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Obviously I have way too much free-time!

Geoff-Allen

Resident megalomaniac
Number 201 in Schizo thread - may as well paste in here too -

Recovering slowly but surely after a bad "episode" - always stuns me as it comes right-out-of-the-blue then disappears JUST as mysteriously ...

From recent reading and surfing -

Kindness makes you happier

Happiness tip kindness

Free sentient beings from suffering

Love letters to strangers (Hannah Brencher)

Lama Zopa cherish sentient beings

fpmt Zopa quotes - dozens at one site!

I thought there was more ... oh well!

:)
 

Geoff-Allen

Resident megalomaniac
More reading at home ...

Buddhism suffering attachment

Handy home hints

Prayer life obstacles

My recipe for happiness (kindness)

The images section too?

Pursuit happiness driving us crazy

Mind body green happiness

Recipe kindness happiness

All the best!
 

Geoff-Allen

Resident megalomaniac
Another interesting article -

The more I practice as a therapist, the more it seems that the problems we face, whether depression, anxiety, or lack of satisfaction in life, contain a common thread. That thread is a terrible relationship with ourselves. Maybe terrible isn’t strong enough. Perhaps hideous is more appropriate! Think about it, when you feel embarrassed, when you are having a rough day, when you feel you have screwed up an important conversation, what does your inner dialogue sound like?

For many of us, non-constructive criticism is our main operating mode. This is how we attempt to shape and motivate ourselves. We come down hard when a mistake is made or a vulnerability surfaces. There is no self-compassion in these moments. But treating ourselves this way causes anxiety. If you can never feel OK about yourself, how can you ever really feel calm? Something will always feel amiss. If you acknowledge what you see as your inadequacies exclusively, how will you ever feel happy or peaceful?

For more -

Self-Compassion
 
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