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Catalyst: Simple Strength for Mind & Body I help people to be stronger for the prime of their life and reduce the risk for later life care

Catalyst: Simple Strength for Mind & Body offers solutions for your strength, mentally and physically to prepare you for the journey ahead and to protect you and your loved ones

Resolving our resolutions | Resolutions that resonateThe New Years Resolution. If ever there was a tradition that led to...
31/12/2024

Resolving our resolutions | Resolutions that resonate

The New Years Resolution. If ever there was a tradition that led to a greater sense of inadequacy, I am not certain. Some make them willingly, many begrudgingly, sensing obligation to eat more healthily, detox after festive indulgences, finally begin that exercise regime we have been promising ourselves for the last decade, and some of us have given up altogether, or proclaim, with false satisfaction, a success in commitment to not making resolutions.

Why do we make resolutions anyway? What are the reasons that so many of us “fail” in our resolutions? Are we really making the correct resolutions and what might that have to do with our ability to make them stick?

Why we make them can be linked to the symbolic mid winter celebrations of death and rebirth. The willingness to make a resolution is the essence of letting go of (letting die) a part of us which we feel does not serve us well and bringing into life a new part which we want to see grow. Our lives are the result of the activities and actions we practice and therefore dedication to the practice of new activities and actions will result in a different outcome. If we are not prepared to resolve to make any changes to our behaviours, we cannot expect the outcome to be miraculously better.

Why do we find sticking to our resolutions for a better self to be so difficult to stick to? Surely if we know something is good for us it should be sufficient motivation unto itself to see us through? Our lived experience proves to us this is not the case.

Letting go of a practiced part of our lives is difficult and even painful and so we are reluctant to do it unless our perception of the effort in the task vs the expected payoff is weighted in favour of change. We might want to run a marathon but if we weight the discomfort of the training more than the sense of achievement should we ultimately succeed, then we are unlikely to push ourselves into our running shoes. Gambling exploits this tendency of our psychology by requiring a small payout for the potential of far greater return, which, coupled with the hormone rush associated with with anticipation of reward (dopamine) can create a compelling addiction.

Humans have an unprecedented ability to sacrifice our present for our future (thank you prefrontal cortex!) but this is something that some find easier than others. Many of us struggle greatly in giving up an immediate opportunity for gratification as opposed to investing in a predicted better future. Prediction is part of the problem and the proverb that, ‘a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush’, is a reflection of this, that we are wired to put more value in what is in front of us now than to the possibility of an uncertain future. As with all our behaviours we can improve this with conditioning, making small, successful sacrifices first, then as our neural processes reform around this new successful pattern, we are able to make increasingly greater sacrifices with more confidence in the long term likelihood that it will pay off.

The other aspect of change worth being mindful to, is what the current behaviour we are looking to sacrifice means to us. Returning to marathon example above, in order to successfully complete this task, we will need to sacrifice time and effort to the goal which will be physically demanding, uncomfortable, and is likely to result in some manner of injury during the training process. The time we sacrifice will come at the cost of some other activity in our lives and we might hope this would be time sat in front of the television which we deem to be wasted time. But it is not necessarily wasted time, for it is meeting a need for us in some manner otherwise we wouldn’t do it. So why are we watching television for 4 hours a night? It might be a desire to learn or be entertained. It might be an effective way of stopping some of the anxious noise in our minds. It might be being present and connected with our family. It might be something else of course, the need met is individual to us, but the point is that if we are not convinced that the training for the marathon will meet the same needs that watching television will, and we do not have a ready and effective substitute for the need, then we are likely to fail in our ambition.

Is it possible that some resolutions might be more worthwhile for us and deliver us more meaningful improvements in our lives? And if we recognised a deeper significance to a proposed change then it is more likely we might find the strength to stick the change.

I am going to take an audacious leap and suggest something which we might all work on which I have found to make a significant difference to our lives, the lives of those we care about, as well as the lives of those we bump into during our day to day existence. The resolution to improve our relationships.

