You can't undo anything you have already done. But you can face up to it. You can tell the truth. You can seek for- giveness. And let God do the rest. Unknown |
We celebrate the sanity enjoy-ed when we see life realistically.
Awareness. It's a good start, but in-complete. It's eighty-eight percent of the answer when dealing with prob-lems. There's no remedy without first noticing the problem.
The ancient Greeks said, "If we aim at nothing, that is ex-actly what we get." Being intentional about the areas where we want to grow is essential, to get the life we deserve and want.
Awareness. It's a good start, but in-complete. It's eighty-eight percent of the answer when dealing with prob-lems. There's no remedy without first noticing the problem.
The ancient Greeks said, "If we aim at nothing, that is ex-actly what we get." Being intentional about the areas where we want to grow is essential, to get the life we deserve and want.
Awareness helps us overcome life's challenges and disappoint-ments. With it, we enjoy progress. Our learning curve spikes.
And life improves.
Negative circum-stances lingering, for months----perhaps years---are overcome quickly, when using awareness, when our problems have our full attention.
Awareness is taking ownership of our feelings, attitudes, and behavior. We take responsibility for our pain, life's difficulties or emotional disappointments. With honesty towards ourselves, we see our part regarding our plight.
Vigilance, or awareness about the areas where we want to grow is necessary for a productive, fulfilling life.
Recovery teaches us that no one can make us happy, sad, angry or have any other feel-ing without us giving them permission to do so. Our feelings are our property, we take ownership of them. This truth is essential for personal growth.
Ownership of our emotions is taking our life back. We move beyond moping over our history. We deal with the experience of our past.
We consider what steps we can take to remedy our past pain. Recov-ery allows us to be present.
Those who negatively affect us may not be able to change. They may lack the perspective to see their troubling values or behav
-ior----areas hindering our relationship with them. Nor may they have the tools to improve their lives.
That's okay.
Dealing with the experience of our past pain moves us from relying on those who have hurt us. They no longer need to change or apologize for us to be happy. Our happiness is no longer conditional, dependent upon a turn around in the victimizer's behavior.
We find ways of moving on. We are no longer anchored by bitterness harbor-ed towards those who have harmed us. We show gentleness to-wards ourselves.
Kindness towards our fears is applied. We meet the needs beneath them. We go for a walk, talk with a friend, or curl up with a book we love.
We associate with emotionally healthy individuals, we apply bound-aries towards those who see us. We nurture ourselves with more rest, better meals, by studying material that empowers and imspires.
This is staying in the solution. Instead of cursing the darkness, we light a candle.
We move beyond grief, painful scars and anger. We replace the inadequate response of bitterness with better behavior, thinking, and forgiveness. We learn that "Forgiveness is not forgetting, it is letting go of the hurt." When we do, our lives move forward unencoumbered by the weight of ancient emotions.
"Acting like a victim is a choice, not a destiny." Hope for Today, p. 189
Happiness and personal fulfillment is ours when we take own-ership for our feelings. We become emotionally mature when we surrender playing the "Poor Me Victim" role. Our life vastly improves as we replace inadequate behavior and dysfunctional thinking with new and better alternatives. (One Day At A Time, p. 280)"Freedom comes from taking responsibility; bondage comes from giving it away." Henry Cloud, Changes that Heal, p. 218
Rooting Out the Problem
The Vital Need for Acceptance
It's vital moving beyond awareness. Awareness is inspecting our issues from a cognitive perspective. Acceptance is next.
It is taking the perspective awareness provides and dealing with our issues from the emotional perspective, from the heart level. This step is often overlooked. We usually focus on solving the problem. This is trimming the shrub of diffi-culties, not rooting them out.
Using only our head, our challenges are guaranteed to return.
Acceptance is being in touch with the issue at the visceral level. It involves five steps. It is:
1. Seeing the vexing area.
2. Feeling our re-sponse to it.
3. Taking our feelings a step further. We grieve the loss involved.
4. Letting the negative sentiments go---often through forgiveness. Forgiveness is not forgetting, it is letting go of the hurt.
5. Seeing what steps we need to take, looking at options that allow us to move beyond our pain.
This involves connecting with others, getting their support. It requires determining the fears beneath troubling issues. Next, is seeing the needs beneath what agitates us and seeing how we can show kindness towards these needs.
Acceptance is pausing while in the midst of a situational or emotional hurricane.
Pausing gives us the space needed to choose better responses. It calms our emotional self. When we are aware of what is happening in the moment we have vertical integration, our mind comes into play.
It comforts our agitated feelings.
With vertical integration our mind goes online. No longer frantic, we have greater emotional balance. We also have a better sense of well-being, along with greater executive functioning.
