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  • Evaluate Before You React to Stress
    2025/07/22

    The second step in the peace framework teaches us how to evaluate our stressful situations by asking better questions before taking action. Evaluation helps us shift from being reactive to intentional by creating mental space between our triggers and responses.

    • Evaluation means getting curious before you get reactive
    • Simple evaluation questions include: what's actually happening right now? What story am I telling myself about this?
    • Mental space clearing technique involves taking 60 seconds to step back from the situation
    • Evaluation moves us from fiction to reality – we often react to the story we tell ourselves, not what's actually happening
    • Examples of evaluation in daily life include receiving blunt texts, being stuck in traffic, or feeling irritated with children
    • The spiritual dimension of evaluation asks "what am I being invited to see differently?"
    • Evaluating through prayer helps us see situations and people with greater compassion
    • Evaluation makes room for wisdom by slowing down in a world that wants you to rush

    Visit jonathan-hale.com to book time with Jonathan as your peace coach. Peace is not passive, it's a practice and you're not alone on the journey.


    https://jonathan-hale.com/

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    17 分
  • Press the Pause Button on Stress
    2025/07/15

    The Pause is your first powerful step toward finding peace in stressful moments, creating space to choose your response instead of defaulting to reaction. This practice interrupts the momentum of stress by creating a gap between trigger and response, allowing you to respond with intention rather than react automatically.

    • Stress doesn't arrive politely—it barges in through everyday moments like frustrating texts, traffic jams, and difficult conversations
    • Our automatic reactions to stress (snapping, shutting down, overthinking) are human, not failures of character
    • The pause turns down the heat on stress, like turning off a burner when a pot boils over
    • Simple pause practices include taking a breath before responding to criticism, stepping away briefly, or saying "I'll get back to you"
    • Building a pause habit in easy moments makes it available during difficult times
    • Pausing has a spiritual dimension—"Be still and know"—creating space to hear guidance beyond our own thinking
    • This practice works whether you approach life practically or spiritually, shifting you from reaction to response

    If this episode spoke to you, I'd love for you to follow and share it with someone who wants to bring more peace into their life. Visit my website at jonathan-hale.com to book some time with me. Peace is not passive, it's a practice and you're not alone on the journey.


    https://jonathan-hale.com/

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    14 分