PANIC: 3 Ways You Can Turn Panic Into Happiness
by Ed and Deb Shapiro
Authors:BE THE CHANGE- How Meditation Can Transform You and the World. EdandDebShapiro.com
Posted: August 13, 2009
We are witnessing an outbreak of panic and fear as people in the US respond with misunderstanding and ignorance to falsely perceived threats to their welfare. There is a tremendous fear of and resistance to change, which cause further suffering.
Panic affects us all at different times, but for some it dominates their day-to-day life. "I had panic all through my childhood until I was 13. I grew up at the base of the Himalaya Mountains and I was afraid of snowstorms, earthquakes, fire, and sometimes for no reason – I was just fearful, I did not sleep well, I panicked very easily."
We were talking with Mingyur Rinpoche, a Tibetan Buddhist teacher, about his new book, Joyful Wisdom. He is openly honest about what he has been through. However, Mingyur did something with his panic that few of us are able to: where most of us feel overcome by panic or try to suppress it, he made friends with it — he turned his enemy into his ally.
"There are two ways we actually make panic worse: we say Yes Sir to it, or Get Out. If we say Yes Sir then we do anything that the panic wants us to do, we let it rule us. But if we fear panic or try to get rid of it, and we say Get Out, then this just makes panic into the enemy. Either way, panic gets bigger and we become less able to cope."
So how can you turn panic into your friend? The answer is surprisingly simple: by becoming aware of it. "Awareness means seeing it, feeling it, and then panic becomes many different pieces: physical sensations, emotions, frightened images, words, thoughts. So awareness is of all the pieces. If you are not aware of the panic then you are a victim of it; awareness is saying hello and inviting it in."
Turning your panic into happiness:
1. Become aware of the panic. Seeing it for what it is without judgment, that it is neither good or bad.
2. Shift your focus away from Yes Sir or Get Out. Normally, when we are panicked, our breathing is shallow and rapid. To help you shift the focus you can bring your
breathing down to the belly, away from the panic. Soft belly breathing: breathing deeply all the way in and out, then relaxing and breathing in again slowly, with a soft and relaxed belly.
3. Develop love and compassion by becoming a friend to yourself. Then you can understand that others panic, that every person in every moment, every breath, every thought, every movement, is looking for happiness – we are no different, we all want the same, we are all part of the big family.
Amazingly, Mingyur was just 13 years old when he discovered the transformative power of meditation. The more he practiced, the more he was able to be with the panic and not let it run his life. "Meditation enabled me to witness my panic. Normally my busy monkey mind ran the show by telling me to be panicked or to hide. Meditation gave me greater freedom of the mind as it gave a job to the monkey mind and I become the boss."
"Who makes problems? We humans. And who is the controller of the human? The mind. And how to control the human mind? Through meditation. If you can control the pilot, then the pilot can control the plane," says Mingyur in our new book, Be the Change: How Meditation Can Transform You and the World
In this way, panic can become our friend and teacher, something we can learn so much from about ourselves. "Panic pushed me into understanding myself more deeply, it opened my heart so that I have greater understanding that others are suffering too."
Sitting quietly in meditation, can silently repeat: May I have happiness and causes of happiness. May I be well, may I be peaceful, may others be well, may others be peaceful.
Do you have stories of when you were able to transform panic? Do comment below. You can receive notice of our blogs every Thursday by checking Become a Fan at the top.

You can pre-order a copy of our book at: Be the Change: How Meditation Can Transform You and the World It will be published Nov 3.
Ed and Deb Shapiro's new book, BE THE CHANGE, How Meditation Can Transform You And The World, forewords by the Dalai Lama and Robert Thurman, with contributors such as Marianne Williamson, astronaut Edgar Mitchell, Ellen Burstyn, Michael Beckwith, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Jane Fonda, Jack Kornfield, Byron Katie, Dean Ornish, Ed Begley, Gangaji, Dan Millman, Russell Bishop, and others, will be published Nov 3 2009 by Sterling Ethos.
Deb is the author of the award-winning book YOUR BODY SPEAKS YOUR MIND. Ed and Deb are the authors of over 15 books, and lead meditation retreats and workshops. They are corporate consultants, and the creators of Chillout daily inspirational text messages on Sprint cell phones. See: www.EdandDebShapiro.com
Filed under Blog by
Leave a Comment
Comments on PANIC: 3 Ways You Can Turn Panic Into Happiness
Every paniky sad or bad situation that happens in life can be turned to an advantage if we analyse it, then pick out the good parts that can drive us forward in a posive and motivated way
an example to this is that I lost my wife through a terminal Ilness( Multiple Sclerosis ) and I could blame life on my looking after her for 20 years till her death in 1992 But!
I loved my wife and I use those years of looking after her as a determined drive to rebuild my life for every time something bad or awkward happens I change my mindset into a determined drive and come back harder and fiecer than ever before for I am building my life in my wifes memory and name
A quite time and meditation may work but I have never realy tried it for I focus on results and progress
Ray
Panic is an automatic subconscious mind taking over our undecided conscious mind to a certain event(s). When we can not make up our mind (conscioursly) then the unconscious mind take over. Or, in many cases, we have construct our unconscious mind for a certain event or situation that we are to lazy to think about, then automatically taken over by our constructed conscious mind.