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Roland Byrd

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Ho'oponopono

Jul 27 2017

How to Recognize When You’re Emotionally Triggered and What to Do About It

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Have you ever been emotionally triggered?

So… You’re Emotionally Triggered

Have you ever had one of those moments when something happens that triggers a powerful emotional response? We don’t always know the roots of these visceral reactions. And we don’t necessarily need to. But we do have to keep our heads.

I had one of those reactions the other evening. Understand, I’ve had years of training in managing my emotions. I meditate almost every day. And I still flipped into an instant fight or flight reflex. But I kept my head—that’s where all of the training really pays off.

I was at the dinner table with my family. We’d finished eating and my younger children were goofing off a little. I was talking to my wife intently when, WHAM! Something slammed into the table right next to me, startling me. But it didn’t just startle me. It scared me. I was instantly fight ready because I thought I was being attacked. I spun in my seat and saw my 13 year old son looking at me. Startled by my reaction, his eyes were wide as saucers.

It Was Instant Fight or Flight!

I didn’t know then why I was reacting the way I was. It’s hard to recognize the cause when we’re in the middle of a triggered response. I figured out later; it had to do with childhood trauma, like a PTSD reaction. But at the moment I only knew I was overreacting on a massive scale. And that’s key. I understood that my reaction was way out of proportion to the event. So I got up and went to my room. Then I started meditating.

A few minutes later I heard my wife calling my name. I didn’t want to stop meditating. My reaction had morphed from fight or flight to fury. I could see that I was still hip-deep in over-reaction to the situation but I was working through it. Still, something in her tone compelled me to pause.

I opened the bedroom door and told her where I was and that I was there so I could cool off. She thanked me and then asked me to get rid of a bug that had snuck in the house.

Really? A bug? She was interrupting my meditation for a bug?

As I went downstairs to deal with the bug, my first thought was I’d smash it with my foot. I’d show that creature what happens to uninvited insect interlopers in my home!

But as I came upon the little creature I asked myself, “What did this beetle do to you?” Sure it was in my house. And yes we spray for bugs, so it would have died anyway if it stayed inside. But to smash it in anger? A death sentence for interrupting my mediation? That wasn’t right. It was an innocent bystander or maybe it was a gift, exactly what I needed at the time to put everything in perspective. In either case I scooped the beetle up on some paper, carried it outside, and set it free.

Let there be peace on earth and Let it begin with me

Then I went back upstairs and meditated using Ho’oponopono for about 10 minutes. But this time I was able to quickly calm down. That’s when I saw that my reaction at the table was linked to abuse I’d suffered as a child. That also when I truly understood that my 13 year old son was also an innocent bystander in the situation. He hadn’t meant to startle or scare me. He was just playing around and accidentally knocked a heavy water bottle over on the table. Granted, he smashed it over is more accurate. But it was still a mistake. Besides, even if he had done it deliberately, his behavior never merited my initial reaction. Period.

Ho'oponopono: I love you, I'm sorry, Please forgive me, Thank you

I finished meditating, went downstairs, and apologized to my son and family for overreacting. I explained that I’d realized I was overreacting and had left the room so I could calm down.

What Does Getting Triggered Mean?

Let’s take a moment and discuss what it means to get triggered, ways to recognize that you’ve been triggered, and some things you can do to keep your head and get back to normal when it happens.

Getting triggered means your subconscious mind plays an instantaneous, scripted response to a situation. These responses are patterns your subconscious mind stored in answer to painful, traumatic, or otherwise (emotionally or physically) dangerous events in your past. They are pure mental-reflex reactions. When a similar event occurs your subconscious mind fires off what it deems the appropriate pattern for the situation. Think of it as an emotional flash-bang grenade.

The problem is these triggered reactions are almost never appropriate to future events. As soon as your subconscious mind thinks it recognizes the pattern it created the reaction for, it gets launched. As you know, many things have similar parts and still aren’t the same. It’s like saying all sports cars have tires so all vehicles with tires are sports cars. We know that isn’t true consciously but our unconscious mind sees the pattern of tires and says, “I know just what to do when faced with tires!” How ridiculous does that sound?

