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by Alexa Erickson
January 28, 2016
from
Collective-Evolution Website

As we've all experienced, life is not simply made up of a bunch of
highs.
The lows come roaring in sometimes when
you least expect it. Life doesn't allow us time to deal with
troubles, physically, mentally, or emotionally, leaving us frantic
as we try to put the puzzle pieces back together.
But can you imagine if we were "allowed" to break down? What if we
lost control and everyone around us let it happen?
We might find resolve much sooner,
since, in real life, we find ourselves pushing away the inevitable,
as the storm slowly accumulates inside until it hits you that much
harder in the face later on.
The School of Life released a video
that brings new light to breakdowns.
Called "The Sanity of Madness," it
exposes the trouble with having to be on your game all the time.
No matter how little sleep we get or
what problems at home we are having, mental blockages we are
experiencing, or health concerns are bogging us down, we are told we
must be at work on time, with our presentation ready, with no
excuses given, and a smile slapped on our pretty little faces.
It can create a vicious cycle: one
filled with,
-
energy drinks to wake up
-
sedatives to calm down
-
routines lacking time for exercise
-
home-cooked healthy meals, and
sleep
-
too much attention given to
computer screens
The video points to the seemingly obvious but the easily forgotten:
"No good life can or should go by without a few quite open incidents
of complete breakdown. Moments when we pull up a white flag and
declare ourselves simply unable to cope or fulfill any of our normal
functions for a time."
When these breakdowns happen, those around us, whether it be
colleagues, friends, family, or complete strangers, might think
we've gone insane; that we have some sort of illness.
But the video says it should be seen as
a sign of normality and health.
Breakdowns can vary depending on the person and the circumstances.
It could be as passive as lying in
bed, staring at the ceiling for a long time, unusually babbling
on to anyone who will listen about out-of-the-box feelings or
ideas, wearing strange clothes, breaking out in dance, shouting
at the top of our lungs, letting fits of laughter overcome us,
making new friends that don't seem to fit our lifestyles, and
traveling to faraway destinations.
We should be able to tolerate these
phases, not freak out over them.
"We allow our bodies to have moments
of breakdown and rest. We should allow similar moments for our
minds," the video points out.
Another thought The School of Life
brings up is that we need moments of madness as a corrective for the
way we view ourselves in the world:
puppets meant to make a certain
amount of money by working ourselves to the bone, toxic media
clips that brainwash us into believing we should, look, act, and
feel a certain way or else we are not worthy of attention or
love.
The emphasis should be on how to have a
"good" mental breakdown, the video suggests.
This entails doing things that help us
to reconnect with valuable truths that our ordinary lives are
preventing us from understanding.
These include:
sexual exploration,
creativity, contact with our bodies, empathy, a new kind of
self-knowledge.
"The idea is that we should return
from the land of madness and plant in the fields of apparent
sanity a lot of pretty valuable seeds that can bear fruit and
sustain us," the video continues.
"We are not automatons, but highly
complicated, volatile collections of proteins that needs careful
and sympathetic administration. We should expect that periods of
madness just do belong to every wise and good life."
View the video below for yourself, and
simply take a deep breath and come to terms with the idea that
sometimes we have to disconnect to reconnect:
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