention to physical distress signals. Honor your body’s messages; don't discount them. Simple prompt action is sometimes all it takes. If you're tired, rest. If you're hungry, eat a delicious meal. If you're stressed, get a relaxing massage. The price of not listening? You come down with the flu; your back goes out. You still don't listen? Chest pain. Ulcers. Depression. The thermostat gets turned up until you pay attention.

    To listen to your body and get a headstart on warding off symptoms get used to detecting the quieter messages your body sends. It’s important to listen to what your gut says, whether it’s tied up in knots or relaxed-- this intuition can inform all your decisions by pointing you to people and situations you’re comfortable with. Also notice your energy level around people. Does it go up or down? Your body picks up on this quickly. Try to surround yourself with positive people. This will improve your health and wellbeing. Here are some signals your body sends if it’s out of balance. Some of them you may recognize right away.

    5 WARNING SIGNS YOUR BODY SENDS (from “Dr. Orloff’s Guide to Intuitive Healing”)
  • Do you ever walk around feeling "off center"? Oddly numb? Out of focus? Detached? As if you're somehow missing a beat? How long do you tolerate this sense that your body just isn't right?
  • Do you sometimes feel "toxic," as if you're coming down with the flu though there are no other signs of it?
  • Have you experienced unexplainable symptoms that may have gone on for years? A knot or emptiness in the pit of your stomach? A lump in your throat? An aching heart?
  • Do you ever have a distressing sense of rawness or feeling exposed? Everything seems to get to you and you feel you have no defense?
  • Are you chronically tired?
  • If you answer “yes” to any of these questions it’s worthwhile to begin by taking a general inventory of your health and stress level. What areas can be improved upon? Examine everything from the amount of exercise to alone time to your relationships. Make sure you’re allotting enough space to recharge. Though the above changes may seen relatively minor, on an intuitive level they indicate early difficulty. To start, do your best to pinpoint and remedy problem areas.

    To detect your body’s warnings, both quiet and loud, requires increasing your sensitivity to the nuances of its messages. The art of listening entails sensing smaller symptoms before they become full blown. Mindfulness is key. Denial is the antithesis of intuition. We must do what we can to get past it. As a physician, I’ve seen time and again how increasing body awareness facilitates prevention of illness and more vibrant health. Listening to your body is a powerful step towards self-care that benefits wellness in all areas.


