Author Archives: Null Jamieson

Protecting Your Peace

I don’t really understand what this phrase means from a tangible perspective in my life.

Protecting your peace means making your emotional, mental and spiritual health your priority. It requires us to think deeply about our values and what’s important to us and making decisions from that place.

That’s from a google search, I don’t have that kind of insight. But what are my values? What is important to me? I find so much frustration and anger rising up lately in my day to day experience which then turns into deep depression where I find no joy in anything.

Emotional / Mental / Spiritual… these are three things that I tend to place into the same category however breaking down each one might help me to understand why they are different. I’ll use Google’s AI responses here to help flesh this out.

Emotional health refers to how well we accept and manage our emotions, cope with challenges, and navigate life’s ups and downs. Stoicism helps with this emotional health aspect, it helps to regulate my emotions through rational thinking.

  • Self-awareness: Understanding and recognizing your own emotions. 
  • Emotional regulation: Managing and expressing emotions in a healthy way. 
  • Resilience: The ability to bounce back from difficult experiences. 
  • Coping skills: Developing strategies to deal with stress and challenges. 
  • Positive relationships: Maintaining healthy connections with others. 

Mental health is more than just the absence of mental illness; it’s a state of well-being that allows individuals to cope with life’s stresses, realize their abilities, learn well, work well, and contribute to their community.

While mental health encompasses emotional health, it’s perhaps larger than that one feature. I have some mental illnesses like anxiety and depression that do have an impact on my emotional health, and while stoicism may not be the answer for all of my mental health challenges, it can be something that keeps me more centred and not let those illnesses take me into places where I don’t want to be.

Spiritual health is a vital component of overall well-being, involving a sense of purpose, meaning, and connection to something beyond oneself, whether it’s a higher power, nature, or a belief system.

This is something very lacking in my life. I grew up in a semi-religious family, I was never particularly connected to Catholicism or Christianity… it felt restrictive and, to be frank, trite. I didn’t like a faith telling me what I was allowed to do and not do as well as telling me what I should be feeling about something. It all felt very silly and I was embarrassed to be connected to the church as I was. I was guided by my morality and my impulse control lead me to say a lot of things that I would relay over and over in my mind.

As I got older, I distanced myself further from religion and relied more on my own morality to be my guiding principle as best I could. I was still of weak character though and would do things that I did not feel good about out of sheer cowardice. But I felt that religion was a tool of people in power to motivate others to action. I had trouble separating spiritualism from religion.

I feel that I am lacking in spiritual health and have been for a long time. Having purpose and meaning, I can’t find anything in my life that I feel is my purpose. I’ve lost all meaning in my life. I have no focus, no drive, no connection to anything. For a while I felt that I was doing ok in that regard however right now… there’s nothing there. I’m void of purpose. But why?

So when it comes to protecting my peace… protecting what I have with each of these elements, what am I protecting? Protecting my emotional health means not allowing someone to manipulate my emotions or manipulate me to not believe what my own emotions are telling me. Maintaining healthy boundaries, which I do not currently have with my kids or my girlfriend.

Protecting my mental health means avoiding exposure to unfavourable conditions that would detract from it. And that would include abusive situations that would possibly reinforce existing issues or beliefs that I already have about myself.

Protecting my spiritual health necessitates me finding some kind of guiding principle or purpose. Or just recognizing that I have one (if I do) and staying true to it.

Must think.

The Return Of The King

It’s been a long time since I’ve been here. Considering that I’m paying for this, I should be using it more to write my thoughts.

A discussion that I had yesterday has made me reconsider some of my own beliefs which may be based on ignorance of facts. However, with the massive amount of information out there with respect to the issues at hand as well as the amount of partisan information that is being spread… getting to the basics of what is going on is very difficult. There is much opinion being published as news and it can be a daunting task to get to some of the facts.

I aspire to stoic principles and I have a tendency to get too emotionally involved in politics if I start digging too deep which then affects my mental health. I then look at the concept of… how much can I change? I have my vote in my own nation, I am but one voice amongst millions. To be more is not in my capacity.

As far as that which is going on in the United States, I have zero impact on that in my life and it is not something that I can affect in the least. Is it good to be aware of what is going on? Sure. But to have an emotional stake? Pointless. Futile.

Morning Reflection – May 18, 2024

Is my attention actually on the things at hand?

Even now I think. “Eh, I’ll go to the range next weekend.” I’ll do this and I’ll do that next weekend. Someday needs to become today.

I need to follow through on my plans. Life is a gift and I need to treat it like a gift instead of something I’ll “deal with” eventually.

Momento Mori.

Staying The Course

Stoic philosophy will tell us that tranquility can be found by trusting that we are generally on the right path rather than listening to the rabble and changing direction based on external factors.

Work has been tough lately. The company I work for is going through some changes and not insignificant ones either. There are a lot of people who don’t like the direction it’s heading and these are long term employees.

It has really concerned me near the end of 2023 and the start of 2024 as a couple of people that I’ve gotten to know have left, sharing their reasons with me. And they aren’t alone in these reasons, there are quite a few others whose justifications sound very similar.

It’s made me nervous, leaving me to question if I should be shopping the market and moving on as well… rather than being someone standing on the deck of the Titanic as it breaks in half before plummeting through the depths to the bottom of the ocean.

I think the wise advice that was given to me was that I have to judge for myself if I am at a place inside me where I need to move on. This rang true at the time and I feel is in alignment with the stoic philosophy that I try to live by. I am not at the same place inside as these other people are, at least not yet.

Will the market become more difficult should I opt to move later? Certainly. However chasing after what other people are doing has left me feeling a lot of anxiety about the present and the future.

I can’t let this derail me.

The Hard Road

Time can be fleeting… slipping through our fingers like sand.

It seemingly moves slowly at first, while we are but in our youth. We imagine ourselves immortal, that our lives will carry on without end. Death is a problem for our future selves. Some of us, foolishly, wish for an early end to our lives to end our pain without appreciating the finality and emptiness of death.

The more that time passes, the faster it seems to escape through our fingers. While it was always passing with the same speed, it is relative to our age and hurtles us closer towards our own mortality as it does from our creation.

It’s the facing of this mortality, REAL mortality, that we begin to understand the value of our time. When we understand the value of our time, it’s then that we can start to pay attention to how we spend it. There are a billion ways that we can spend our lives with what we devote our energy to being fought over by people and companies, trying to steal our energy and distract us from the things that we really need to focus on. Detract from us setting and achieving our goals.

Living is a choice. We make choices every minute of every day that can lead us to our goals and satisfaction in our lives, or they can pull us away from them… leaving us for wanting. The road is hard and only hard things are worth fighting for.

Stoicism #1

Concentrate every minute like a Roman-like a man-on doing what’s in front of you with precise and genuine seriousness, tenderly, willingly, with justice. And on freeing yourself from all other distractions. Yes, you can-if you do everything as if it were the last thing you were doing in your life, and stop being aimless, stop letting your emotions override what your mind tells you, stop being hypocritical, self-centered, irritable. You see how few things you have to do to live a satisfying and reverent life? If you can manage this, that’s all even the gods can ask of you.

Marcus Aurelius Antoninus