This is a multi pronged opportunity for us all, to improve the relationship we have with ourselves, improve the relationship we have with others, and improve the relationship we have with the world. Our felt experience is essentially relational, and how we feel about the relationship with ourselves, with others and with the wider world around us will define the quality of our mental landscape. If we have a bad relationship in any of these three areas, we leave ourselves prone to psychological vulnerability and suffering. We would be ambitious to tackle all of these at once, so focusing on our relationship with ourselves and one other relationship in our lives which we would like to be better is a more realistic, but still challenging, place to start. Tackling this might require us to work on multiple parts of ourselves which will translate to tangible improvements in a broad range of aspects of our lives. We will need to cultivate the courage to approach these changes, we will need to learn about ourselves and learn to articulate what we hope for from our relationships. We need to remind ourselves that not everyone thinks the same way that we do and that we can live together with a broad (but not infinite) range of beliefs about what is best in the world. We will need to approach our relationships from the perspective of gratitude and charity, appreciation of the smallest of blessings that we have and willingness to offer to others without expectation of return.

To maximise our potential for success in this ambition we will need to play the part we want to become. Inviting a sense of play in our lives will help us to let go of the expectation of immediate success, and will allow a lightness to our experience that will help us navigate new and unfamiliar behaviours. Play the role that you want to become and invite the spirit of change into your life, embrace the meta story of the death and rebirth of the hero and see what happens.

This is what we will explore at the Mind Fit Community which returns on Thursday 2nd January, 6pm at Retrocave on Ashley Road in Poole. If you want to help develop practical skills for change please come and join us.

Synthesis | Bringing it all togetherThis is an abridged version of my newsletter which you can read in full at the link ...
03/10/2024

Synthesis | Bringing it all together

This is an abridged version of my newsletter which you can read in full at the link below and is what we will be discussing at the next mind fit community on Thursday 10th October at 6pm at Retrocave, Ashley Road, Poole. I hope to see you there!

This year alone we have discussed themes of; our internal narrative; mind and body; trust, truth and honesty; loss and grief; a sense of the sacred; relationships with others; worry and anxiety; using language to transform our perspectives; understanding our habits; free will; repositioning ourselves out of despair; understanding trauma; managing overwhelm; our relationship with uncertainty; how to breathe for a healthier mind and fault versus responsibility.

However, simply understanding something intellectually is not sufficient when it comes to our mental health. We need to embody it; we must bring these components within our lives for them to become actualised and effective. We need synthesis.

My five pillars of wellbeing model of thinking looks at aspects of our lives which we all have some measure of control over, and that by working on these areas we can make meaningful gains into a better experience of wellbeing for no, or negligible, financial cost.

These foundations are sleep, nutrition, exercise, mindfulness, and breath work and were all things that I had found to be personally beneficial, worked wonders for my clients, and had a solid stack of research supporting them in addition.

Breathing. Simply breathing slowly and paying attention to the experience of our breath can have a powerfully transformative effect on our felt experience. Breathing as slowly as we can, comfortably, will help our body feel calm, it will help us turn the volume down a little (or even a lot) on our minds.

Nutrition. I have only basic qualifications in nutrition, but it is clear that what we eat, how often we eat and how we eat (as in hastily at our work desk, or enjoying the company of friends) had a significant impact on our physiology which in turn affects our mental landscape.

Exercise. Getting enough exercise, both strength focused as well as cardiovascular, is perhaps one of the most researched areas of science and has a litany of evidence-based claims pertaining to heart health, disease reduction, cancer risk reduction, and more topically, is strongly showing protective benefits against dementia.

Sleep. One of the most interesting (and sadly depressing) books I read was by Mathew Walker, entitled, “sleep”, in which Walker explores the research regarding sleep and the impacts on our health and wellbeing when we do not get enough.

Mindfulness. Noticing the pattern of our mind, without attaching ourselves to the thoughts is one of the most revelatory experiences we may have and can profoundly improve our relationship with ourselves and with others. Mindfulness is a skill and something we need to regularly practice to unlock the benefits of, just like exercise, eating well, sleeping well, and how we breathe.

These five elements or foundations allow us to engage with our lives with a greater sense of agency and will delivery meaningful benefits to our felt experience which will improve the quality of relationship with ourselves and with those around us. And that can’t be a bad thing.

This is what we will be discussing at the next mind fit community on Thursday 10th October at 6pm at Retrocave, Ashley Road, Poole. I hope to see you there!

Earlier this year I was invited to speak with Forest Holme on their new podcast series,  Life and Loss and this was rele...
07/09/2024

Earlier this year I was invited to speak with Forest Holme on their new podcast series, Life and Loss and this was released on Friday via their channel which I link below.

There are a whole series of fascinating and challenging conversations focusing our experiences and relationship with the most challenging moments in life so please check out their channel and show some support for their work if you can.

