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Mike's Musings: Therapists and the Coronavirus

“Worry never robs tomorrow of its sorrow, it only saps today of its joy.”– Leo F. Buscaglia Not an easy time to be a psychotherapist. Most of their clients/patients are probably struggling with heightened stress,…

“Worry never robs tomorrow of its sorrow, it only saps today of its joy.
– Leo F. Buscaglia


Not an easy time to be a psychotherapist. Most of their clients/patients are probably struggling with heightened stress, financial catastrophe, loneliness or despair. If it wasn’t for several wonderful therapists over the years, I might not have been here to write this. So, I would like to declare for all the world to hear, “Thank goodness for each and every one of them!”


Sometimes, just the act of venting is helpful. Counseling provides a safe haven for precisely that kind of free-ranging release: You can say things in the therapist’s office, with the therapist present, that would be incendiary or hurtful in your living room.” – Laura Wasser   

  
During our regular talk with our therapist, Kat (not Kathleen’s real name), my wife, Most Beautiful One, expressed her frustration with the volatile state of affairs in our country including the passing of Ruth Bader Ginsberg. Kat, after reminding us that some amount of grieving was normal and necessary, got right to the point by asking us what tools we could bring to bear to better manage the emotional highs and lows caused by this current political sh*t show. My response was that I had decided to “expect the worse and celebrate anything better than that.”


With my history of depression and anxiety, I’m sure she understood why I might want to protect myself from future angst. However, since I could tell she didn’t see this as a viable long-term strategy, I decided to dig a little deeper knowing she is probably chuckling as she reads this.


We can easily manage if we will only take, each day, the burden appointed to it. But the load will be too heavy for us if we carry yesterday’s burden over again today, and then add the burden of the morrow before we are required to bear it.” – John Newton


One of the advantages of having had a remarkable mentor or teacher Daisaku Ikeda for over 50 years, is that there is a wealth of written guidance I can readily access to help me stay on track with a healthy attitude. For instance this gem, “The deeper the dark, the closer the dawn. However profound the suffering that envelops you, never forget the inner spark of hope and courage. Never lose the capacity to wait with patient endurance.


It helps me to acknowledge, that throughout history, there have always been greedy, narcissistic, hypocritical leaders. And being swayed by every outlandish, immoral and frightening tweet and threat I read or hear is highly unproductive. To quote Andrew Berstein, “Remember that stress doesn’t come from what’s going on in your life. It comes from your thoughts about what’s going on in your life.”


I’m also reminded (yet again) that we humans have a tendency to blame our sufferings and challenges on circumstances and people beyond our control. And while on one level this might be valid, the Buddhist principle of the oneness of life and its environment explains that the root causes of our individual sorrow and joy originate from within. This is what is projected onto the screen of our life. Collectively, the quality of our social and political environment is a reflection of people’s inner life condition as well as their ability or inability to get along; therefore, change people change society.


I’m a lot happier if I concentrate on the only thing I can really control…my own thoughts, words and deeds. I believe this will result in more positive outcomes in the world around me. Either way, I will be able to keep growing!


Thanks for reading and I wish you less stress and more joy.

Next week: Eliud Kipchoge & the Coronavirus

Other titles by Mike during Covid-19:

Teenagers and the Coronavirus

Isaac Asimov and the Coronavirus

Bobby McFerrin & the Coronavirus

Gilda Radner and the Coronavirus

Henrik Ibsen & the Coronavirus

A Remarkable Mender & the Coronavirus

Julie Andrews and the Coronavirus

Most Lucky One & the Coronavirus

Lily Tomlin & the Coronavirus

Herbie Hancock & the Coronavirus

Leo Tolstoy & the Coronavirus

Most Beautiful One & the Coronavirus

Grandma Moses & the Coronavirus

Leonardo da Vinci & the Coronavirus

Lean on Bill Withers and Defeat the Coronavirus

Gandhi, King, Ikeda & the Coronavirus

Tagore and the Coronavirus

Annie Leibovitz and the Coronavirus

Ansel Adams and the Coronavirus

Louise Penny and the Coronavirus

Harry Manx and the Coronavirus

Keb’ Mo’ and the Coronavirus

Davy Jones and the Coronavirus

Prince Hamlet and the Coronavirus

Helen Keller and the Coronavirus

Pema Chodron and the Coronavirus


ABOUT MIKE LISAGOR – Mike Lisagor plays harmonica and sings in Good Karma Blues. He has written hundreds of magazine articles and blogs on a variety of business and Buddhist related topics. He is the author of “Romancing the Buddha,” which he adapted into a successful one-man show that he performed at Bainbridge Performing Arts and in Los Angeles and Washington D.C. His nature photographs have appeared in the Boston Globe, Bainbridge Island Magazine, Living Buddhism as well as in several local galleries. His latest graphic art project, “Reimagined Nature”, is in the lobby of New Motion Physical Therapy.