Have you been told, “Just let go of it,” or tell yourself, “I have to let go,” but wonder, how? I’ve asked myself that question. Sometimes you want to let go of a worry or an obsession about someone else. You may try to detach, but can't. Other times when you can’t move forward after a major loss, or when you need to unwind from a busy work schedule. Each case has different challenges, but fundamentally, they all require a shift in attention from the mind into the body and from the past or future into the present. Letting go can be a rejuvenating practice that brings the mind and body into balance for clarity, peace , and heightened functioning.

Depending upon what you’re letting go if, it can take moments or years. When you’re letting go of someone you love, it’s not easy, nor pain free. However, it’s human nature to avoid pain, even if the price is long-term misery. When the source of frustration, loss or stress is ongoing, letting go becomes a process of developing a new, beneficial orientation toward life.

Letting go may require repeated efforts to shift your consciousness away from the problem. When you're obsessing about or judging someone, you may need to detach and question some basic assumptions about your ability to control, or even influence, the person’s feelings and behavior. You may need to ask for what you need or want or set boundaries. Sometimes, worry and anxiety is due to underestimation of your ability to overcome an obstacle or loss. Worry can be paralyzing and lead to depression and despair.

Guilt or resentment can rob you of your life and happiness and keep you frozen in the past. The antidote may involve compassion for yourself or someone else, amends, or other communication.

Generally, too much feeling or too much thinking can limit your ability to live your life. If you’re obsessing, it can be helpful to make contact with sensation, including emotion. When you're overwhelmed with anger or another emotion, using your body – especially when you're angry - or doing something that requires mental attention, like puzzles or math, can be helpful. In both cases, creativity is a wonderful way to uplift you, calm your mind, and soothe your emotions.

Here are some things you can do:

1. Detach

When it comes to worrying and obsessing about a person or problem, understand the principles of detachment. (Chapter 9 in Codependency for Dummies goes into detail about nonattachment.) Analyze what you have the power to change and what you don’t. If effective action is necessary, take it.

2. Pray

Many people unaccustomed to daily prayer don’t think of asking for help, particularly out loud. This gesture in itself is one of surrender that relinquishes the ego’s hold on the problem and allows for new information or an altered perspective to appear. Prayer is effective to help you accept what you cannot change. The Serenity Prayer begins, “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change . . .” Sometimes, you might have to pray for the “willingness to accept the things I cannot change.”

3. Journal

Writing about your feelings or writing them in the form of a letter can be a release from mental obsession. If you’re letting go of someone, write them a good-bye letter. This can be useful even to someone who’s died. You can dialogue with the person by writing his or her response with your nondominant hand. Read your words to a trusted friend, sponsor, or therapist for added relief.

4. Distract Yourself

When you’re too much in your head, shift gears, and do something physical that’s enlivening, absorbing or relaxing. Put on music and dance, workout, or garden. Play and creativity also shift your autonomic nervous system and use other parts of your brain. Painting provided relief for me on September 11th.

5. Relax

Most people think they’re relaxed while still holding a great deal of tension. It’s helpful to lie down and allow your body weight to sink into the floor. Notice where you hold yourself and give into gravity, and then let go.

Try progressive relaxation , starting at the feet and proceeding to your scalp and forehead. Tighten for five seconds and then release the tension in each muscle group. Afterword, scan your body for any area of restriction, particularly the eyes, stomach, and jaw. Discover where your body tends to grip. The slightest tension around the eyebrows restricts the flow of energy throughout the body. This can be a prime area or storing daily stress, particularly for people regularly viewing a computer screen.

6. Allow Your Feelings

Change can only happen in the present. Coming into your body and into the moment return you to your power source. Interrupt your mental activity, place your hand on your chest, and ask yourself, “What am I feeling?” It may start with awareness of sensation in your body. Emotion that’s been feeding anxiety , an obsession, grief , or frustrated attempts to fix or control a situation may surface. Deep release can also be accompanied by shaking or jerky movements – much like a cat twitching during his nap.

Once you’re in present time and centered in yourself, your perspective changes away from a narrow focus on the “problem” or person. You gain a more realistic appraisal of the situation, including your limitations. You reconnect to life itself, and often new opportunities and solutions present themselves.

Find Free “14 Tips for Letting Go” at http://www.whatiscodependency.com .

© Darlene Lancer 2012

Author's Bio: 

Darlene Lancer is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and author of Codependency for Dummies . She has a broad range of experience, working with individuals and couples for over twenty-five years. Her focus is on helping individuals overcome obstacles to leading fuller lives, and helping couples enhance their communication, intimacy, and passion. She is a speaker, freelance writer, and maintains private practice in Santa Monica, CA. For more information and a free ebook, "14 Tips for Letting Go," see http://www.darlenelancer.com . You can also follow her on Facebook.