The Weekend That Changed My Life: What Happened When I Tried 'F**k It' Therapy

Tried And Tested: What Happened When I Tried F**k It Therapy
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As one of the champions of our Third Metric strategy – the HuffPost’s drive against burnout, to seek out less stress, and a sustainable way of living your life that involves wellbeing as well as money and power – you’d think I have it sussed.

I meditate, I practice yoga and I’m pretty good at turning my email off at weekends without a faint trace of guilt.

But like a lot of people, life’s many ups and downs have taken their toll; I have simply reached a point where I’m not dealing with things very well. Frankly, I’d like to try a different approach to how I handle stress because my current strategy is not working.

I’m lucky in that I work in a field where I have access to different sorts of therapies and theories on how to manage stress or unhappiness. But it doesn’t make asking for help that much easier.

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And, like a lot of fellow Brits, I can be cynical when it comes to the ‘tapping into your emotions’ theology.

John and Gaia are based in Italy where they run amazing retreats, but they also do weekends in London and Dublin that are a cheaper taster of what they can do.

Gaia’s special knack has been called her ‘magic frequency’. If that sounds too hippie-ish for your tastes, believe me I’ve been there, but having completed a weekend, I totally get it.

We started off sitting in a circle, each of us a bit aloof (maybe they’re worrying about being hugged too). But then Gaia began to talk, and it was like someone is saying all of the things I’d been holding in my head, but had been unable to express.

The biggest learning was Gaia's talk around the idea of primary selves.

"They are usually formed in times of survival or when you need protecting, so whether you identify as a perfectionist, the helper, the nice person, the altruistic one, the spontaneous person – these are all personas that helped you get through something, at some time."

The problem with primary selves, especially if you identify as being the person who helps a lot or sorts things out for other people, is that while they are nice characteristics to have, if you feel you have to be like that all the time, it can be utterly suffocating.

“You’re then stuck in what other people’s perceptions of you are,” said Gaia, “when the truth is that it is only a small part of you.”

Who we are as a whole is much bigger, she said, and that is crucial to how you handle things like sadness, upset or resentment.

The minute you realise that you don’t always have to put aside your own needs to help other people (because you really will go mad) and that you can be other things, whoof! It's very liberating.

Story continues below the slideshow:

