10 Ways to Extend the Vacation Feeling

Don’t settle back into “the usual” so fast. We can keep the feeling of vacation a little longer by slowly returning to routines, especially while the weather is good and the days longer. Be creative — there are plenty of simple, fun activities that have a little vacation feeling.


Here’s a short list to have fun and experiment with:

  1. Keep spontaneity alive after vacation — it can make any day feel more fun.
  2. Instead of rushing home after work, pick-up some already prepared foods and head to the park for an “after work” picnic with family and friends.
  3. Vacations aren’t the only time to unplug. Avoid the pitfalls of routine and challenge yourself to not check your emails after work hours.
  4. While the season is still favorable for fruit, make some fun foods like a watermelon boat stuffed with a fruit salad, or fresh fruit smoothies or homemade ice cream with fresh fruit.
  5. Get the kids outside at night for a fun family evening. Make popcorn, watch the stars, or play cards by the light of a lantern.
  6. Take vacation photos and use them to reconnect with special moments. Frame them, take them to work, or make a slide show for your personal computer.
  7. Remember to instill feelings of appreciation daily and use the Inner-Ease or Notice and Ease tools.
  8. Spend a couple moments each day and recall how it felt on vacation — the warm-hearted memories. Hold the feeling in focus for a few moments. Recalling positive emotions can help off-set stress.
  9. Instead of a weekend full of just chores, take one morning to fly a kite at the beach, or go see local attractions that are new to your area — keep it simple and fun.
  10. Make time to watch the sunset – or if you’re an early riser watch a sunrise. Both are moments of pure beauty that can kindle feelings of gratitude!

Taking time to extend the vacation feeling is good for your heart, mind and body–making life more enjoyable!

A Most Memorable Adventure

Traveling can be stressful—find out how Howard dealt with some challenging situations while on a business trip. In forty hours he had been in two different countries, met many new people, delivered a program, had four amazing meetings, experienced new fellowship — and had a most memorable adventure.

“On a business trip in Europe I woke up early in Stockholm feeling good and I headed to a conference center to deliver an all-day program to Swedish business leaders. Back at my hotel, I planned to go straight to bed, so I’d be well rested for the next day. As the hours rolled by I laid wide-awake knowing I had to leave at 5:00 am to go to the next city. As worry tried to creep in I kept going to a gentle feeling to make peace with the situation.

Having not slept a wink, I got up in the darkness and headed to the airport to board a plane for Paris. Once there, I took a train into the city and rushed into a business meeting, then caught a cab ride to another meeting, then another, then another. At times my mind and body felt exhausted and left me doubting if I could pull this trip off. I knew I had to stop any self-sabotaging thoughts. I decided I needed to use the small windows of time between meetings to create and sustain a positive, productive attitude.

I used Attitude Breathing, a technique developed here at HeartMath. Choosing an attitude of appreciation for this amazing business trip, I soon started to rise above the weariness. I knew with my intense schedule and all the meetings I had planned, my attitude would be key to handling this trip. Every time I really centered my focus around the feeling of appreciation I noticed my energy level felt better.

As the day was winding down, my business partner said we were going to a special restaurant to meet an old friend of his. I told him I could not do it, I had to have sleep. I felt in his response how important this was to him. I decided again to shift my attitude and made the commitment to support him. As soon as my heart and mind were aligned with the decision to go, my body responded and again I felt the energy I needed was there almost instantly. We had an amazing dinner and I felt good about how I had handled the day and how I rose to the occasion meeting challenges with a positive attitude.

By this time I was so ready to go to my hotel, check in and just sleep, however my friend now wanted to take me to a special place, it was a surprise he said. I politely declined, perhaps another time I told him. He looked at me and in his Parisian accent said “When opportunity comes you must take it.” We got in his car and whisked across Paris as he drove me to this mystery location. We parked at the bottom of a very long, steep stone stairway. Forty hours without sleep, my body was feeling heavy and my head felt foggy.

