In an attempt to shift focus from situations in my life I struggle with and/or have no control over, I'm going to today, focus on things I'm grateful for.
This is a common thread in religion.
"Count your blessings"
The effort this takes varies day by day.
When it's sunny, work is productive, and the birds are singing, it's easy to be grateful and show gratitude for the positive things in our life.
It's almost as if, when the sun is out, it makes our internal perspective shine that much brighter. The physical effects the visceral.
I always understood why ancient civilizations worshipped the sun, or sun gods.
Sol, Mithra etc...
What about when the day wasn't so good?
Our boss beat us down, our friends cancelled on us, our family was inconsiderate, the day was cold and dreary...
Maybe nothing "bad" even happened.
We're just soaked to the bone in apathy.
Life's uncertainties, like a petulant child, yank on our arms and hands, pulling down. Nagging. Ripping our sleeves.
Incessant and unforgiving.
Maybe we no longer have something we once had.
Something that brought us joy and centered us.
Now it's just me.
Sure, I like me.
Right?
How easy is it to show gratitude during these moments?
Because it's in these moments, feeling gratitude, is most important.
Gratitude doesn't come as easy as grumbling does. But when you begin putting forth intentional effort to give attention to things you're thankful for, it has a magnetizing power.
I never thought of myself as a grumbler.
Until I realized that just because I don't often vocalize negativity, didn't mean I never harbored it.
It's easy to see things you wish were different.
Things you have no control over.
Things that cause pain.
Because pain is louder than contentment.
Pain is the oboe of emotions.
It's not booming loud, but it's nagging and nasal and it demands your attention. (Ha)
So while we allow pain to exist.
We don't give it any more attention than it deserves.
See it and let it pass.
Suffering does serve a purpose. Without suffering, one could argue, joy would not even exist.
Let us instead think of things we are grateful for.
Commit to doing this everyday.
In the morning. Or maybe in bed before bed. Driving to work perhaps.
What am I grateful for?
I'm grateful for my mother. She'll drop everything and come see me if I need her. She makes me laugh and grit my teeth. I'm grateful I have her determined and hardworking genes.
I'm grateful for my father, who is the most calm, mild and deeply compassionate person I know. He doesn't speak much, because still waters run deep. Our bond is unlike any other, and he'll let me hug him indefinitely without pulling away.
I'm grateful for my younger brother who I can be completely and utterly unedited with and I trust more than anyone in the world. His heart is the purest I know.
I'm grateful for my sister who makes me laugh and I can pour my heart out to her and always be met with camaraderie and a kindred heart.
I'm grateful I have a friend I can call or text at all hours and always be met with compassion and calm understanding and non judgment.
This person will send me random texts and emails telling me I'm special. They've cried with me and held my hand during hard times.
I'm grateful I have another friend who is so intuitive, they'll sense when I need to talk or even invite me over at the drop of a hat for a good purging. She doesn't indulge my emotions but tells me exactly what I need to hear, even when I don't want to.
I'm grateful today for the sun shining.
I'm grateful for the roof over my head and my semi warm apartment.
I'm grateful for food in my belly.
I'm grateful for writing.
I'm grateful for my job and hilarious co-workers.
I'm grateful for music, my therapy. Music is always there for me. A constant source of inspiration and mood elevation.
I'm grateful for my comfortable bed.
I'm grateful for nature. Being able to be immersed in nature, breathe fresh air, feel the sun.
I'm grateful for candles for making my studio apartment feel more like home:)
That came easier than I thought.
You should try it:)
Let us make an honest effort everyday, to mentally ponder the good things we have.
I think you'll be surprised how they pour out.
Writings of a therapeutic nature, based in honest, self-evaluating internal rhetoric. With a goal to organize and improve quality of life. These writings are both to myself and people I give consideration to based in love, respect and understanding. This will also be an outlet for general thoughts on various topics, meant with no one specific in mind. Some writings may be emotional in nature. Some writings may be simply contemplative. Some may not make much sense at all.
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
A letter...
I don't like to live with regrets.
Who does?
But I think all of us, had we the chance, would go back a change a few things in our life.
Even despite the lessons gleaned from the experiences.
At what point are life lessons not justified?
How many lessons can one person digest before it's too much?
Does it ever come to that point?
