Three Sure-Fire Ways to Get Out of a Funk

Going Down the Rabbit Hole 


The other day I innocently asked my grandson what he would like for his upcoming ninth birthday. He thought for a moment, then gazed intently into my eyes and answered explicitly: No books, Nana. And nothing you knitted.


If I had been confronted by his blatant honesty last week, I don’t think I would have had the same lighthearted reaction.


Ever been in a deep funk where suddenly everything looked dark, foreboding and hopeless? I call this sudden turn of darkness “going down the rabbit hole.” And I went there seven days ago.


Sure, there were real frustrations:



The scale was heading north again; my beloved white jeans were tighter and   tighter.
I was spending more money than my income could bear.
I had career-related deadlines, setbacks, obstacles and challenges that were beginning to seem insurmountable.
And I was tired. So very tired.

Down the rabbit hole I tumbled. Isolating myself from family and friends. Viewing every situation and scenario in the most negative light possible.


Things Could Always be Worse                                                                                 Yes, I know that.


My favorite waitress’s mom is dying of a brain tumor at age fifty-two.


A high school crony is on dialysis three times a week and has just had four fingers on his right hand amputated due to his diabetic condition.


My mother’s long time friend has just lost her twenty-five year-old grandson to a drug overdose.


But I’m allowed to wallow in my own “petty” misery right? I’m allowed a few bad days in a funk? Even if my misery is less than their misery?


Three Ways to Claw Yourself Out of the Rabbit Hole


Perfect the Art of Gratitude


Let’s face it: the lack of gratitude causes an over-inflated sense of entitlement, a de-sensitizing to small material pleasures, and an inability to be sated. Practicing the art of gratitude is the gateway to seeing our world differently – we re-awaken to the pleasures in our lives that are already in place. I marvel at the orchid’s new bud. I savor my first sip of morning coffee. I drink in my husband’s handsome chiseled profile while he sleeps beside me.


On my climb out of the rabbit hole, I stop focusing on the deficits. I free myself from eagle-eyeing and stock piling every aggravation, annoyance and slight directed my way. From over personalizing. From utter self-absorption.


“Gratitude,” says Timothy Miller, in How to Want What You Have, is the intention to count your blessings while avoiding the belief that you need or deserve different circumstances.


Seek Out the Humorous                                                                                   Continually looking for the humor in the daily routine of our lives helps us weather instability and change. Finding the lighthearted edge reduces stress and aids us in concentrating less on our disappointments, frustrations and woes. A sense of humor helps us deal with obstacles, road blocks and bumps in the road, facilitates our evolving and finding a comfortable place for ourselves. And keeps us out of the rabbit hole.


Try these on:


A thief broke into my house last night. He started searching for money, so I woke up and searched with him.


Kids today don’t know how easy they have it. When I was young, I had to walk nine feet through shag carpeting to change the TV channel.


A recent study found that women who carry a little extra weight live longer than men who mention it.


Feel better?


Keep Things in Perspective                                                                               When storm clouds appear on your horizon, how do you cope? I do so by keeping  things in perspective. I recently wrote a column on the difficulty of seeing a child off to college. Of pre-school. Or Kindergarten. My column could apply to watching an adult child move far away to a new city.  It could apply to watching an adult child or a grandchild embrace a way of life that seems disjointed and foreign. My column could apply when we experience a lack of open and honest communication with our offspring. Sure feelings of loss, anxiety, and disappointment can pull us down, but keeping things in perspective will ultimately be the grease that makes climbing out of the rabbit hole easier, quicker and less arduous. It’s all about perspective.


Want an easy fix to attaining a proper perspective?

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Published on August 17, 2017 05:05
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