We got to the top and wow — I stood there in awe, it was magnificent – it was Cathedral Montmartre which sits at the highest point in Paris and overlooks the entire city. I felt reverent and humble as I look out across all of Paris at night. I will never forget that feeling and I am still grateful that I followed my heart and not my tiredness – and that I took my friend’s advice to seize the moment and opportunity.

Howard in hotel roomFinally, at my hotel, I reflected on this wild marathon I was just on. In forty hours I had been in two different countries, met many new people, delivered a program, had four amazing meetings, experienced new fellowship — and I had a most memorable adventure. The Attitude Breathing® technique really helped me through what turned out to be an exceptional time.”

Howard Martin

The Attitude Breathing Tool

The Attitude Breathing tool is designed to help you shift out of a negative emotional state into a positive one. You learn to clear and replace negative attitudes right in the midst of stress or anxiety to gain a more intelligent perspective.

Unwanted attitude

Step 1: Recognize an unwanted attitude.

A feeling or attitude you want to change. This could be over care, anxiety, self-judgment, guilt, anger, anything.

 

 

Replacement attitude

Step 2: Identify and breathe a replacement attitude.

Select a positive attitude, then breathe the feeling (examples: calm, ease, peace, compassion) of that new attitude slowly and casually through your heart area. Do this for a while to anchor the new feeling.

Relaxing Can Take Practice

Believe it or not relaxing can take practice – especially if we are not currently using tools that help us learn how to quiet the mind and still the body. Some people may find that it can take a couple of days at the beginning of a vacation before they start to really feel unplugged and are experiencing the pleasure of downtime.

To help find and keep that relaxed feeling as soon as possible, experiment with the following tool from HeartMath called Notice and Ease. Use it daily during vacation to maximize time off. This exercise can be used for increasing personal balance whether we’re on holiday or at work.

The Notice and Ease Tool from HeartMath®

The simple steps of Notice and Ease teaches us to settle into the moment, take intensity out of any negative emotions and ease them out so we can experience more good feelings such as joy, compassion and vitality. These positive emotions can increase the biochemical DHEA, which promotes emotional vitality, slows the aging process and offsets the stress hormone cortisol.

Step 1: Notice and admit what you are feeling.

To gain more insight about your emotions, you will need to become more aware of what you are feeling. Noticing and admitting what you are feeling requires slowing down and taking stock. Periodically, throughout the day simply pause and notice how you feel. It takes only a few seconds to ask, “What am I feeling right now?” Don’t judge whatever you are feeling. Instead, observe what’s flowing through your emotions. You’ll discover new things about your emotional patterns and what triggers less desirable emotions in you.


Step 2: Try to name the feeling.

Simply by naming the feeling to yourself, whatever it is – worry, anxiety, frustration, anger, sadness, hurt, resistance or even a vague disturbance – will help you admit what you are feeling. Being honest about naming what we are feeling helps regulate our emotional energy, slowing down the emotional energy running through our system and giving us more power. We can then redirect emotional energy to work for us instead of having it leave us feeling drained throughout the day.


Step 3: Tell yourself to e-a-s-e…

As you gently focus in your heart, relax as you breathe and e-a-s-e the stress out. As you tell yourself to ease in your heart, relax and ease the stressful emotion out, feel as if the unwanted emotion is leaving your system. Don’t force it out; ease it out. Befriend the reaction by holding it in your heart, and then let the feeling ease out of your system. If you try to fight your feelings or push them away, they will gain energy. Befriending your feelings will help you clear.

Keep using the Notice and Ease™ tool for one minute or longer, until there is a feeling that something has lightened up, even if there’s not an immediate, complete release. Just keep practicing the Notice and Ease tool until there is a feeling of more inner balance.

The Right Start for Your Day

Your alarm doesn’t go off, you over sleep and you PANIC. You’re running late, can’t find your car keys and you’re FRUSTRATED. You get stuck in traffic, miss your exit and you’re ANGRY. You reach to change the radio station, spill your latte and you’re ANNOYED. You have 3 urgent messages from a client, an ‘I need to talk to you’ message from your boss and you’re ANXIOUS. You’re late for the staff meeting, the only empty chair is next to the guy you can’t stand and you’re IRRITATED. Hey, cheer up! It’s only 9:15!