Our life's tapestry has a few snags.
Some severe tears in the colorful threads, distorting entire sections of the design.
It's still beautiful.
The colors are vibrant and eye catching.
Certain parts you could stare at for hours.
There's real beauty.
It reminds me of a large mural at Village Gate here in Rochester.
This painting is oranges and reds and yellows on one end.
Abstract pointalism and fractals and splatters and nonsense.
And yellows and greens on the other end that somehow cohesively blends in the middle.
It's a wonderful metaphorical piece.
The first time I saw it, I looked at it for several minutes.
What would you change?
Honestly.
If I had the chance to go backwards, I'd change a couple things.
I'd tweak a few events, my reactions, my perspective...
Only things I had the power to change.
------------
I'd plead with my naive self to speak up.
Tell someone.
Don't feel like you have to protect anyone when you did nothing wrong.
Stop assigning blame to yourself which should be assigned to someone who knows better.
They are lying to you.
Don't listen when they say it's your fault.
You're a child.
Don't wait 17 years to be honest.
This is going to set up a pattern in your life of allowing people to use you as a doormat.
It'll be one of those doormats with an inspirational saying, or maybe even a funny quip!
But a doormat nonetheless.
Because in that 17 years you'll have to suppress so much, that the only way you'll function is by developing this thick shell.
It'll be mined from a deep, murky place and have the appearance of strength.
It'll be coated with humor and sarcasm.
It might even be shiny and optimistic!
People will always comment on your smiling and upbeat personality.
You'll be your mother's "personal comedian".
But this shell is dense.
And 17 years later when it finally cracks a tiny bit, your world will implode.
But you had to do it.
You had to be honest
This will be a divisive time in your family.
People will move away.
Confusion will ensue.
You'll question your choice.
you had to do it.
Love will dominate as it always has, but now with serious, intentional effort.
Effort to overlook.
How can someone overlook it?
---------
If I could go back I'd tell this 15 year old girl to tell her boss what he did.
Don't quit your job out of fear.
Don't quit your job to protect that person.
It's not okay.
--------
If I could go back I would tell this young 17 year old girl to run for her life.
That just because you commiserate with someone, doesn't mean you can help him be happy.
Trust your gut when you give him the ring back a month before the wedding.
I would tell her you're going to spend the entirety of your twenties attempting to uplift someone who is incapable of change.
You can't change people.
They have to do that themselves.
Oh but he'll beg for your help sometimes.
Your empathy will expand. You're going to have moments where you question everything.
No. More than moments.
Years.
You'll stay because of your blind loyalty.
That vow.
You'll stay despite dangerous and unstable conditions.
Because your pattern is to forgive and protect those who cause you harm.
You'll overlook so much it's absolutely, staggeringly, preposterous.
You'll downplay things to such an extent that you're downright lying to yourself.
Because how else will you tolerate it?
You have permission to pack up and leave.
Give yourself permission.
This is dangerous.
Don't wait years to tell.
Call your sister the first time.
You're sitting in your car.
Her number is dialed, just press send.
Don't exhaust every option before you feel like it's okay to leave.
Because I promise you, western pharmaceuticals won't help.
Herbal medication won't help.
Counseling won't help.
The congregation elders' shepherding calls won't help. They'll try!
His family won't help. They'll certainly try.
Your family won't help. They'll certainly try!
And you, you won't help him.
You'll spend 10 years of blood, sweat and tears to get that man to simply behave like a level headed human being, and it won't do a thing.
Because he's broken.
It won't matter how submissive and understanding you are.
It won't matter how many times you apologize for things that weren't your fault.
It won't matter how loving, affectionate and empathetic you are.
He won't change, even though he wants to and he loves you so much.
It doesn't change anything.
It doesn't matter that you're the only person he's ever really loved.
He will convince you he'll change.
He'll get you to crawl back every time.
Don't.
DON'T.
-----------
When you move away... And you befriend someone who has had similar experiences... Eerily similar... don't think you can help them.
You can't.
Just because you found the strength to leave, doesn't mean they're ready yet.
They may not ever be.
Your hearts will intertwine with kindred hope.
The bond will be strong. Different from what you've known.
You'll have conversations hours long.
Heavy hearts and wet faces.
Declarations.