    Comments
    Carol commented on 24-Jul-2011 02:59 PM
    MY body has definitely talking to me a lot. I've worked so hard on releasing and shrinking a uterine fibroid, but my intuition is telling me it has grown even larger. Not wanting to give up any of my female organs i'm frustrated. But i'm even more frustrated
    with being so tired and drained all the time by such heavy monthly periods. Any advice?
    Deborah Lynch commented on 26-Aug-2011 02:24 PM
    There are many other treatments for fibroids. If your doctor is only giving you the hysterectomy option, get a second opinion.
    Alexi commented on 25-Oct-2011 03:55 PM
    I know of many amazing success stories of women with fibroids and heavy periods who go get the help of a skilled acupuncturist and herbalist. Something you may want to give a shot! highly recommend.
    Suzanne Picinich commented on 18-Jan-2012 10:52 AM
    It sounds as if you have one fibroid. These can be removed more essilly than multiple fibroids. There are new Gynecologic treatments - in 1992 laparoscopic myomectomy to remove the fibroid & spare the uterus ovaries & Fallopian tubes, preserving fertility.
    At that time short term hormonal cycle interruption to shrink the fibroid was being pioneered. There are many treatments available. About 20% of women over 30 get fibroids. Don't take it sitting down, do your own research. Blessings.
    Anonymous commented on 18-Jan-2012 11:01 AM
    When I bought my condo, I completely overrode my body's input...I thought about it, but everyone was telling me how great this place was, good location, etc. I definitely was never happy there--mostly depressed. Still, it took me a number of years to move,
    as I had lost confidence in my decision-making abilities. Though I didn't become sick there, a few years after I moved they found an 11 lb. tumor in my body, which was probably growing for years. Happy to say that I'm in a much better home environment now,
    and I try to always honor my body's messages.
    Cheryl commented on 18-Jan-2012 12:37 PM
    This blog was so timely for me. I recently resigned from a second job which drained my energy and left me frustrated and stressed every time I worked. I worked hard, but never felt appreciated. I was ambivalent about quitting because the pay was exellent.
    It took a few months to make the decision. I now feel empowered and at ease. This morning I woke up exhausted with a headache. I chose to skip my 90 minute power yoga class, which I would usually push myself to go to. I ate a healthy breakfast and relaxed
    with my coffee instead. I then checked my email and my choice was validated by this blog. It only took me 46 years to learn that if I listen to my body instead of my critical rigid mind, I take better care of myself and consequently get to feel better. Thank
    you Dr. Orloff.
    judy krings commented on 18-Jan-2012 03:00 PM
    This is a terrific article. As an auto immune disorder prone person, after years of working overtime (even though I loved it) 6 years ago after gigantic stressors, I began to feel my body saying, "Enough! I can't go on!" This was not the piece of cake
    this shrink and life coach wanted to face. I am the optimist who is always there for others. Somehow I was leaving ME out of the equation. Now I listen with a sharper ear. I pick and choose what I want and need to feel my career is still rewarding. And I force
    myself to get up from my ever-busy computer and stretch! Thanks for a super relevant, life-saving post.
    Brain Green commented on 18-Jan-2012 04:40 PM
    Really this means listening to the rest of the organism apart from the mind. The subconscious includes the body-mind. In our societal culture many of us are trained by our upbringing to ignore the organism that we are in favor of other factors. Parental
    figures inside and outside the home deprive us of our true sense of ourself. I ought to know, it happened to me in spades! hypnohotshot.
    Betty commented on 18-Jan-2012 08:28 PM
    Thank you Dr Orloff for this excellent message. I am facing a move soon and thus new employment so this info will definately come in handy. I can relate as I recently left a high stress job as I knew I couldn't take it anymore. Seemed I was one step away
    from a heart attack. Was developing all kind of body symptomss just as you described in your video. Best thing I could have done was to move on and listen to my body talk. I'm starting to feel better now and re-energize again. Thanks again!
    Beverlu commented on 18-Jan-2012 10:47 PM
    Thank you Dr Orloff for your wisdom once again. It's about trusting and honoring ourselves. Why is that so difficult to do? And why does the fear come in to squelch our innate knowing. I love the synchronicity of this message, exactly what I needed to
    hear.
    V russell commented on 19-Jan-2012 01:00 AM
    160/100 ... that was the blood pressure reading my doctor read to me in his office today... But, I am a steady 110/90 kinda gal!! So what is this completely weird thing that is happening to my body? One word STRESS - and no release. I have not been taking
    care of ME. I have allowed work to consume me and now I am paying the price. My bedtime intention - "I am open to hearing myself and all that I have to say - I am nurturing myself from the inside out" I am off to bed now with a warm mug of milk and a new sense
    of appreciation for my amazing body and its fragile nature.
    Barbara commented on 19-Jan-2012 01:01 AM
    I've been researching and following my intution on how to save my lady parts despite having uterine fibroids and PCOS. What I'm coming up with is iodine deficiency, and it also explains my having low thyroid symptoms despite good thyroid lab test numbers.
    Just ordered Dr. Brownstein's books on Iodine and the Thyroid, after taking the time to slow down and follow my gut on the Internet. The doctors only wanted to prescribe and cut on me...
    Mary Anne commented on 19-Jan-2012 10:36 PM
    What a great message, and something that I really needed to hear right now. I have had difficulties breathing at work and have attributed it to the heating system and indoor air quality...when perhaps the environment there is literally suffocating me--?
    Definitely food for thought. Thank you, Judith.

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    Are You Catching Other People's Emotions?

    Dr. Orloff - Monday, June 06, 2011
    Are You Catching Other People's Emotions?

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    In my book “Emotional Freedom,” I emphasize the importance of learning how to stay centered in a stressful, highly emotionally charged world. Since research has shown that emotions can be contagious, you can potentially “catch” fear, anger, or joy from people without realizing it. If you tend to be an emotional sponge, it’s vital to know how to avoid taking on an individual’s negative emotions or the free-floating kind in crowds. Another twist is that chronic anxiety, depression, or stress can turn you into an emotional sponge by wearing down your defenses. Suddenly, you become hyper-attuned to others, especially those with similar pain. That’s how empathy works; we zero in on hot-button issues that are unresolved in ourselves. Negative emotions can originate from several sources. What you’re feeling may be your own; it may be someone else’s; or it may be a combination. I’ll explain how to tell the difference and strategically bolster positive emotions so you don’t shoulder negativity that doesn’t belong to you.

