Posts Tagged: mental noise

“TURNING DOWN THE MIND NOISE”

“You showed me how, how to leave myself behind
How to turn down the noise in my mind
Now I haven’t got time for the pain
I haven’t got room for the pain
I haven’t the need for the pain
Not since I’ve known you” (Carly Simon, “Haven’t Got Time for the Pain”.  I’m not sure who Simon’s “you” was, but I tend to think of my wife and God—in that order!)

“What sounds in my life might prevent me from hearing God’s whisper?
What noise in my mind might also interfere?”

These questions were asked in my “3-Minute Retreat” this morning, put out by Loyola Press.  They strike me as being very important questions.

We live in a noisy world.  No doubt, you’ve noticed that.  We get used to the noise, but that doesn’t make the noise a good thing.

My wife and I recently had a nice getaway at a bed and breakfast.  The place was back a little-traveled country road and back a long lane.  It was so quiet that I had a difficult time sleeping.  You could almost hear the silence.

I grew up on a two-hundred acre farm.  The main nocturnal noises were crickets, whip-poor-wills, and my dad’s snoring.  Noise was not usually a problem.  However, even there, even when I was young, the mental noise was considerable.

While I can’t always live in the country, or otherwise turn down the volume on external noise, I can most certainly do something about the “noise in my mind.”  Here are some suggestions that I am making mainly to myself.  However, you, dear reader, may also find some of them helpful.  Let me know what works, or if you’ve found other things that work.

This mental noise is comprised of many things: my past experiences, my fears, my hopes, my insecurities, people who have been and are special to me, my desires, the opinions of other people, and so on.  If I listen to these, one by one, I think that I can make progress in sorting out what these various forms of noise are trying to say to me.

And that is the first thing: I need to listen to the noise in mind.  It may be that the noise is actually comprised of several voices to which I need to be listening.  Even when the noise seems incoherent, listening to it may be a good discipline.  While psychiatrists and psychologists may be especially good at listening to my mental noise, it may be that I can train myself to pay attention to it myself, at least in some measure.

Second, I have the right to turn down the noise level.  This is much easier after the noises/voices in my head feel as if they’ve been heard.  The voices in my head are often like small children, tugging on their momma’s sleeve.  If I ignore those voices, they just get louder and more insistent.  But if I smile and listen to them, and respond to them lovingly, then the voices (again, like a small child) are free to run along and play by themselves.

Third—and perhaps I should have listed this first—I need to recognize a very uncomfortable truth, which is this: I often want to choose mental noise.  Why?  I think mainly because it absolves me from the responsibility to do the next right thing.  And that is because the next right thing is rarely something I want to do.  If I can claim that the mental noise is so loud that I can’t think straight, then I don’t have to live straight.

Well, those are a few fairly random thoughts about the noise in my mind.  I hope that this post doesn’t simply add more noise to your already noisy mind, dear reader.

It may even be the case that, if I turn down my own mental noise, my external world may become a bit less noisy.  I may discover that, if I deal with my own mental noise, I can hear the crickets and whip-poor-wills again.  Dad’s dead.  I can’t hear his snoring these days.

“THE NUDGINGS OF GOD AND HEARING THE HOLY SPIRIT”

“Today, I am ready for positive change. I will be responsive to inner nudges that move me in that direction.”

The above is from a daily reading I receive.  I customized it for my daily twelve-step affirmation: Today, with God’s help, I am ready for positive change. I will be responsive to inner nudges that move me in that direction.

I also receive a daily “Three-Minute Retreat” from the Jesuits.  It is also very helpful to my recovery and my life.  Interestingly, today’s retreat talked about hearing the Holy Spirit, and was based on John 16:13.  The crafter of this retreat asked a thought-provoking question: “What gets in the way of my hearing the Spirit?”

I immediately thought of external noise.

But then, nudged by God no doubt, I thought of the really noisy noise in my own mind.  That is the real distraction!

So, how do I turn down the volume in my own noisy mind?

Perhaps stilling my body helps still my mind as well.  Of course, the converse is also true.

Then too, breathing deeply tends to help the mental noise to subside.

Listening to some soothing instrumental music (I love harps and flutes!) is good for me as well.

Noticing lovely things quiets my mind and spirit as well.  Today, before I went for my walk, I noticed our beautiful rose-of-Sharon trees, and the bees which were working on them.

Prayer can help.  Obviously, the Serenity Prayer is good.  There is a reason why it is called the Serenity Prayer.  It is not only a prayer for serenity.  It also helps to bring about the serenity for which I pray.

There is also a wonderfully simple (yet profound) prayer that I learned years ago, while I was doing a “Fifty-Day Spiritual Adventure.”  It is simply this: “Calm my spirit, Lord.”

But before any of this can help, I need to do one simple thing: I need to notice the noise.

A noisy mind is like a small child who keeps tugging on his mom’s arm until she pays attention to him.  After he has been heard, he is (sometimes) ready to settle down.

Perhaps this blog is one way of paying attention to my own noisy mind.  It might even help you, my dear and highly valued reader!

When I (and you) desire positive change, we will pay attention to our mental noise.  Maybe then we will be more sensitive to the nudging of God and the voice of the Holy Spirit.

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