Curled into a ball on the floor, they'll need comfort...
Let her win.
Because it was never a competition.
She'll dominate.
Focus on becoming more mindful.
Focus on your well being.
You won't help things.
Stop hoping, because it hurts...
Eventually you'll see things happened for a reason.
You can't see them right now, because it's too cloudy.
But you're the sky.
When the weather passes it'll be so obvious what the next steps will be.
It won't even feel like a decision it'll be so fluid.
And stop trying to figure it out.
Be present.
Go outside.
Write until it's 4 am if you need to.
The dreams will stop..6 days in a row now...
Keep learning.
Keep reading.
Be more conscious.
Be kind.
Don't judge.
You don't know what's going to happen.
Ever.
You've been through a lot of bad.
But you've had so much good in your life too.
The struggles don't define you.
They softened and sharpened you where you've needed it.
Your new friends are a gift.
Don't take them for granted.
But don't rely on them too much either.
You have to pick yourself up.
You've done it before, you can do it again.
And when you get shut out, doesn't mean you close your door too.
Always be available for those you love.
You never know when someone will need you.
It's ok to feel hurt.
Be open despite the hurt.
There are no absolutes.
You don't know what will happen down the road.
Set your intentions, be honest, and surrender.
Who does?
But I think all of us, had we the chance, would go back a change a few things in our life.
Even despite the lessons gleaned from the experiences.
At what point are life lessons not justified?
How many lessons can one person digest before it's too much?
Does it ever come to that point?
Our life's tapestry has a few snags.
Some severe tears in the colorful threads, distorting entire sections of the design.
It's still beautiful.
The colors are vibrant and eye catching.
Certain parts you could stare at for hours.
There's real beauty.
It reminds me of a large mural at Village Gate here in Rochester.
This painting is oranges and reds and yellows on one end.
Abstract pointalism and fractals and splatters and nonsense.
And yellows and greens on the other end that somehow cohesively blends in the middle.
It's a wonderful metaphorical piece.
The first time I saw it, I looked at it for several minutes.
What would you change?
Honestly.
If I had the chance to go backwards, I'd change a couple things.
I'd tweak a few events, my reactions, my perspective...
Only things I had the power to change.
------------
I'd plead with my naive self to speak up.
Tell someone.
Don't feel like you have to protect anyone when you did nothing wrong.
Stop assigning blame to yourself which should be assigned to someone who knows better.
They are lying to you.
Don't listen when they say it's your fault.
You're a child.
Don't wait 17 years to be honest.
This is going to set up a pattern in your life of allowing people to use you as a doormat.
It'll be one of those doormats with an inspirational saying, or maybe even a funny quip!
But a doormat nonetheless.
Because in that 17 years you'll have to suppress so much, that the only way you'll function is by developing this thick shell.
It'll be mined from a deep, murky place and have the appearance of strength.
It'll be coated with humor and sarcasm.
It might even be shiny and optimistic!
People will always comment on your smiling and upbeat personality.
You'll be your mother's "personal comedian".
But this shell is dense.
And 17 years later when it finally cracks a tiny bit, your world will implode.
But you had to do it.
You had to be honest
This will be a divisive time in your family.
People will move away.
Confusion will ensue.
You'll question your choice.
you had to do it.
Love will dominate as it always has, but now with serious, intentional effort.
Effort to overlook.
How can someone overlook it?
---------
If I could go back I'd tell this 15 year old girl to tell her boss what he did.
Don't quit your job out of fear.
Don't quit your job to protect that person.
It's not okay.
--------
If I could go back I would tell this young 17 year old girl to run for her life.
That just because you commiserate with someone, doesn't mean you can help him be happy.
Trust your gut when you give him the ring back a month before the wedding.
I would tell her you're going to spend the entirety of your twenties attempting to uplift someone who is incapable of change.
You can't change people.
They have to do that themselves.
Oh but he'll beg for your help sometimes.
Your empathy will expand. You're going to have moments where you question everything.
No. More than moments.
Years.
You'll stay because of your blind loyalty.
That vow.
You'll stay despite dangerous and unstable conditions.
Because your pattern is to forgive and protect those who cause you harm.
You'll overlook so much it's absolutely, staggeringly, preposterous.
You'll downplay things to such an extent that you're downright lying to yourself.
