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As published in The Indian Times.


There’s a moment, quiet but sharp, that many of us know well. You forget something. Miss a deadline. React poorly.And before anyone else says a word, your own voice turns on you:“You should’ve done better,” “What’s wrong with you?” “Why can’t you ever get it right?”

That voice, your inner critic, is something most people experience. It cuts deep, lingers long, and rarely offers compassion. But could it also carry a hidden grace?


One of the Mind and Motion Cards, Flaws offers a gentle prompt:“Being hard on yourself can limit growth, but it may also reflect a deeper care for who you are becoming.”

Let’s sit with that.


The Habit of Harshness

Being hard on yourself often masquerades as self-improvement. It insists it’s making you stronger, sharper, more disciplined. But often, it contracts the heart. It limits movement, physically, emotionally, mentally.


From a Vedic lens, the mind is both guide and saboteur. As shared in the Bhagavad Gita:“For one who has conquered the mind, the mind is the best of friends; but for one who has failed to do so, the mind will remain the greatest enemy.” (Gita 6.6)


When self-talk becomes harsh, it may not foster learning, it can freeze growth. Rather than guide us forward, it may keep us circling past mistakes. And yet, this harshness usually emerges from a protective place, a shield against disappointment, rejection, or failure.

It’s not about weakness. It’s about survival.But survival is not the same as living.


The Motion of Becoming

Here’s where a subtle shift happens, what limits us may also reveal what matters to us. Beneath self-judgment lies care. We don’t criticise what we don’t value.If you’re hard on yourself, perhaps it means you care deeply, about your impact, your growth, your values.


The Mind and Motion Card – Flaws encourages curiosity, not condemnation:“What is this voice protecting?”“What might it sound like if translated into care?”


From here, we may begin to respond, not with punishment, but with presence. Like breath returning us to the body, gentleness returns us to movement.


Softness as Strength

If the aim is to grow, not just succeed, but evolve, then kindness must be part of that journey. Stumbles are part of motion. Awareness, not fear, shapes who we become.


A Reflection Practice

Next time your inner voice tightens its grip, consider this reflective practice, inspired by the Mind and Motion approach:

1.        Pause. Take a breath.

2.        Acknowledge the voice: “I hear you.”

3.        Ask: “What am I afraid will happen if I don’t push myself like this?”

4.        Listen with compassion, not correction.

5.        Respond: “There may be another way to grow, one that includes care.”


Let that land. Let it move you.


Being hard on yourself isn’t necessarily a flaw, it may be a sign that you’re aware of your own potential. But if you stay caught in the cycle of harshness, you may miss the deeper invitation: To grow, with awareness, with care, and with motion.


So, the next time you hear “You should’ve done better,”Pause. Breathe.And whisper back:“I’m already becoming.”


Explore Further

The Mind and Motion Cards offer guided reflections like this to support your personal growth journey. These tools are designed to complement, not replace, professional support.

For more resources or to purchase the deck, please visit https://www.monicapema.com/category/all-products


Monica Pema | Integrated Wellness Expert

BSc. MSc. Psychology | Dip. Holistic Kinesiology

“From Passion to Purpose in All Walks of Life”


This article is intended for self-reflection and general education only. It is not a substitute for professional medical, mental health, or psychological care.

 

As published in The Indian Times


A Gentle Look at Worry and the Power of Perspective

Why shifting your state of mind doesn’t have to be dramatic, and how psychology, movement, and Vedic wisdom quietly agree.  Bhagavad Gita 2.14 reveals a profound truth: suffering, like joy, is temporary, and our resistance is what makes it unbearable.

 

When Worry Overstays Its Welcome

Worry was designed to be functional. A little warning bell that says, “Something might need your attention.” But in modern life, that bell rarely quiets. It becomes background noise. A racing heart in the chest. A constant companion. A knot that stays.

 

You’ve likely felt it: that unease as you lie awake at 2am, the looping thoughts before a meeting, or the feeling that something’s off, even if you can’t name it.  Worry, when brief, can heighten awareness. But when it becomes chronic, it fogs our clarity, robs our joy, and makes us feel disconnected from ourselves.

 

The Science of Worry

In psychological terms, worry is the cognitive component of anxiety. It's future-focused, a possible mental rehearsal of things going wrong. The prefrontal cortex gets stuck in prediction mode, while the amygdala, the brain's fear centre, keeps firing signals of danger, remember its primitive.  Dr. Susan David, a Harvard psychologist, reminds us, “Emotions are data, not directives.” They are indicators, not dictators of truth.  When you see worry not as a personal flaw but as a nervous system signal, you begin to loosen its grip.

 

A Vedic Lens on the Mind

The Bhagavad Gita tells us that emotions, like the seasons, come and go. They are not ultimate truth. They are part of prakriti, nature, which is in constant motion.