You understand how damaging triggered reactions can be. But how do we know when we’re having one?

Ways to Recognize You’ve Been Triggered (How do You Know When You Get Triggered?)

If You’re Having a Triggered Response, You might experience one of the following:

  • Feel anger like a flash-fire or become overly emotional
  • Have trouble thinking clearly
  • React without thinking
  • Either want to, or actually behave in a way you normally wouldn’t
  • Say things you’d never normally say
  • Fixate on the person, event, or thing that upset you
  • Feel like you have to get even
  • Feel physically threatened when there’s no actual danger

 

What You Can Do When You Get Triggered:

  • Recognize you’re overreacting
  • If appropriate, tell the people involved that you know you’re overreacting
  • Leave the situation
    • If appropriate, come back when you’ve calmed down
  • Take a few deep breaths
  • Ask yourself, “What else could this mean?”
  • Use Ho’oponopono on the feelings you’re having
  • Avoid making major life decisions
  • Never harm yourself or others
  • Never discipline when you’re in the middle of a triggered reaction

 

For more ideas on breaking patterns in your life read: Break Your Mold: The Art of Overcoming Patterns and Behaviors That Hold You Back

You Are The Master of Your Destiny!

Roland

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Written by Roland · Categorized: Personal Development, Transformational · Tagged: Emotional Triggers, Forgiveness, Gratitude, Ho'oponopono

Jul 01 2017

You Can Love More

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We all can love moreYou Can Love More.

It’s easy to say, “You can love more”. But why does love matter? What does loving more really mean?

First, let me tell you about an experience I had a short time ago:

How can I help more people? How can I make a bigger difference, empower more people to change?

These questions tugged at the fringes of my mind, heavy with urgency while I hovered at the edge of darkness. I unknowingly drifted into sleep’s embrace. One moment I was aware, the next I was waking, digging my way toward consciousness like one buried in deep sand.

I opened my eyes a fraction. Moonlight reflected off clouds drifting past my window. Bright as white fire against the night, it stung my eyes. I wanted to close them and surrender to unconsciousness once more. But the clouds were surreal. They called to me and I couldn’t look away. They swirled, danced in the moonlight. A word formed in the spaces between them.

“You”

I blinked to clear my eyes, rubbed them, closed them tight and shook my head to dissipate the mental fog. Surely this was a trick of my weary orbs. I opened them again. It was still there. Brighter. More defined. As if an unseen hand had carved the word out of the shining clouds.

“You”

The clouds held form a beat, then churned and shifted. Wispy tendrils of vapor merging, overlapping, coalescing. Moments later a new word shone, etched in dark relief against the billowing sky.

“Can”

Okay. Now you’ve got my attention. I can what? I knew I was awake. This wasn’t a dream. I glanced at my wife’s sleeping form. Blissful peace upon her visage. I kissed her cheek then looked back to the clouds, eager to receive the rest of my message.

Sliding across one another the clouds mingled anew. When they came to rest the word “Love” shone upon me through the night.

“Love”

Then the clouds paused, as if making sure I understood. I smiled involuntarily. Wind howled, shook my house like a playful child. The clouds whirled, spun, merging and mixing and my word vanished in a wash of moonlight. I waited, watching carefully for more. But nothing came. The sky was done speaking.

I wondered, “You Can Love”. Of course I can love. I do love. I love my work. I love helping others. I love my family, my wife, my life. I love so many things. And then it hit me with the force of an emotional tsunami, the giant wave crashing across my mind. I Can Love More.

Be Patient Kind Forgiving Understanding Accountable Courageous Humble, Love More

I can love the people I’m helping more. I can love my work more. I can love my family, my wife, my children more. I never thought it was possible but now I know it is. I can love more. I can love enough to give my absolute best, my supreme effort every day. And the more I love, the more I open my heart, the more people I’ll reach, empowering them to change.

And That’s What It’s All About. Helping Others!

How does this apply to you?

We All Can Love More.

You can love those in your life more. You can love your family more, your co-workers more, your neighbors more. You can love yourself more. Love yourself and others enough to be the best version of yourself. Give people the benefit of the doubt. That means the person who cut you off in traffic too. Chances are they didn’t mean it. And even if they did, why not love them anyway?