Sound familiar? And even though a lot of us ignore these ‘little stresses’ and our emotional reactions to them (Hey, this is life!), our bodies don’t: adrenaline soars, extra cortisol is pumped into your body, the heart races, muscles tense up. Over time, our bodies adapt and eventually forget how to rest. It’s the reason why we don’t sleep as well as we used to, we’re on edge more often than not and when we finally get that week-long vacation on Maui, we need three days just to feel relaxed!

There will always be traffic, urgent messages and staff meetings. But we can change how we respond to these every day hassles and in the process, reduce wear and tear on our bodies.

First, don’t ignore how you feel throughout the day. When you feel angry, irritated, anxious, etc. bring your system back to balance, quickly, on demand, with the free Quick Coherence® technique. Heart focus. Heart breathing. Heart feeling.

Second, take 5-15 minutes a few times every week to practice sustaining the heart feeling. Over time you can retrain your system how to rest. Just like stress accumulates in our bodies, so does emotional resilience. You’ll find the little stuff doesn’t bother you as much and you’ll have more energy to handle the big things when they come along.


Take care,
Kim Allen

When Life Happens, Try This Ease Technique!

On a recent trip to visit my family, my husband and I were on our way to the airport and I felt like I might be getting a cold. The day after we arrived I woke up feeling much worse. As our vacation continued I also wasn’t sleeping at night. I thought okay, this isn’t what I had in mind for vacation, but I knew the quicker I could go to a place of acceptance the easier it would be for me to deal with being sick. I found myself using the HeartMath Inner-Ease™ technique (see below or click here for steps of Inner-Ease technique) throughout our trip. I knew it would help me to conserve my energy so I could use it for both healing and to put towards my family.

While still sick and fatigued, my spirits were good from having quality time with my family. If nothing else sharing physical space together for several days was enough to be grateful for. On the last day when my husband and I stopped to drop off our rental car it became obvious that the weather was quickly turning bleak. Once at the airport we immediately checked the flight schedules and saw that our flight was on time.

As soon as we arrived at our gate the airline announced the flight would now be a little delayed due to severe weather. No problem, it’s that time of year we thought. My husband and I set our intention to stay positive knowing soon we’d have our plane and be off. With delay announcements continuing every 60 minutes for several hours, nine hours later we finally had a plane. All the passengers lined up to board only to now be told we had no pilot. Apparently, the pilot was now off duty.

The immediate shock of this news, still feeling quite poorly, and being extremely tired meant we weren’t going anywhere until the next day — and we were going to miss work as a result. By this time it was after 11:00 pm. We quickly arrested our fatigued frustration using the Quick Coherence technique and returned to our attitude of inner ease. We did a quick survey of local accommodations – what luck, we got a room!

A little after midnight, as our shuttle pulled up in front of the hotel, my husband’s cell phone rang. It was the hotel calling to inform us they no longer had our room available even though we had given a deposit to hold it and we were right out front. Again, we were presented with an opportunity to go even deeper in the heart and hold our inner ease.

Gaby and JimBack to the airport we went. By this time sleep deprivation and lack of food, having been fifteen hours since we last ate, were adding to the surreal feeling of it all. Everything in the airport was closed; it was like being in a very weird dream. Again, I found myself referring back to my heart tools. Quick Coherence and Inner Ease were my tools of choice throughout our trip.

On the flight home I reflected on the experience and appreciated just how well these tools worked. I also appreciated myself for my efforts to keep a casual ease attitude with what could have been a very stressful situation. It also further confirmed for me the power within each of us to choose and create how we want to respond to life and its unpredictable events.

The Inner-Ease Technique

The simple steps of Notice and Ease teaches us to settle into the moment, take intensity out of any negative emotions and ease them out so we can experience more good feelings such as joy, compassion and vitality. These positive emotions can increase the biochemical DHEA, which promotes emotional vitality, slows the aging process and offsets the stress hormone cortisol.