Reasons To Love Meditation
It Lowers Stress -- Literally(01 of19)
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Research published just last month in the journal Health Psychology shows that mindfulness is not only associated with feeling less stressed, it's also linked with decreased levels of the stress hormone cortisol. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Lets Us Get To Know Our True Selves (02 of19)
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It lets us get to know our true selves. Mindfulness can help us see beyond those rose-colored glasses when we need to really objectively analyze ourselves. A study in the journal Psychological Science shows that mindfulness can help us conquer common "blind spots," which can amplify or diminish our own flaws beyond reality. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Can Make Your Grades Better(03 of19)
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Researchers from the University of California, Santa Barbara, found that college students who were trained in mindfulness performed better on the verbal reasoning section of the GRE, and also experienced improvements in their working memory. "Our results suggest that cultivating mindfulness is an effective and efficient technique for improving cognitive function, with widereaching consequences," the researchers wrote in the Psychological Science study. (credit:Flickr:David Ortez)
It Could Help People With Arthritis (04 of19)
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A 2011 study in the journal Annals of Rheumatic Disease shows that even though mindfulness training may not help to lessen pain for people with rheumatoid arthritis, it could help to lower their stress and fatigue. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Changes The Brain In A Protective Way (05 of19)
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University of Oregon researchers found that integrative body-mind training -- which is a meditation technique -- can actually result in brain changes that may be protective against mental illness. The meditation practice was linked with increased signaling connections in the brain, something called axonal density, as well as increased protective tissue (myelin) around the axons in the anterior cingulate brain region. (credit:Alamy)
It Works As The Brain's "Volume Knob"(06 of19)
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Ever wondered why mindfulness meditation can make you feel more focused and zen? It's because it helps the brain to have better control over processing pain and emotions, specifically through the control of cortical alpha rhythms (which play a role in what senses our minds are attentive to), according to a study in the journal Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. (credit:Alamy)
It Makes Music Sound Better(07 of19)
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Mindfulness meditation improves our focused engagement in music, helping us to truly enjoy and experience what we're listening to, according to a study in the journal Psychology of Music. (credit:Flickr:U.S. Embassy Jakarta, Indonesia)
It Helps Us Even When We're Not Actively Practicing It(08 of19)
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You don't have to actually be meditating for it to still benefit your brain's emotional processing. That's the finding of a study in the journal Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, which shows that the amygdala brain region's response to emotional stimuli is changed by meditation, and this effect occurs even when a person isn't actively meditating. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Has Four Elements That Help Us In Different Ways(09 of19)
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The health benefits of mindfulness can be boiled down to four elements, according to a Perspectives on Psychological Science study: body awareness, self-awareness, regulation of emotion and regulation of attention. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Could Help Your Doctor Be Better At His/Her Job (10 of19)
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Doctors, listen up: Mindfulness meditation could help you better care for your patients. Research from the University of Rochester Medical Center shows that doctors who are trained in mindfulness meditation are less judgmental, more self-aware and better listeners when it comes to interacting with patients (credit:Shutterstock)
It Makes You A Better Person (11 of19)
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Sure, we love all the things meditation does for us. But it could also benefit people we interact with, by making us more compassionate, according to a study in the journal Psychological Science. Researchers from Northeastern and Harvard universities found that meditation is linked with more virtuous, "do-good" behavior. (credit:Alamy)
It Could Make Going Through Cancer Just A Little Less Stressful(12 of19)
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Research from the Jefferson-Myrna Brind Center of Integrative Medicine shows that mindfulness coupled with art therapy can successfully decrease stress symptoms among women with breast cancer. And not only that, but imaging tests show that it is actually linked with brain changes related to stress, emotions and reward. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Could Help The Elderly Feel Less Lonely (13 of19)
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Loneliness among seniors can be dangerous, in that it's known to raise risks for a number of health conditions. But researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles, found that mindfulness meditation helped to decrease these feelings of loneliness among the elderly, and boost their health by reducing the expression of genes linked with inflammation. (credit:Alamy)
It Could Make Your Health Care Bill A Little Lower(14 of19)
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Not only will your health benefit from mindfulness meditation training, but your wallet might, too. Research in the American Journal of Health Promotion shows that practicing Transcendental Meditation is linked with lower yearly doctor costs, compared with people who don't practice the meditation technique. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Comes In Handy During Cold Season(15 of19)
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Aside from practicing good hygiene, mindfulness meditation and exercise could lessen the nasty effects of colds. Researchers from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Health found that people who engage in the practices miss fewer days of work from acute respiratory infections, and also experience a shortened duration and severity of symptoms. (credit:Flickr:anna gutermuth)
It Lowers Depression Risk Among Pregnant Women (16 of19)
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As many as one in five pregnant women will experience depression, but those who are at especially high risk for depression may benefit from some mindfulness yoga. "Research on the impact of mindfulness yoga on pregnant women is limited but encouraging," study researcher Dr. Maria Muzik, M.D., an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan, said in a statement. "This study builds the foundation for further research on how yoga may lead to an empowered and positive feeling toward pregnancy." (credit:Flickr:phalinn)
It Also Lowers Depression Risk Among Teens(17 of19)
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Teaching teens how to practice mindfulness through school programs could help them experience less stress, anxiety and depression, according to a study from the University of Leuven. (credit:Shutterstock)
It Supports Your Weight-Loss Goals(18 of19)
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Trying to shed a few pounds to get to a healthier weight? Mindfulness could be your best friend, according to a survey of psychologists conducted by Consumer Reports and the American Psychological Association. Mindfulness training was considered an "excellent" or "good" strategy for weight loss by seven out of 10 psychologists in the survey. (credit:Flickr:lululemon athletica)
It Helps You Seep Better(19 of19)
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We saved the best for last! A University of Utah study found that mindfulness training can not only help us better control our emotions and moods, but it can also help us sleep better at night. “People who reported higher levels of mindfulness described better control over their emotions and behaviors during the day. In addition, higher mindfulness was associated with lower activation at bedtime, which could have benefits for sleep quality and future ability to manage stress," study researcher Holly Rau said in a statement. (credit:Alamy)

What I experienced in the two days is too big to write in one feature, so I’ll explain the two big things that made a lasting impression.

