Mental rehearsal
We are greatly influenced by our past, but not inseparable from it. The past is impossible to change, but it doesn’t have to determine our future.―James W. Tamm and Ronald J. Luyet
👥 Serves: 1 person
🎚 Difficulty: Medium
⏳ Total time: 11-30 minutes
🥣 Ingredients: “Radical Collaboration: Five Essential Skills to Overcome Defensiveness and Build Successful Relationships” book by James W. Tamm and Ronald J. Luyet (if you’re curious to find out more about it!)
🤓 Wholebeing Domains: Awareness, Discomfortability, Positive Emotion
💪 Wholebeing Skills: Abundance, Acceptance, Adaptability, Flexibility, Letting go, Perspective, Reflection, Reframing
Mental rehearsal
📝 Description
Letting go of the past to reclaim the future.
The following activity has been taken from James W. Tamm and Ronald J. Luyet’s book Radical Collaboration: Five Essential Skills to Overcome Defensiveness and Build Successful Relationships. The book guides individuals and organisations through a process of self-discovery and self-transformation to become more skillful at collaborative relationships.
This exercise will help you evaluate the usefulness of the stories and interpretations you attach to the external events that happen in your life. These stories give meaning to your life, but they can sometimes become an obstacle that may hinder your wellbeing. The following mental rehearsal helps you let go of the past that does not serve you anymore to reclaim control over your future. In particular, it will guide you through an exploration of the fears and rigidity that you developed during your childhood and enable you to understand how your present is different from your past. Over time you can learn to free yourself from phantom childhood fears.
👣 Steps
Step 1 – Prepare
Close your eyes and relax your body, taking several deep breaths. Notice if there is any tension in your body that you can get rid of by shifting your position. Pay attention to your breathing. Settle into a rhythm of breathing deep, slow breaths. To the extent possible, breathe down into your belly. Once you are feeling relaxed, continue onto the next step.
Step 2 – Recall an experience
Recall a recent experience where you became fearful and rigid in your thinking or behaviour.
Step 3 – Identify negative traits
Identify the negative traits, attitudes, or behaviours that you exhibited. Also identify any fears of being ignored, humiliated, or rejected.
Step 4 – Think back
Think about where you first learned these traits, attitudes, or behaviours. If possible, try to remember a specific scene early in your life where you first learned this fearful behaviour.
Step 5 – Notice differences
Notice how the circumstances of your recent experience are different from those when you first learned these negative traits, attitudes, or behaviours.
Step 6 – Re-imagine the present
Imagine yourself in the present as significant, competent, and likeable and let these feelings flow throughout your calm, centred being.
Step 7 – Re-envision the experience
Now, in your mind, re-envision your recent experience with this new conscious awareness of your own significance, competences, and likability. Continue to breathe deeply as you let yourself integrate your new feelings into this recent experience. Imagine yourself re-experiencing the recent experience, creating an outcome you would have liked to have experienced. Notice what is different in your behaviour, in your internal interpretation of the event, and in your capacity to respond authentically.
Step 8 – Notice the present
Notice how you are feeling about the experience now.