 

Focused

Step 1: Heart-Focused Breathing

Focus your attention in the area of the heart. Imagine your breath is flowing in and out of your heart or chest area, breathing a little slower and deeper than usual.

Suggestion: Inhale 5 seconds, exhale 5 seconds (or whatever rhythm is comfortable).

 


Lungs

Step 2: Draw in the Feeling of Inner Ease

With each breath, draw in the feeling of inner ease to balance your mental and emotional energy.

 


Anchor

Step 3: Anchor and Maintain the Feeling

Set a meaningful intent to anchor the feeling of inner ease as you engage in your projects, challenges or daily interactions.

 


Quick Steps

  • Heart-Focused Breathing
  • Draw in the feeling of inner ease
  • Anchor and maintain the feeling

Benefits of a Vacation

Ahhh, vacation time! While this might be how you’re feeling, not everyone feels this way. Many people are skipping vacations though a vacation might be the best thing for heart, mind and body health.

While scrapping vacation time might seem easier than all the preparation, research suggests it can put unnecessary strain on our health.

Giving ourselves permission to slow down and make time to practice self-care is vital to the mind, body and spirit. Vacations allow us to replenish our personal energy, they allow for some inner-reflection, and it’s an opportunity to nurture our heart connections with family and friends. Vacation time can help us increase our overall wellness.

Mind/Body Benefits of Vacation

1. Making time for family and friends strengthens connections and helps to nourish our mental and emotional health.

2. Allowing for casual downtime gives our mind and body time to rest.

3. Temporarily ditching our routine allows our adventurous side to step out and explore.

4. A change in scenery can usher in a fresh energy and perspective about life.

5. Vacations allow us to be outside more and enjoy nature – revitalizing our sense of wonder.

6. Stepping away from work and routines can often inspire ideas, solutions and new ways of handling complex situations.

If you’re ready to make this summer a season for reclaiming your self-care and balance, the next step is to look at how you can use your time wisely so you don’t end up needing to recuperate from a vacation. Stay tune for more fun vacation stories and tips…..

Independence Day

We talk, and sometimes even brag, about the amount of stress we’re experiencing these days. Yet, I still hear the same excuses for not doing something about it.

I just don’t have the time! We’re all busy and as long as we believe stress reduction requires time, we continue to reserve it for Saturday morning in the garden or 9:00 pm in the bathtub or late August in Maui! The truth is stress doesn’t wait until you have time to ‘manage’ it. You need something that works 24/7, QUICK! It takes less than a minute to stop the stressful feeling with HeartMath’s basic Quick Coherence® technique: Heart focus; heart breathing; heart feeling. Five times a day takes less than five minutes!

Nothing’s going to change anyway. Don’t expect life to suddenly transform around you every time you shift into coherence. Do it for your own sake. Don’t ignore the impact you can have on others when you are more balanced or calm.

It’s not working. Be patient. Like learning any new skill, this takes practice. And simply thinking about it won’t have the same benefit. You need to focus on and engage the heart; shift how you feel. Anytime you learn something new, the least line of resistance has the tendency to win out. The time it takes to find an excuse can be better spent to:

Recharge your batteries. Make a shift before you feel stressed. Pause for 15-30 seconds and find something in your life to appreciate. Each time you do this, you boost your whole system.

ave fun with your practice. If you approach your practice too seriously, it will feel like a chore and create even more stress. Find ways to build coherence into your daily routines.

Finally, recognize your stressful feelings one more time today than you did yesterday and then do something about it. Just one extra shift to coherence a day can save wear and tear on your body.

This July 4th, liberate yourself from your stress, once and for all.



Take care,
Kim Allen

Enjoy Life!

PaintDo you ever feel like life needs a fresh coat of paint or a little dusting off? Some days we can wake up feeling like the sheen seems to be absent from our life. As if something is different or something changed when we weren’t looking. These feelings aren’t uncommon and often can be an inner heart signal telling us it’s time to refresh our attitudes and try new ways of doing our routines and breathe fresh energy into everyday events.

Over the summer we will be sharing some helpful insights and tips that can help you get more out of life—useable suggestions that we hope will add a little sparkle to your summer! So let’s get started.