Sage Patanjali, in the Yoga Sutras, speaks of chitta vritti nirodhah - the calming of the fluctuations of the mind. The mind, like a lake, becomes clear not by force, but through gentle redirection.  In both the Vedic and psychological perspectives, the path to peace begins not with elimination of emotion, but with observation.

 

 

Movement as Medicine

At PEMA Mind and Motion, we often say, “Shift the state, not the story.” Why? Because your nervous system speaks in sensation, not logic.  When you feel stuck in a mental loop, movement helps release the charge beneath the thought. You’re not trying to fix the story, you’re creating space around it.  Clinical studies now show that even gentle movement, a slow walk, stretching, swaying does activate the vagus nerve, shifting the body out of fight-or-flight and into a calmer, more receptive state.  In Vedic terms, prana (life force) begins to flow freely again. You return to a state of sattva - clarity, balance, and calm.

 

How to Interrupt the Worry Cycle — Kindly

Here are four gentle ways to respond to worry:

1. Acknowledge Without Attachment 
Instead of pushing worry away or diving headfirst into it, simply name it. “Worry is here.” Remember it is only a visitor.

2. Choose Micro-Movement
 Shake your hands, stretch your neck, go outside barefoot. A small movement often shifts the bigger internal state.

3. Use a Tool Like the Mind and Motion Cards
 These psychology-informed cards offer questions that may gently redirect your perspective. You might pull the Quickness card and be invited to ask: “Is everything urgent, or does something need prioritising?”

4.  Anchor Into the Present
 Vedic breathwork (pranyama) practices like anulom vilom (alternate nostril breathing) calm the dualities in the mind and re-centres your awareness in the now.

 

As the Gita reminds us, “The mind can be both friend and foe.” The difference lies in how we relate to it.

 

From Worry to Wisdom

Worry isn’t a weakness, it’s your nervous system doing its job. But it needs you, the wise observer, to step in, with compassion.  When we build a relationship with our emotional landscape, we begin to read the signals with more peace.

This is emotional literacy, not about having fewer emotions, but understanding them more deeply. 

 

The Mind and Motion Cards were created exactly for this purpose. Not to give advice, but to invite awareness. Each card is a lens, not to bypass what you’re feeling, but to help you walk with it differently.  Whether it’s Doubt, Rest, or Happiness, each feeling has a message. Each message can be met with movement, reflection, and care.

 

A Final Thought

In a time where constant stimulation leaves us scattered, let this be a gentle reminder; you don’t have to overhaul your life to change how you feel. Sometimes, the smallest shift, a breath, a stretch, a question, can open a new path.

 

Worry may visit, but it doesn’t have to unpack and stay.

 

‘Let the river slow. Let the knowing return. Let the mind and body remember their quiet power, together’, Rishi Vasishth.


Ready to take the first step toward emotional well-being? The Mind and Motion Cards are here to help you navigate your emotional journey. For more resources on emotional regulation and guided practices, visit www.monicapema.com.


Monica Pema | Integrated Wellness Expert

BSc. MSc. Psychology | Dip Holistic Kinesiology

“From Passion to Profit in All Walks of Life”


This article is intended for reflection and education. It is not a substitute for medical or psychological care.

 

 

 



Girl Awakening Podcast - May 2, 2024  #openheart #innerpower #bebold

A journey that began at 14years old over a cuppa with a favourite cousin and a not very ordinary conversation about Angels all the things in between, brought Monica to choose at a very young age the lane she wanted to operate in.


Her connection to nature, again at a young age, and a love of meditative observations on the glorious opening of the Rose in all it's perfection and delicate detail, blossomed within her a remembering, an insight to the MAGIC of PERCEPTION - a remembering of that divinity and perfection is within me.


She believes life is a walking meditation, the magic lies within us...and we agree, Monica is NOT one for working in boxes!


In 2003, Monica Pema, founded PEMA Holistic-Health with a vision to bridge the gap between mainstream and holistic approaches. As a multi-modality Psychologist BSc (Hons) Psychology & MSc in Industrial /Organisational Psychology and Holistic Kinesiology (Dip. HK), she recognised the need for a comprehensive and integrative approach to well-being.


Her approach is TOGETHER taking a deep dive into the whole person - uncovering all that holds you back from performing optimally, guiding through her in depth toolkit to returning to your natural state and innate ability to self - cultivate emotionally and naturally!


She has recently released her extensive online course - The Conscious Self Courses, link below.


Sit down with a cuppa and as Monica suggests, give your self permission to do you while you listen to this episode with the joy full and grateful heart of the powerful Soul sitting with us emanating the light that is her namesake.


Oh and did we mention the intentionality of her soul incarnating on the blessed day of Holi - there is no mistaking the purposefulness of Monica Pema!!!




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