Acceptance helps remove ten percent of the problem. Acceptance is not resignation, "Oh, this is my lot in life. I have to tolerate it." It is taking action, not yielding to what's unacceptable.
It is staying in the solution.
Here's another critical point: many go straight from aware-ness to action. "I see the problem, and now, this is what I need to do....." and we design an action plan. Bad idea.
When responding this way we are only involving our mind. The heart level plays a part, too. Acceptance is rooting out the problem.
When was the last time we made time, determining why we isolate, or inventoried a perturbing area? Examining the source for festering issues is critical for mental, emotional and physical health.
Connecting at the gut level is crucial. If we want healing from pain. Negative feelings are remedied when they are tended to, not ignored.
It is wise looking for the emotional payoff for our unhealthy behavior and limiting beliefs.
When was the last time we did an inventory of our thinking, checking for false beliefs? When have we noted lingering childhood feelings that keep us caged with depression and powerlessness? We want to challenge current behavior formed as a child, young adult.
It's characterologically healing, to ask ourselves if our habitual feelings or thoughts are really true. It's important noting that as children, we may not have had the emotional and psychological wherewithal to process our pain. As adults, it is more likely we do.
For this to happen, we need psychological or emotional distance. It helps us clearly see areas needing growth. We get this from emotionally healthy friends who accept us.
When we fail, they are compassionate. They don't judge us our weaknesses. Instead, they help us discover behavior and thoughts that serve our need to thrive and celebrate life.
We thrive when surrounded by friends who loves us. Yes, they challenge us, asking hard questions about our feelings, attitudes, and behavior. But they still love us. This is necessary to replace problemed areas in our lives with new and better behavior.
The Shoe Leather of Personal Growth
Awareness of what triggers us is helpful. Handling the emotions that surface---meeting the needs beneath them is even more critical. Next, is applying the shoe leather of practical action. An action plan is a bridge that takes us from our need to the steps necessary for us to have the life and peace of mind we want.
Donning the shoes of practical principles and actions help us when we are out in the street of life. They assist us in handling life's demands. We want to apply healthy alternatives. We want to move away from unhelpful default modes. We want to replace unsuccessful former ap-proaches with new and better behavior.
Practical principles permit us to tread upon the gravelly aspects of life without being harmed.
Action is the remaining two percent needed for handling painful areas. There you have it, the Three A's. Awareness deals with the head, acceptance with the heart and action with the feet (what we do). Applying healthier alternatives---staying in the solution---helps us move beyond what were once monuments of our past pain.
We will enjoy better relationships, sanity, serenity, emotional health, and ease.
******
Recently, life offers more drama than I care for.
I not sleeping much. No fun. Am I complaining? I hope not. Inventorying the past few weeks, that's all. Awareness precedes improvements.
Being Kind Towards Myself
I lost a notebook containing important records. Telephone numbers listed within are not recorded on my phone. It included a lot of my writings. I'm frustrated and annoyed with myself."We achieve inner health only through forgiveness - the forgiveness not only of others but also of ourselves." - Joshua Loth Liebman
Occasions like these allow the practice of patience. It reminds me to be gentle towards myself. This means forgiving me.
I'm human. My recent behavior is like many, when stressed in different areas. Life has been unmanageable.
I'm thankful for several supporting me today. Their insight and wisdom provide clarity I don't have right now. I feel scattered. Their humor lifts my spirit when, without recovery, I would be in the dark tunnel of despair.
I provide myself with greater clarity by spending time with friends today.
I don't take life's gifts for granted. This includes friends. Life is tense without them. Some of you, guests to this inn, are included in this group.
I value prayer. Without it, I'd be lost. I've discovered over the years that I'm as strong spiritually as I am in my prayer.
How About You?
Which of the three A's are you using to deal with a rocky area in your life?
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing about your life and for sharing your gratitudes too!
My gratitudes for today:
1) An abundance of vegetables, hand-picked from my garden. Amazing! I can't wait to begin munching away!
2) Soothing teas.
3) Talking with someone who I admire and being able to open up and receive their guidance and wisdom (vitamin recommendations and a book that I can't wait to start reading)!
4) Identifying the areas in my life that require an immediate improvement and feeling excited to begin the process of change.
5) Finding a little time for "me" time. I need to decompress and relax and I finally have a little bit of time to do that :)
Have a wonderful evening!
Thank you for dropping by!
You don't know how glad it makes the innkeeper, when guests post their gratitudes. He does a happy dance whenever that happens. :->
Morgan, I appreciate your gratitudes; they meet my need for celebration, even for the small and simple things in life, like tea and Quiet Time alone. I'm impressed: you are investing in yourself. Kudos to you!
I find life is rich when filled with simple pleasures. May you have a wonderful new week, starting with today, Monday!
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