Enjoy Life! Tip – Appreciation

SmileThink about how different life looks when seen through the eyes of appreciation. Appreciation is one of the most effective core heart feelings for giving you an energy boost and changing your perspective. When you appreciate yourself and the wonderful bounty of your life, your own value increases, both for yourself and others. Take some time today and remember to appreciate.

10 Ways to Extend the Vacation Feeling

Sunglasses

Don’t settle back into “the usual” so fast. We can keep the feeling of vacation a little longer by slowly returning to routines, especially while the weather is good and the days longer. Be creative — there are plenty of simple, fun activities that have a little vacation feeling. Read Article

A Most Memorable Adventure

Eiffel Tower

Traveling can be stressful—find out how Howard dealt with some challenging situations while on a business trip. In forty hours he had been in two different countries, met many new people, delivered a program, had four amazing meetings, experienced new fellowship — and had a most memorable adventure. Read Article

When Life Happens, Try This Ease Technique!

Anchor

On a recent trip to visit my family, my husband and I were on our way to the airport and I felt like I might be getting a cold. The day after we arrived I woke up feeling much worse. As our vacation continued I also wasn’t sleeping at night. I thought okay, this isn’t what I had in mind for vacation, but I knew the quicker I could go to a place of acceptance the easier it would be for me to deal with being sick. Read Article

Benefits of a Vacation

Passport

Ahhh, vacation time! While this might be how you’re feeling, not everyone feels this way. Many people are skipping vacations though a vacation might be the best thing for heart, mind and body health. Read Article

When Stressed—Apply Self-Care

Doesn’t it feel good to be appreciated? When someone shares with you their appreciation, whether about you or something positive that happened to them, the feeling is palpable. That’s because appreciation is a powerful emotion that positively impacts our entire system. Science has shown that this single emotion can positively enhance our attitudes, our immune system, our heart rhythms – even our mental clarity.

There’s a wonderful quote by Robert Brault that goes, “appreciate the little things in life for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.” Rather than waiting to look back, we can intentionally add more of this powerful and beneficial energy in our lives by just taking a couple moments every day to genuinely feel the appreciation we have for our friends, loved ones and even the kindness we may have received from someone we don’t know.

Consciously applying appreciation adds value to that which is important in our lives and reminds us that life is good!

1

If you are stressed, acknowledge your feelings as soon as you sense that you are out of sync or engaged in common stressors— feelings such as frustration, impatience, anxiety, overload, anger, being judgmental, mentally gridlocked, etc.


2

Take a short time out and do heart-focused breathing: breathe a little slower than usual; pretend you are breathing through your heart or chest area. (This is proven to help create coherent wave patterns in your heart rhythm—which helps restore balance and calm in your mental and emotional nature while activating the affirming power of your heart.)


3

During the heart-focused breathing, imagine with each breath that you are drawing in a feeling of inner-ease and infusing your mental and emotional nature with balance and self-care from your heart. (It’s scientifically proven that radiating love and self-care through your system activates beneficial hormones and boosts your immunity. Practicing will increase your awareness of when the stressful emotion has calmed into a state of ease.)


4

When the stressful feelings have calmed, affirm with a heartfelt commitment that you want to anchor and maintain the state of ease as you re-engage in your projects, challenges or daily interactions.

Appreciating What Is—Reminds Me that Life is Good

Doesn’t it feel good to be appreciated? When someone shares with you their appreciation, whether about you or something positive that happened to them, the feeling is palpable. That’s because appreciation is a powerful emotion that positively impacts our entire system. Science has shown that this single emotion can positively enhance our attitudes, our immune system, our heart rhythms – even our mental clarity.

There’s a wonderful quote by Robert Brault that goes, “appreciate the little things in life for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.” Rather than waiting to look back, we can intentionally add more of this powerful and beneficial energy in our lives by just taking a couple moments every day to genuinely feel the appreciation we have for our friends, loved ones and even the kindness we may have received from someone we don’t know.

Consciously applying appreciation adds value to that which is important in our lives and reminds us that life is good!