Surf the Urges

The Rise and Fall of Urges:
Surfing the Emotional Wake

It is more difficult to murder a phantom than a reality. —Virginia Wolf

Eileen surfingA recent study in Germany suggests that we spend a full quarter of our waking hours resisting urges. Yes, our desires are frequent, variable in intensity and largely unproblematic. Our urges create conflict within ourselves and can intensify to the point that we act on them, even when our best selves do not want us to. If you are longing to make a positive change in your life, such as getting in right relationship with food or with others or even with living the life you want, there is science around resisting urges. Confidence to resist urges begins with fully experiencing them. As we feel an impulse to do something we are trying to change, we can practice fully accepting the urge rather than pretending it is not there. Notice that urges crest, then dissipate, like an ocean wave. Once the urge is fully accepted, we spend less energy on it than if we try to control it. Getting to know the urge and exploring how it is in conflict with your larger goals and dreams will weaken it. This leaning into it keeps us from acting on it. A vice delayed is often a vice avoided. Surf the urges, don’t stuff them!

Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom. —Viktor E. Frankl

Eileen O'Grady
About the author

Dr. Eileen O'Grady is a certified adult nurse practitioner who has practiced in primary care for over two decades. In that role she experienced a wide breadth and depth of humanity with disorders of the mind, body and spirit. She believes deeply that internal change leads to wellness, and that many disorders and diseases are entirely reversible with dramatic lifestyle change. Eileen's School of Wellness offers a unique approach to well-being. Through retreats and keynotes, workshops, and coaching, she provides practical tools that inspire, cultivate resilience, mindfulness, and agility, empowering individuals, teams, and organizations to thrive.
1 Response
  1. Thanks Karen for the great insight on how to dicert our attention to be present. I liked the idea of the hand exercize to help us learn a new habit and bring our attention to the current moment instead of living in the past or future. It’s amazing to me how our bodies can react to these learned responses whether we want it to or not and how we can teach it to react differently through your exercizes. Looking forward to your next show!

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