The first was figuring out what my primary selves were.

“Write down a list of six qualities,” Gaia said, “as if you were going for a job interview.”

Easy.

Then Gaia asked us to think of a person, either someone we dislike in our lives, or someone famous like a politician. “Now write down six characteristics they have that you don’t like,” she said.

Once the list was done, Gaia asked us to read what we had down, and so we did. For a lot of us, responsibility, hard working and kindness seemed to be common qualities.

“Now read the second list,” said Gaia, “but say ‘I am’ in front of each quality.”

This may not sound hard, but it really is. I struggled to get the words out.

This, Gaia told us, reveals a lot about ourselves. “When we form our primary selves, the opposites have to be shut away because we don’t like those qualities. They become our disowned selves.”

You may not think this is a bad thing, but -

“Even the beautiful stuff – the qualities you like – if it’s fixed, if we think we have to be like that all the time, we’re in trouble. It makes us think we are nice people, but if I have to be intelligent or kind all the time, it’s exhausting. If you’re flexible all the time, people will walk all over you. These parts are a choice, not an obligation. They are only parts of you, not the definition of who you are.”

The second big reveal came the following day. After some energy work in the morning – we were moving around and doing deep breathing which had some people yelling like maniacs as their ‘energies’ were being released – I had decided that it was not my thing and was ready to leave.

I’m very glad that I didn’t.

We moved on to deep breathing which involved pairing up with someone who had done it before. The idea was that you lie down, and start breathing deeply, creating a circular motion with your breath.

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“It can affect people quite deeply,” Gaia said. “If an emotion comes up, just lean into it, acknowledge it is there and rest in it.”

The other person helps you by whispering if you need to breathe more deeply, can sometimes press your feet or your shoulders.

I wasn't quite sure how I felt about that, but I paired up with Kate who helps out at John and Gaia’s retreats, and something about her represented safety to me. (I don’t know why – it may have been her fluffy slippers).

I lay there, wondering how on earth deep breathing was going to help me, when after an indefinite length of time, I started thinking of things I haven’t thought of for years – it was a lot of sadness, but it felt like really old sadness.

Then I felt angry, and then I – embarrassingly – burst into tears. Apparently this happens a lot. It felt like a really good, cleansing cry though – like clearing out my cupboards.

At that point, when I was really getting into it, one lady started wailing really loudly and my god, it put me off.

As if sensing my discomfort, Gaia came over and whispered some words in my ear, and then it just started flowing again.

My sadness passed, my anger passed, and what was left behind was the realisation that as bad as feeling bad is, it never lasts forever (even though we think it will).

Also - we get so caught up in the type of people we currently are at the moment, that we forget the people we once were or used to be. Classic example: people who have teenagers completely forget what they were like at that age. We assume we get broken by our horrible experiences, but really, that isn’t the case. They affect and change us, sure, but it doesn’t mean that we can’t still tap into the things that make us happy.

At the end of the two days, I felt utterly exhausted. Who knew lying down in a mound of blankets could be so challenging? But although I was mentally drained, when I woke up on Monday morning, I felt strong and prepared to take anything head on.

I’m not so naive to think that this radically fixes everything – in fact Gaia actually addresses this by saying: “This isn’t about fixing yourself, but gaining a better understanding of how and why you work.”

I feel infinitely more peaceful. And surely, being okay with yourself is half, if not most of the battle?

To find out more about John and Gaia's course, visit the website. You can also buy John's books here.