Welcome to another episode of the "Life and Loss" podcast, brought to you by Forest Holme Hospice Charity in Poole, Dorset. In this episode, Lorien, a mindfu...

Breaking the habitThere is some preamble here so please bear with me, but this article looks to consider our habits, why...
28/05/2024

Breaking the habit

There is some preamble here so please bear with me, but this article looks to consider our habits, why it can be so difficult to stick the change, and ultimately what we can do about it. It will be the focus of our next Mental Fitness Community event on Thursday 6th June where we will explore some practical mindful tools to help break the habit of being ourselves where it doesn’t serve us well.

So, to the preamble…

I have long felt that mindfulness has a bit of a PR problem. This might be down to its relative origins in the west where it is often unconsciously attributed to the hippie trails across India and the seeking of enlightenment, often coupled with psychedelics, beards and beads. There is also the challenge that mindfulness has in describing itself succinctly to audiences who are not already sold on the personal development and self-care band wagon. Mindfulness is experiential, practitioners say, the only way to truly understand this thing is to practice it for yourself. They then invite us to focus on the experience of eating a raisin or to close our eyes and focus on the breath. And all of this is true and valid but if you are a sceptical westerner or one of many for whom the idea of “alternative” approaches sends a shiver down their spine with fear for the integrity of mental “can do”, attitudes, then this is likely to not move you any closer to embracing the opportunity provided here.

Back to the habit…

When teaching and talking about mindfulness I try and make it as practical and real world as possible because ultimately that must be the merit on which any tool stands or falls. Does it work when you need it to? It is worth observing how automatic it is to feel differently when we are in a different environment. When we change the context in which we find ourselves we are more likely to be open to new experience, be it positive of negative. This is the purpose of something as simple as going away on a holiday. It forces us to shift our mode of being in some manner whereby we can release ourselves from a number of the routine tensions of our lives. This is the same effect you find in rehabilitation centres; people are taken away from their normal environment by which they can free themselves sufficiently of the contextual anchors that they might be able to make key changes with the right support. This is also why many people fall back into their old patterns soon after they return home and are unsuccessful in reintegrating the changes into their day to day lives.

Sam Harris says something to the effect that we are experts at being almost exactly who we were yesterday and this something about ourselves that is well worth remembering. We are absolutely creatures of habit, and this doesn’t just apply to our physical behaviours and the mundane routines of our daily lives but also to our mental patterns, our reactions to ourselves and our reactions to others. One of the primary reasons that making change of any kind last in our lives is so difficult is the sheer weight of our habitual behaviours and mental patterns. Want to lose fat and gain muscle? It is going to take consistent, deliberate effort. Want to repair a damaged relationship? It is going to take, consistent, deliberate effort… In the absence of this commitment, we invariably fall back into our well-trod mental routines.

Taking the fluff out of mindfulness…

Mindfulness is the quality and attitude of deliberate attention by which we are able to notice our drives, impulses, routines, and automaticity. We can then bring the attitude of curiosity to the experience and see what unfolds for us. Fundamentally it is a skill by which we can become more attentive to our patterns of behaviour in order that we might be able to interrupt those patterns if we wish to. It brings the experience of a shift in the pattern of our lives whilst being exactly where we are. It doesn’t guarantee we will succeed in making the shift, and this is where complimentary, supporting psycho technologies can be very beneficial, but it is the foundation on which we build the possibility of effective change in our lives.

Back to the start…

And this brings us back to the beginning in that this is something we can only grasp so far intellectually; to actually experience it and therefore understand it, we need to do it. You wouldn’t expect to tell someone who had never surfed how it is to surf and leave them satisfied that they know all there is to the experience of surfing. Everyone will say you can only really appreciate it as an experience if you try it, and mindfulness is an experience in the same manner. The toolbox of mindfulness includes practices which focus on the breath, the body, sounds, taste, touch, smell and sight and these tools are all variations to practice the ability to return to the quality and attitude of deliberate attention. Paying interested attention to the breath can feel lovely, and it can help us to quieten the mind, but this isn’t the point of the practice, the point is to discover that we are not our next thought, feeling or bodily sensation and that these experiences don’t have to define the moment which we are in. This is the revelation of the experience, but again, it isn’t enough to understand it intellectually, any more than reading a book on s*x is a substitute for the real thing.

