Living My Intention Creates Agency, A Remedy For DespairĀ 

I texted a cover photo of my new book to my siblings. ā€œCongratulations,ā€ my older brother, the single parent of two teens wrote. ā€œMy kids could use some crisis management, so this is good timing.ā€

ā€œThe book is actually for managing you ā€” the parent. Because if theyā€™re in crisis, you are too,ā€ I wrote back.

Anxious Parents Make Anxious Kids

We will all have that moment, when weā€™re called to the hospital room, school office, or bedside, to stand beside a beloved partner, pet, parent, client, or our child. Someone we love will be in physical or mental distress and it will affect us.

The mother of a child hospitalized for six months with bacterial meningitis told me, ā€œWhen your child suffers, itā€™s the worst pain in the world. Youā€™re helpless to take it away. I would gladly suffer instead. Itā€™s the worst pain in my life.ā€ Functional MRI imaging has shown that when someone we love is in pain,Ā we automatically run the same pain circuitry in our brain, minus the specific locator site. This means that witnessing our beloved in pain, weā€™re also in pain. And itā€™s not a choice we consciously make.

When those we love are sick or struggling, itā€™s easy to focus on how we can get them through this situation. Itā€™s natural to panic and react with fear or anger when faced with something that feels so difficult. We can abandon ourselves in this rush to fix someoneā€™s pain.

This pain circuitry runs both ways, and when parents are stressed their kids feel it. Studies over time show thatĀ ā€œanxious parents make anxious kids.ā€Ā Especially when children are suffering, our anxiety heightens their perception of pain and discomfort. One of the best things we can do when our children are in pain is to take care of our feelings, of our own anxiety.

Our presence matters. How we are is felt. Am I contributing to peace and care in this moment, or contributing to the helplessness, chaos, and despair?

What Iā€™ve learned through my experience with suffering in my kids is that I canā€™t fix their pain for them or heal what is happening in them. The best gift I can give them is my emotional regulation and balance, so my discomfort doesnā€™t spill over to them and intensify the pain.

In Buddhism we learn that our thoughts are actions ā€” they are the foundations for all our words and the energy we bring to situations. Our thoughts create our experience. When we set our intention to be a presence of care or connection in this interaction, we are already doing something.

Agency

Living in alignment with our intention means weā€™ve already taken action. Moving into the awareness of what we are doing rather than what we canā€™t control keeps us from experiencing helplessness or falling into despair and depression.

This shift is what in psychology is called agency, the ability to see that our actions affect our lives and make a difference.

This return to agencyĀ can shift the activation of the brain from a shared painful experience to one of soft joyĀ at being a presence of care and support. I can be present with my child in a way that aligns with my highest intentions and doesnā€™t spill my suffering onto them.

Intention setting supports agency by creating clarity around how we want to contribute to the world. I think of intention setting as a profound gift I am committed to offering during my lifetime, to my children, and to everyone I come into contact with.

Use these steps to connect to your intention:

  1. Stop and notice your body ā€“ How are you? The body is always in the present moment and brings us into self-connection.
  2. Soothe yourself ā€“ Place your hand on your heart or cheek. Come back to the breath and rest with the inhale and exhale. Focus on the exhale. This stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system and starts to calm the nervous system as we accompany ourselves.
  3. Ask what you are longing for right now, and then offer it to yourself ā€“ For example: ā€œMay I be calm and patient.ā€ ā€œMay I be solid and strong, even in this.ā€ ā€œMay I care for my pain.ā€ ā€œMay I risk opening to grief.ā€ ā€œMay I live without fear.ā€ ā€œMay I recognize whatā€™s good in my life.ā€ ā€œMay I see kindness in the world.ā€ This acknowledges your feelings and needs in this moment and cares for your experience.
  4. Ask what you want for yourself and your child or the one in pain, and then offer it to both of you ā€“ What is the best thing I can offer to myself and them in this moment?Ā For example: ā€œMay I be a presence of care for you and me.ā€ ā€œMay I know what is yours and what is mine to carry.ā€ ā€œMay I keep my heart open to you and to me.ā€ ā€œMay I be calm, even in this.ā€
  5. Write down your intention ā€“ To remember my intention, Iā€™ve written it on my arm, on my sneaker, and on a note I taped to my computer. It can be helpful to write your intention and have it in your pocket.

These simple practices can help give back a sense of power about what I do have jurisdiction over and help me know that Iā€™mĀ doing something, even if I canā€™t take away the pain of someone else. Returning to intention reminds me that although I may not have a choice about feeling pain, I have a choice about how I show up for myself and my child.


Author Bio

Celia Landman, MA, is a mindfulness educator offering support to teens and adults. She draws from experiences working with those impacted by trauma, addiction, and anxiety, and creates customized meditation, visualizations, and trainings to reconnect them to their wholeness. She was ordained by Thich Nhat Hahn as a member of the Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism. She is also a certified trainer with the Center for Nonviolent Communication.

Her new book,Ā When the Whole World Tips: Parenting through Crisis with Mindfulness and BalanceĀ (Parallax Press, Nov. 21, 2023), describes how to find balance while navigating seemingly impossible parenting situations. Learn more atĀ celialandman.com.



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