David J.
Pollay
Read David's bio and previous columns
October 27, 2008
How to Take the Power
Away from Bad Memories
Our brain automatically tries to keep us safe. We are wired not to hurt
or kill ourselves. The challenge is that the brain has an alarm system
that can be hypersensitive. We often receive physical and emotional
alerts to warn us of problems that pose no real threat. As a result, we
are left to respond to psychological and physical false alarms.
Memories often trigger
fear
In
a paper titled “Memories of Fear, How the Brain Stores and Retrieves
Physiologic States, Feelings, Behaviors and Thoughts from Traumatic
Events,” Bruce Perry M.D., Ph.D., psychiatrist and former Chief of
Psychiatry at Texas Children's Hospital, wrote: “The remarkable capacity
of the brain to take a specific event and generalize, particularly with
regard to threatening stimuli, makes humans vulnerable to the
development of ‘false’ associations and false generalizations from a
specific traumatic event to other non-threatening situations.”
Essentially, events in our lives that have long since passed can
continue to exact their toll by triggering fear in us.
Waking up happy
Most days I wake up feeling happy. Why? The answer is simple: It’s
because I get to wake up to the warm embrace and beautiful voice of my
wife, Dawn, each morning. Dawn wakes me up so that I can wake up my
little girls and make their breakfast before they go to school. I
cherish my morning wake-up routine. While some days I wake up a little
tired, I still feel happy: I am focused on what I care about.
Waking up with random
memories
Contrast these typical mornings when I am home with the days when I’m
traveling on business. It is not uncommon for me to wake up with
memories of 20 years ago, a random thought or a feeling I cannot
explain. And many of these thoughts are negative. I wake up thinking
about the money I lost years ago on a bad financial decision. Or a time
when I blew a presentation. Or when I failed a test in school. Or when I
made a mistake in an important relationship. And then my unchaperoned
brain automatically starts searching for evidence of whether I’m still
making bad financial decisions, or I’m still not studying enough, etc.
And, if I’m not careful, my unattended brain will find some shred of
evidence to build its negative case. And the result is that the initial
bad memory or random thought captures my attention and then sets the
tone for my day.
What can we do?
The first key is to recognize that our brains will continue to send us
unconscious warning signals every day of our lives. The second key is to
understand that our initial emotional reaction to these warnings may
also be subconsciously activated by the memories our brain associates
with the alarm. Positive Psychology researcher Jonathan Haidt, Ph.D., in
his book The Happiness Hypothesis, writes about the research by
social psychology researcher Dan Wegner, Ph.D.: “Automatic processes
generate thousands of thoughts and images every day, often through
random association. The ones that get stuck are the ones that
particularly shock us, the ones we try to suppress or deny.”
The third and final key is to realize that there is no need to engage
all these negative memories: We do not have to reflect and analyze them
each time they surface.
A time to “smile, wave,
wish them well and move on”
Thankfully, I discovered the power of applying The Law of the Garbage
Truck to bad memories (see
my column on October 29, 2007, or go to
www.bewareofgarbagetrucks.com). I do not suppress or deny my
memories and random thoughts: “I just smile, wave, wish them well, and I
move on.”
There comes a time in our lives when we must let our bad memories pass
us by. We must not let our past reduce our joy, our confidence, or
belief in what is good and possible in our lives. We can live our best
possible life now.
David J. Pollay’s book,
Beware of Garbage Trucks!™,
is due out this Fall. Mr. Pollay is the creator of
The Law of
the Garbage Truck™ (www.bewareofgarbagetrucks.com). He is a syndicated columnist with
North Star
Writers Group, creator and host of
The Happiness
Answer™ DVD, and
an internationally sought after speaker. Mr. Pollay is the
founder and president of the personal coaching and seminar organization,
The Momentum Project (www.themomentumproject.com).
© 2008
David J. Pollay. Distributed by North Star Writers Group. May not be
republished without permission.
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