    This wasn’t something I always knew how to do. Growing up, my girlfriends couldn't wait to hit the shopping malls and go to parties, the bigger the better--but I didn't share their excitement. I always felt overwhelmed, exhausted around large groups of people, though I was clueless why. "What's the matter with you?" friends would say, shooting me the weirdest looks. All I knew was that crowded places and I just didn't mix. I'd go there feeling just fine but leave nervous, depressed, or with some horrible new ache or pain. Unsuspectingly, I was a sponge, sensing the emotions of people around me.

    With my patients, I’ve also seen how absorbing other people’s emotions can trigger panic attacks, depression, food, sex and drug binges, and a plethora of physical symptoms that defy traditional medical diagnosis. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that more than two million Americans suffer from chronic fatigue. It’s likely that many of them are emotional sponges.

    Here are some strategies from “Emotional Freedom” to practice. They will help you to stop taking on other people’s stress.

    Emotional Action Step:  6 Tips To Stay Centered In A Stressful World

    To detach from other people’s negative emotions:
    Tip #1: First, ask yourself: Is the feeling mine or someone else’s? It could be both. If the emotion such as fear or anger is yours, gently confront what’s causing it on your own or with professional help. If not, try to pinpoint the obvious generator. For instance, if you’ve just watched a comedy, yet you came home from the movie theater feeling blue, you may have incorporated the depression of the people sitting beside you; in close proximity, energy fields overlap. The same is true with going to a mall or packed concert.

    Tip #2: When possible, distance yourself from the suspected source. Move at least twenty feet away; see if you feel relief. Don’t err on the side of not wanting to offend strangers. In a public place, don’t hesitate to change seats if you feel a sense of depression imposing on you.

    Tip #3: For a few minutes, center yourself by concentrating on your breath: This connects you to your essence. Keep exhaling stress inhaling calm. This helps to ground yourself and purify fear or other difficult emotions. Visualize stress as gray fog lifting from your body, and hope as a clear light entering. This can yield quick results.

    Tip #4: Stressful emotions such as fear frequently lodge in your gut.  Place your palm there as you keep sending loving-kindness to that area to soothe stress. For longstanding depression or anxiety, use this method daily to strengthen yourself.  It’s comforting and builds a sense of safety and optimism.

    Tip #5: Visualize. A handy form of protection many people use, including health care practitioners with trying patients, involves visualizing an envelope of white light around your entire body. Think of it as a shield that blocks out negativity or physical discomfort but allows what's positive to filter in.

    Tip #6: Look for positive people and situations. Call a friend who sees the good in others. Spend time with a colleague who affirms the bright side of things. Listen to hopeful people. Hear the faith they have in themselves and others. Also relish hopeful words, songs, and art forms. Hope is contagious and it will lift your mood.

    Keep practicing these strategies. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel each time you’re on emotional overload. With strategies to cope, you can have quicker retorts to stressful situations, feel safer, and your sensitivities can blossom.


    Comments
    Brenda commented on 24-Jun-2011 12:45 PM
    Great post. I'm aware of what you're talking about. I usually make it a habit to surround myself with white light, or a shield, when I'm out in a large crowd. Being in a negative person's energy field is so draining.
    Lauren commented on 27-Jun-2011 01:30 PM
    Thank you so much for your this post and your videos. I *must* get your book! I have recently discovered what an 'empath' is and that I am one (as well as a gusher - so I have all these feelings and then have to tell everyone about them - yikes). When
    someone tells me a story in which they get very angry (even though they're not angry at me), and can't handle it. The anger comes at me like a punch in the stomach. Likewise, happy/sweet stories make me smile and cry 'cause they're so touching. When I watched
    your video clip on "What Emotional Type are You?" and you talked about empaths, I (of *course*) started to cry. The realization I was allowed to have was the connection between the emotions and my severe discomfort in crowded places. I have always told people
    that it's like I'm claustrophobic - but it has less to do with small spaces and more to do with lots of people. I can be in a tiny elevator as long as I'm by myself. But, to be in a store filled with other people - I can't handle it. Even watching Independence
    Day fireworks outdoors with a crowd is very uncomfortable for me. Thank you for allowing me to understand this connection. I get stressed thinking my little bouts of being overwhelmed mean there's something very wrong with me. Thank you for helping me see
    it's just part of the whole!
    Gay Edelman commented on 07-Sep-2011 03:15 PM
    Judith, you are my hero. Until I learned from you that I'm an emotional empath, I thought I was just an emotional train wreck by my nature. But my true nature is love and light, which I must protect. I especially love the white light envelope, and the
    admonition not to worry about offending negative-energy strangers. If I don't protect me, who will?

