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Jamie English

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April 10, 2020 by Jamie English Leave a Comment

I Don’t Want to Call It a New Normal

There is a commercial that I’ve seen several times lately that says, “we are living in a new normal.” It is beginning to bug me. Is this a new normal? I will tell you that I am resistant to living like this and saying it is forever. It is hard enough to live with these life adjustments and reminding myself that it is temporary. In my experience as a therapist, I am well aware that adjustment happens. It happens for good things, like getting married or promoted. It happens for not so good things like losing a job or losing a loved one. And no matter the reason, adjustment can be hard.

For whatever reason, I have noticed that adjustment happens in shifts. A timeline that I find helpful and that I have offered to my clients is to make notes on your calendar reminding you of how long it has been. I go into my calendar and write “6 weeks since….” and then follow up with a keyword or phrase. I then mark when it has been 12 weeks, then three months, then six months, then nine months, and finally a year. At that year mark, I write “one year since….” and include the question to myself, “do you need to add more dates on the calendar?” I sometimes journal when I get these notifications on my calendar, but it isn’t necessary.  I simply evaluate myself and how I am doing. During adjustment times, it can be hard to keep track of the adjusting that has happened. I can almost always look back on the last chunk of time and see ways I have adjusted, even progressed.

Here’s where my resistance comes in with the current global pandemic. This is not permanent. This is not a new normal. Maybe it is a temporary new normal, but I am also looking forward to things opening back up and being able to get out without the many limitations that are in place. It seems like we cannot predict when this is going to happen. It looks like there are varied opinions from different experts.  Because of this, I completely understand the value of accepting that this is how it is for now.  I just don’t like calling it the new normal.  Maybe I am splitting hairs, but I think language is important for the way our brains interpret the world.  Maybe we can call it a “new temporary reality” or something.  Give me some ideas, friends!

For my family and me, the changes started somewhere between March 11th and March 16th. I marked April 27th on my calendar for six weeks. I’ll evaluate my stance then. Until then, I hold out hope that things are temporary and am trying to make the best of this situation.  I just don’t want to call it my new normal.

Filed Under: Musings, Self Awareness Tagged With: control issues, fear, imperfection, internal wisdom, mental-health, vulnerability

December 6, 2019 by Jamie English Leave a Comment

You Are Never Not Communicating


About a year ago, I was lamenting about how ghosting really bugs me. I was talking with a friend the other day about this. It still is quite odd that this practice of ghosting (not responding to someone via phone call, text, email, etcetera) continues.

As I was talking about this with my friend, she was agreeing with me but also helping me realize two important things:

  1.  It might not be intentional. Each of us could be not responding to someone who is thinking we are ghosting them when, in reality, it slipped our mind. How many times have I responded to someone in my head and thought it was in reality? I have another friend who has once or twice not responded for a bit to something I said—and actually, it slipped her mind and mine. And she goes to text me something else and sees the previous text. She responds to the previous text, apologetically, then sends me the current text. It is essential to be careful what story you are telling yourself about someone ghosting you.
  2. This one is the big a-ha moment of the week for me. Once we discussed the unintentionality that might be around some ghosting that isn’t really ghosting, we moved to the person who truly did ghost me recently. I am so sure this person ghosted me. My friend helped me identify the “should” statement in my head that is causing me stress. We will call the ghoster “Sally.” My “should” statement rolling around in my head: Sally should just communicate with me. As we discussed this stressful thought, my friend asks, “Well….isn’t Sally kinda communicating with you?” Well, yes, she is.

Now I am back to the life lesson I am chewing on. We are never NOT communicating. Yes, we must be careful as the receiver of communication what stories we might be telling ourselves. But it is so true. We are always communicating. Look around and see what is being communicated beyond the words being said.

Filed Under: Growing, Psychoeducation Tagged With: cognitive distortions, communication, control issues, ghosting, life lessons, mental-health, philosophy

September 27, 2019 by Jamie English 1 Comment

Breathing Through Transition

Who remembers when they were a kid wanting to be a teenager? Then when we were a teenager, we couldn’t wait until we could drive. Then we couldn’t wait until we graduated high school. Then we couldn’t wait to go to college. Then….

I remember going to a yoga class a few years ago and learning how we move from one pose to the next too quickly. She said we need to slow down and breathe more through the transition. That is a life lesson right there. Slow down, notice your body, and breathe. How often are we holding our breath through life?

These transitions are all around us. Right now, I can’t wait for fall weather, and I know holidays are coming up. Where are you in your world? Anything you can’t wait to get here? Significant transitions and little transitions. Promotion at work? Weddings? New jobs? Maybe even something that isn’t “in the works” yet but you can’t wait for it to here already. Just for right now, be present and breathe.

Filed Under: Psychoeducation, Self Awareness, Self-Care Tagged With: breathing, control issues, empowerment, internal wisdom, letting go, mental-health, self-care, transition

August 16, 2019 by Jamie English Leave a Comment

No Matter What You Do, Some People Will Still Not like You

How important is it that everyone likes you? How much space does this take up in your head? Is it making you crazy, thinking way ahead of what others will do and think? Are you finding some situations hard because if you do one thing, this group will like you and another will hate you? You can’t please all of the people all of the time.

The first step in letting go of this is to accept the fact that you can do everything “right,” and some people will still not like you. How do you feel knowing some people are walking around that simply do NOT like you? And they probably never will, no matter what you do. Notice that feeling and sit with it. Bonus points for looking inside and determining what it is within you that desperately needs everyone to like you. My money is on questioning our self-value and needing external validation….but if that’s too deep for you, feel free to go back to sitting with the feelings that come up knowing some will probably never like you. That is fairly deep in itself to sit and allow the feelings as you accept this reality.

The next step, if you need it or want it, is to consider that them not liking you has NOTHING to do with you. It could be they are so miserable within themselves that they project it on to almost everyone. It could be you remind them of the teacher who humiliated them in the 6th grade. Whatever it is, it is up to them to work out if and when they decide to.

And then lastly, or maybe firstly, we need to embrace our authentic selves. If we can let go of looking for everyone’s approval, that frees us up to be ourselves. When we are ourselves, sometimes amazing people show up in our lives who appreciate us and…ahem….like us.

Filed Under: Acceptance, Psychoeducation Tagged With: acceptance and commitment therapy, body image, cognitive distortions, control issues, empowerment, letting go, life lessons, mental-health, people pleasing, self-care, self-esteem

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Jamie English



(903) 399-5131
jamie@innerrevolution.org

2080 N. Hwy 360, Suite 430
Grand Prairie, TX 75050

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2080 N. Hwy 360, Suite 430
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