So many people live in a blame based reality, constantly on the lookout for someone who’s at fault for the condition of their lives. They never look in the mirror. They fail to understand that regardless of what happens to them, they always have a choice what they do with it, what meaning they give it.

Blaming Others Isn’t Love.

Love others and yourself enough to accept full accountability for your choices. Love enough to make the changes you must and live the life you desire. By living the life you desire you’ll create positive ripples in our world. Love yourself and others enough to influence the world for good. Make a commitment now to be more loving, to make a difference!

I love you, I'm sorry, Please forgive me, Thank you

I’ll close with the Ho’oponopono mantra:

I love you

I’m sorry

Please forgive me

Thank you

 

Love

Roland

You Are The Master of Your Destiny!

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Written by Roland · Categorized: Personal Development, Transformational · Tagged: Forgiveness, Ho'oponopono, Love more, Make a difference, Personal Accountability

Sep 21 2013

Why You Should Forgive?

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Yesterday is beyond your control...

Why Forgive?

That’s a good question. I know I’ve felt hurt by others’ actions before. If I tallied all the times I was hurt physically, psychologically, emotionally, spiritually… The list would be very long. I’m sure it’s the same for you.

But what’s the point?

Does it hurt the people who hurt me when I think of the things that happened?

Does it pay them back or get even with them?

Do they even know I’m thinking about it?

To think of injustices I’ve received in the past is like tearing open a healed wound to see if the damage is still there.

And what of the injustices I’ve inflicted on others? When I’ve learned from them, grown from them, become a new man. Does constantly examining them make them go away?

Does it change what happened?

Can anything change the past?

Does it help people I’ve hurt for me to punish myself constantly for something I did in the past when I was a completely different person?

Does it help you if you punish yourself for things you did in the past, when you were a different person?

Does it help those around you?

The past overflows with lessons. When we learn the lesson and grow, it’s time to let it go. Besides, it’s nearly impossible to grow from something you’re unwilling to release.

But let’s get back to why we should forgive.

If something horrible happened to you and you continually think about it, you’re forcing yourself to relive that experience over and over. If you take the same event and you discover the lessons in it, then you can release it. When you release it, you stop reliving it. That’s when you truly heal.

Part of healing is forgiving the person who hurt you.

Understand that the person may never know you forgive them. You can tell them if you want but it’s okay if you don’t. Forgiveness isn’t about going to that person and telling them everything is okay. Maybe it’s not okay. Maybe what they did was horrible beyond compare. Maybe it was life-altering for you or your family.

You should still forgive them because forgiveness isn’t about them.

Forgiveness is about you.

Forgiveness helps you. When you make the choice to forgive, you’re choosing to release hate, fear, loathing, sadness… All the things that tear at you, that bind you in chains of misery.

Forgiveness is refusing to let painful events in your past ruin your present or your future.

What if the person who hurt you did it deliberately, with malicious intent?

“Oh no, I could never forgive them…”

Why?

Reframe it. When you choose to hold hatred and anger in your heart, it’s like your allowing that person to continue hurting you. In cases like that, isn’t the best ‘revenge’ to completely let go of what happened so their actions never hurt you again?

We’ve all seen the person who refuses to forgive another. Sometimes it consumes their life. They begin to define themselves by the hatred they hold for the person who hurt them. That’s bad enough. The truly sad thing is that their choice to withhold forgiveness impacts everyone in their life. Their children, friends, family, associates, everyone they interact with feels the hatred, anger, pain that they radiate.

So what do you do? How do you start forgiving?

Understand that their actions weren’t about you. Their actions were and are about them. For whatever reason, the person who hurt you was doing the only behavior they knew to meet some need. I like to think that if the person knew a better way of meeting their needs, they’d do that instead. Again, this in no way justifies their behavior or makes it okay. It helps you understand that what they did was a desperate attempt to meet some deep emotional need.

Ask yourself, “If I were them, why would I do that?” This also helps you understand that their behavior was about them.

Look for the lessons in the event. How could this event improve your life? That might sound strange but everything has some positive in it. When you discover how something about a painful or otherwise damaging event can improve your life, you’re miles closer to releasing it, to healing.