Because how else will you tolerate it?
You have permission to pack up and leave.
Give yourself permission.
This is dangerous.
Don't wait years to tell.
Call your sister the first time.
You're sitting in your car.
Her number is dialed, just press send.
Don't exhaust every option before you feel like it's okay to leave.
Because I promise you, western pharmaceuticals won't help.
Herbal medication won't help.
Counseling won't help.
The congregation elders' shepherding calls won't help. They'll try!
His family won't help. They'll certainly try.
Your family won't help. They'll certainly try!
And you, you won't help him.
You'll spend 10 years of blood, sweat and tears to get that man to simply behave like a level headed human being, and it won't do a thing.
Because he's broken.
It won't matter how submissive and understanding you are.
It won't matter how many times you apologize for things that weren't your fault.
It won't matter how loving, affectionate and empathetic you are.
He won't change, even though he wants to and he loves you so much.
It doesn't change anything.
It doesn't matter that you're the only person he's ever really loved.
He will convince you he'll change.
He'll get you to crawl back every time.
Don't.
DON'T.
-----------
When you move away... And you befriend someone who has had similar experiences... Eerily similar... don't think you can help them.
You can't.
Just because you found the strength to leave, doesn't mean they're ready yet.
They may not ever be.
Your hearts will intertwine with kindred hope.
The bond will be strong. Different from what you've known.
You'll have conversations hours long.
Heavy hearts and wet faces.
Declarations.
Curled into a ball on the floor, they'll need comfort...
Let her win.
Because it was never a competition.
She'll dominate.
Focus on becoming more mindful.
Focus on your well being.
You won't help things.
Stop hoping, because it hurts...
Eventually you'll see things happened for a reason.
You can't see them right now, because it's too cloudy.
But you're the sky.
When the weather passes it'll be so obvious what the next steps will be.
It won't even feel like a decision it'll be so fluid.
And stop trying to figure it out.
Be present.
Go outside.
Write until it's 4 am if you need to.
The dreams will stop..6 days in a row now...
Keep learning.
Keep reading.
Be more conscious.
Be kind.
Don't judge.
You don't know what's going to happen.
Ever.
You've been through a lot of bad.
But you've had so much good in your life too.
The struggles don't define you.
They softened and sharpened you where you've needed it.
Your new friends are a gift.
Don't take them for granted.
But don't rely on them too much either.
You have to pick yourself up.
You've done it before, you can do it again.
And when you get shut out, doesn't mean you close your door too.
Always be available for those you love.
You never know when someone will need you.
It's ok to feel hurt.
Be open despite the hurt.
There are no absolutes.
You don't know what will happen down the road.
Set your intentions, be honest, and surrender.
Monday, December 18, 2017
You only lose what you cling to...
In dealing with any sort of loss you're forced to learn about it.
Life slaps us until we get it, or until we break and then we get it.
The way I've found I handle difficult situtions is by researching and trying to understand not just my personal feelings, but productive ways to glean lessons from each experience.
This takes more effort than I ever thought possible and If I'm being honest, is very difficult.
But it is always rewarded with a calmer sense of myself and more peace. Even if only for a moment.
I'm constantly unlearning. And in unlearning, I'm unburdening myself.
Of what?
Of expectations.
Even if it's only moments of clarity, they are coming more frequently now.
I'm beyond blessed to have people in my life who help redirect my line of thought and care without any expectations in return.
In an effort to hold onto or grasp tightly something that has brought you true joy, it's often possible to lose the thing itself.
When you cling to something, what you're really chasing is the image or illusion of the thing.
An idea
A mirage
Nothing is permanent and you can't fully experience existence if you cling to what is passing.
So just experience it.
I think princess Leia said it best when speaking to Grand Moff Tarkin when she stated, "The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers." :)
We live in a culture of attachment. We try to fill the void with things, people, distractions...when what we probably should be doing is focusing on our inner person and refining ourself.
Healing ourself.
What a big pill to swallow.
It's so much easier to focus on other people.
Because when we focus on ourselves even for a moment, we might come face to face with things we have been avoiding.
Unravel the rope and unbind yourself.
That which wraps around you, constricts you.
I sometimes have expectations or hopes when it comes to people in my life. I'm human.