So, here is the invitation…

Practice a mindful approach, as often as possible throughout the day, practice noticing the quality of the moment found in the moment you are in. The more you practice the more the experience will unfold and more you will become aware of the automaticity of the experience of your life and that maybe, you might be able to make some of the shifts that you want to.

If you would like to practice some of these skills, we will be exploring them at the Mental Fitness Community on Thursday 6th June at 6pm so we hope to see you there!

Approaching AnxietyAnxiety.  Something we have all experienced at one point or another. Also, we are likely to know peop...
29/04/2024

Approaching Anxiety

Anxiety. Something we have all experienced at one point or another. Also, we are likely to know people personally who experience it significantly.

So, what is it? Why do we have it? And what can we do to reduce the experience of it in our day to day lives?

This is the topic we will be exploring on Tuesday 30th April 6pm at Retrocave on Ashley Road, Poole.

Please come and join in the conversation!

Big shout out and thank you to Kieran and the excellent team at Retrocave Café and Retro Game shop in Poole for hosting ...
18/03/2024

Big shout out and thank you to Kieran and the excellent team at Retrocave Café and Retro Game shop in Poole for hosting our Mental Fitness Community events.

It is a great space for a coffee and some fantastic food with the added bonus of being able to breathe in some lovely nostalgia for all things geekness!

Please check them out and also consider jumping onboard with the community project too.

Next meeting is Thursday 28th March 6pm!

Retrocave Café and Retro Game shop

We continue our exploration of tools and principles to give us a better skill set for mental self defence on Thursday 14...
07/03/2024

We continue our exploration of tools and principles to give us a better skill set for mental self defence on Thursday 14th March at 6pm at RetroCave Cafe on Ashley Road, Poole.

The theme for this meeting will be Loss and Grief and how we can better recognise this state and what it might mean for us and how we might work through our sense of grief. Whatever aspect of our lives we have a sense of loss in respect to - be it our health, a relationship, a loved one, a community, a sense of safety, or anything other loss experience; then this discussion and exploration could provide some very practical insight and support for moving forwards.

Become a part of this 2024 Mental Strength & Fitness community initiative focusing on practical strategies, philosophies, mindfulness and other psycho tools for a more resilient approach to what life throws at us.

The vision is that this will be a fun and interactive space in which to share and develop practical philosophies and mindfulness strategies for a healthier mental landscape. Whether you are completely new to this looking for their first workable strategy or someone with decades of experience you will be very welcome to help co create this community with me.

There is intended to be an open community and there is no charge for the session, I simply ask that you support our venue by purchasing something from them at your visit.

If this is something you would like to be part of please let me know in the comments or send a DM.

If you read this far please support us with a like and share this to help this community initiative grow.



I had the recent pleasure of being interviewed by the lovely Yasmin Mirdamad at Aloha Social.  Sharing some of my journe...
16/06/2021

I had the recent pleasure of being interviewed by the lovely Yasmin Mirdamad at Aloha Social. Sharing some of my journey into coaching and all things wellness and also thoughts on some of the most interesting emotional challenges we face right now.

You can read it here and check out Yasmin’s great tools for evolving your social media landscape 🤩, you won’t regret it 😁

https://www.thisisalohasocial.com/post/aloha-friends-lorien-holiday

On my voyage I came across wellness coach & life strategist Lorien Holiday, join me as I set sail with Lorien to learn more!

17/05/2021

Breathwork and Calming a busy mind workshops. Tuesday 18th May I will be holding a day of taster experiences at the Healthful Mind clinic in Wimborne.

If you would like to learn so simple yet superbly effective breathwork tools or some solutions for a busy mind, then please check out the links below 😁

Calming a busy mind
9.30
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/151198188853
12.30
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/151287889149

18.00
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/151287963371

Intro to Breathwork
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/151461807343

10/05/2021

01/02/2021
19/01/2021

Hey Gang! Happy Tuesday! (the poor cousin of the week...)
The mighty squat! An exercise that when done right will help give you strength for life.

A number of people either shy away from this exercise because it causes them pain, or do it badly and cause themselves pain.

If you are currently struggling to squat or experience knee or low back pain when squatting please check out this mini tutorial.

Let me know if there are any exercises you struggle with or avoid and I am happy to see if I can help you.

Also if you want to learn more safe and effective exercise techniques please join my Power Strength & Fitness sessions on zoom Monday, Wednesday and Thursdays!

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