Ho’oponopono

Ho’oponopono is a prayer or meditation that you repeat while thinking of the person who harmed you. It’s worked wonders in my life. You can also use Ho’oponopono while thinking of yourself. How many of us hold anger toward ourselves about some past event that we should or could have handled better?

It works best if you sit quietly, without distractions. Then think of the person who hurt you or that you hold anger toward and repeat mentally; their name I love you. I’m Sorry. Please Forgive me.

If the name of the person who hurt you is Rick, then you’d repeat Rick, I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me. Do this at least ten times in a row every day for a week. You’ll be amazed at the difference you feel.

But why would you even think forgive me to the person who hurt you?

What you’re really saying is forgive me for holding onto the anger, hatred, hurt… I feel over your actions. When you hold on to those things it’s about you. It’s about your choice to remain in pain. This helps you release those feelings and that helps you heal. Again, this is only something you say in your mind. They’ll never know unless you tell them.

When you chose to use Ho’oponopono on yourself, you use your name. So when I use the method on myself I say, “Roland, I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me.” If your name is Sue, you’d say, “Sue, I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me.” If you resist the urge to use Ho’oponopono on yourself, then you really must do it!

You might feel weird or silly saying that to yourself but I challenge you to try it anyway. It heals deep wounds. It reduces self-criticism. It fosters patience. It lets you know that you care and love yourself in a healthy way.

Ultimately, the real question is, “What have you got to lose?”

 

Until next time:

You Are The Master of Your Destiny!

Roland

Copyright © 2013 Roland Byrd — All Rights Reserved

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Written by Roland · Categorized: Personal Development, Transformational · Tagged: Forgiveness, Healing, Ho'oponopono, Victim Mentality vs. Success Mentality

Mar 09 2012

Do You Know How Beautiful You Are?

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Have you discovered your passion? Are you living up to your potential?

Do you know how beautiful you are?

You have a gift, something only you can do. Others may have similar gifts, but none can do exactly what you do exactly how you do it. It’s your style, your flair, your brilliance.

But do you know what your gift is?

Have you explored the possibilities within you?

Sadly, many will answer, “No.”

But you can answer, “Yes!”

It’s always the right time to step into the beauty of your creation.

How?

First: Learn to love yourself. I’m speaking of love born of acceptance and gratitude. Appreciate yourself for who you are. If you’re not the person you’d like to be, that’s ok because you will grow into the person you want to be.

Second: Discover your passion. There is something you love doing, something that you love doing more than anything else. What is that? Figure it out and start doing it! Even if you think you’re no good at it. Do It! You’ll get better each time and soon you’ll look back and wonder what you were afraid of.

Third: Use your gifts to make a difference in the world. Contribution is a powerful method of discovering your true potential. Often your subconscious mind will shatter the bounds of mediocrity when seeking ways to better the lives of others.

Finally: Treat yourself and others with loving kindness. If you feel animosity towards another, accept the feeling and then dissolve it using the Ho’oponopono meditation, which is repeating to yourself—toward the person, “I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me.”

So if the person you’re feeling animosity towards is named Sally—a made up name for me—then say, “Sally, I love you. I’m sorry. Please forgive me.”

Repeat the Ho’oponopono meditation for five to ten minutes and every time you feel negative emotions toward the person in question. This helps dissolve the negative feelings within you and creates a bridge to healing.

You can also use this meditation to heal unhealthy emotions you might feel about yourself. Just insert your name.

Always remember,

You Are The Master of Your Destiny!

Roland Byrd

Copyright © 2012 Roland Byrd — All Rights Reserved

P.S. The painting is by Vauna Byrd. This is the first painting Vauna ever did. It is however the result of years dedicated to her passion for decorating cakes. Vauna’s artistic talent crossed easily to the new medium.

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Written by Roland · Categorized: Personal Development · Tagged: Align with your passion!, Be Extraordinary, Be the Miracle, Beautiful, Forgiveness, Ho'oponopono, Realize your true potential

© Copyright 2009 - 2026 Roland Byrd · All Rights Reserved

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