Yet in clinging to these, I find I am causing suffering to myself.
People are only capable of what they are capable of, and nothing more.
They have aspirations to be more conscious, mindful and self-aware and they have the best intentions.
They speak with openness and their words are saturated with clarity and resonate deeply.
Yet the space they are in doesn't fully allow them to act in accordance with their words. Who can?
This is difficult for everyone
But attachment to outcomes causes inextricable grief.
We create this beautiful outcome in our mind of what we wish so deeply to happen. We mold it like we're molding partially dry playdough.
It resists. It isn't pliable.
When we try to control movement rather than letting it flow, we needlessly waste energy.
That's when our emotions take control.
What's scary is that we close ourselves off to what actually is.
Rigidity sets in. Like Stone.
So do not unintentionally forecast and do not weep for the past
When we resist, strife thrives.
Set our intentions and surrender to them.
What is it I want?
Peace.
Deep contentment.
Inner happiness.
More specifically,
Loving friends
Health
Honest and real love
I am accepting that I have no control over anything but myself.
None.
I don't know what's going to happen in 2 minutes, much less 2 weeks or 2 years.
The more tightly we hold onto something, in an atempt to control it, the more chaos that creates.
This causes frustration and struggle.
That door stays shut and bolted.
It turns to iron. Cold and immovable.
But what if you opened up a window. Imagine the endless possibilities that could flow through it that you could never imagine were even possible.
Release.
In clutching and grasping and cracking our nailbeds, bloody, to hold onto something that should be let go, we're missing out.
On harmony.
Opportunity.
Awakening
Equanimity
On Life.
Surrendering is gentle. It feels calm. Then it feels scary.
Because it's extremely easy to talk a good talk about being mindful and in the present.
But to actually surrender...especially when the heart is involved...
Contraction and expansion.
We can feel when we've stopped doing and started being.
We feel contraction in our chest and gut.
There's tightness. Unease.
We feel expansion in a manifestation of lightness.
We feel openness and peace in our heart or our abdomen or our neck.
We can sleep peacefully through the night.
I'm attempting.
I'm unlearning.
I hashtag #acceptance and #peace :)
I know I'll get there.
So close your eyes and take a deep inhale.
Exhale.
How are you feeling right now?
Life slaps us until we get it, or until we break and then we get it.
The way I've found I handle difficult situtions is by researching and trying to understand not just my personal feelings, but productive ways to glean lessons from each experience.
This takes more effort than I ever thought possible and If I'm being honest, is very difficult.
But it is always rewarded with a calmer sense of myself and more peace. Even if only for a moment.
I'm constantly unlearning. And in unlearning, I'm unburdening myself.
Of what?
Of expectations.
Even if it's only moments of clarity, they are coming more frequently now.
I'm beyond blessed to have people in my life who help redirect my line of thought and care without any expectations in return.
In an effort to hold onto or grasp tightly something that has brought you true joy, it's often possible to lose the thing itself.
When you cling to something, what you're really chasing is the image or illusion of the thing.
An idea
A mirage
Nothing is permanent and you can't fully experience existence if you cling to what is passing.
So just experience it.
I think princess Leia said it best when speaking to Grand Moff Tarkin when she stated, "The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers." :)
We live in a culture of attachment. We try to fill the void with things, people, distractions...when what we probably should be doing is focusing on our inner person and refining ourself.
Healing ourself.
What a big pill to swallow.
It's so much easier to focus on other people.
Because when we focus on ourselves even for a moment, we might come face to face with things we have been avoiding.
Unravel the rope and unbind yourself.
That which wraps around you, constricts you.
I sometimes have expectations or hopes when it comes to people in my life. I'm human.
Yet in clinging to these, I find I am causing suffering to myself.
People are only capable of what they are capable of, and nothing more.
They have aspirations to be more conscious, mindful and self-aware and they have the best intentions.
They speak with openness and their words are saturated with clarity and resonate deeply.
Yet the space they are in doesn't fully allow them to act in accordance with their words. Who can?
This is difficult for everyone
But attachment to outcomes causes inextricable grief.
We create this beautiful outcome in our mind of what we wish so deeply to happen. We mold it like we're molding partially dry playdough.
It resists. It isn't pliable.
When we try to control movement rather than letting it flow, we needlessly waste energy.