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    Emotional Types: Are You a Gusher?

    Dr. Orloff - Tuesday, May 31, 2011
    Emotional Types: Are You a Gusher?

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    In my practice as a psychiatrist and in my personal life, I've known many people whom I call "emotional gushers." Gushers are experts at knowing their emotions and were born to share them. No one has to wonder where they're at. Elated, bored, miserable, they tell you. What you see is what you get. They tend to be spontaneous, direct, authentic and trusted confidants. The gusher unloads stress by verbalizing it.

    I, for one, know how freeing this can be. I am grateful to my treasured circle of friends, who deserve trophies for listening to my fears, hopes and quandaries over the years. However, some gushers get antsy when there's no one to tell. Also, they may resist making independent decisions, trusting their intuition or staying emotionally grounded without external input. I have a patient who's an aide in a convalescent home, a true friend to the elderly. Though he finds helping others gratifying, the setting can be arduous: understaffing and budget cuts compromise the care he gives to the dementia-afflicted or physically disabled, a brutal neglect he had difficulty stomaching. Each night, he depended on being able to vent his stress to his wife and could work himself into tremendous anxiety if she wasn't around. My patient didn't know how else to calm down and release stress until I taught him the techniques in this article. In addition to healthily venting, he learned to tap the power within to find inner peace.

    In my book "Emotional Freedom" I describe the gusher as well as three other common emotional types, which include the Intellectual, the Empath and the Rock. It's important to know which type you are to be empowered emotionally. To determine if you're a gusher, take the following quiz.

    Quiz: Am I A Gusher?

    Ask yourself:
  • Is it easy for me to express my emotions?
  • Do I get anxious if I keep my feelings in?
  • When a problem arises, is my first impulse to pick up the phone?
  • Do I need to take a poll before finalizing a decision?
  • Are my friends often telling me, "Too much information"?
  • Do I have difficulty sensing other people's emotional boundaries?
  • If you answer "yes" to one to three of these questions, you possess some gusher tendencies. Responding "yes" to more than three suggests that this is your emotional type.

    Recognizing that you're a gusher enables you to become a better communicator by learning to balance self-sufficiency with emotional expression. Sometimes gushers are so hungry to share that they turn people off. At a party, in the market, they're all over you, compulsive emotional purgers. (The joke goes that such motormouths qualify for the Twelve-Step Program On-and-on-and-on-and-on!) Although it's liberating to voice feelings, a gusher must strike a balance between healthily emoting and drawing on the wisdom within. Consider the following profile summarizing a gusher's traits.

    The Gusher's Upside

  • You're emotionally articulate.
  • Negativity doesn't fester in you if you express it to others.
  • You have a supportive network of friends.
  • You value intimate relationships, are a sensitive listener.
  • You deal with hard issues and process them quickly.
  • The Gusher's Downside.

  • You're a candidate for becoming a drama king or queen.
  • You may turn friends into therapists.
  • You seek external feedback before you consult your intuition for answers.
  • Your need to share excessively may burn other people out.
  • You haven't fully embraced your own inner power or spiritual strengths.
  • Emotional Action Step: Tips For Gushers To Find Balance

    Empower yourself with self-sufficiency. Experiment with centering your feelings before soliciting support. Here's how: First define the upset. Let's say your boss has made mince meat out of your self-worth yet again. Second, ask yourself, "How does this make me feel? Seething? Demoralized? Plotting murder?" Now let yourself experience those emotions uncut, not acting them out, an essential stage before transformation can happen. Third, work with your feelings using these techniques:

  • Set your intention to clear the emotion.
  • Keep exhaling stress and relax your body.
  • Use positive self-talk to love yourself back to center again. Inwardly say, "I did my best. I even deserve points for graciousness." Affirm everything you did right; try to forgive where you might've fallen short, a loving inner dialogue that reinstates your power.
  • Tune in to your intuition to find a solution. Spend a few quiet moments meditating to see what images, impressions or ah-has! come to you about improving the situation.
  • As a gusher, if you skip these steps and go straight to the phone, you'll cheat yourself out of the opportunity to build the emotional muscles necessary for more freedom and autonomy. Knowledge is power. The most important relationship you'll ever have is with yourself. If this is good, you'll be capable of gratifying relationships with others.


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