That's when our emotions take control.
What's scary is that we close ourselves off to what actually is.
Rigidity sets in. Like Stone.
So do not unintentionally forecast and do not weep for the past
When we resist, strife thrives.
Set our intentions and surrender to them.
What is it I want?
Peace.
Deep contentment.
Inner happiness.
More specifically,
Loving friends
Health
Honest and real love
I am accepting that I have no control over anything but myself.
None.
I don't know what's going to happen in 2 minutes, much less 2 weeks or 2 years.
The more tightly we hold onto something, in an atempt to control it, the more chaos that creates.
This causes frustration and struggle.
That door stays shut and bolted.
It turns to iron. Cold and immovable.
But what if you opened up a window. Imagine the endless possibilities that could flow through it that you could never imagine were even possible.
Release.
In clutching and grasping and cracking our nailbeds, bloody, to hold onto something that should be let go, we're missing out.
On harmony.
Opportunity.
Awakening
Equanimity
On Life.
Surrendering is gentle. It feels calm. Then it feels scary.
Because it's extremely easy to talk a good talk about being mindful and in the present.
But to actually surrender...especially when the heart is involved...
Contraction and expansion.
We can feel when we've stopped doing and started being.
We feel contraction in our chest and gut.
There's tightness. Unease.
We feel expansion in a manifestation of lightness.
We feel openness and peace in our heart or our abdomen or our neck.
We can sleep peacefully through the night.
I'm attempting.
I'm unlearning.
I hashtag #acceptance and #peace :)
I know I'll get there.
So close your eyes and take a deep inhale.
Exhale.
How are you feeling right now?
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Martyrdom
There's great virtue and selflessness in putting others first.
If I were to encapsulate my upbringing, it would be a scripture in 1 Corinthians that states, " That is why if food makes my brother stumble, I will never again eat at all, so that I will not make my brother stumble".
The sentiment is pretty clear. All things we do, should be for the sake of others. To not act in accordance with this would be immoral. Never do anything that might cause unrest to another human being.
Even if that means unrest to our self.
This is Christianity at its core, if you were to boil down all of Jesus' ethical teachings.
Martydom- to constantly live or suffer for the sake of others. Never elevating yourself above anyone.
It's a wonderfully noble idea.
The idea of self-love was not even a thought to me in the slightest growing up.
I couldn't possibly do what's best for me and my needs AND do what's best for another's.
This is because each individual has different needs.
So are we living our life for someone else...
Often times we find we are living a life we weren't quite hoping for.
Most hope for similar things.
Security. Peace. Love.
Yet we find ourselves in drawn out situations that cause unrest and discomfort. We feel that familiar churning in our core, trying so hard to rectify the position we're now cemented into.
We tell ourselves that we want to be where we are. That's our choice.
But is it really? Or are we convincing ourselves because that's easier than disrupting the status quo. It's easier than disrupting the people in our life.
So this begs the question,
What's a sign we're living for someone else?
One thing is that we give in to the demands of someone else.
We're afraid to upset the apple cart.
We're afraid of the reaction.
We'd like to maintain relationships with friends and family who bring love and clarity in our life.
However,
We're asked to limit association with these people, or it's suggested in a very convincing way.
It may be recommended with an air of deep concern for our well being that we put some distance between us and our loved ones.
We'd like to pursue hobbies or a way of life that we feel would enrich our life.
However,
We're made to feel silly for wanting these things. Maybe we're even made to feel selfish.
Do you give into people's demands just to keep the peace?
Another sign is that we're emotionally and mentally exhausted all the time. There's an internal battle within us between what we really want for ourselves and what we're asked to do from someone else.
Slowly we become a different version of our self. A repressed version.
A shell.
Ask yourself, in catering to this person, am I no longer connecting with people in truly meaningful ways?
In the Japanese culture, there's this idea that we have three faces.
One that we show the world.
One that we show only to our friends and family
One that we never show anyone.
When we've stopped connecting- which could be for a plethora of reasons- due to feelings of judgment for our choices, maybe from friends, or fear of someone's reaction-that's when we either consciously or subconsciously show only the first face.
This face is not necessarily disingenuous.
But it is protected. It's walled off which doesn't allow for healthy companionship.
Relationships rely on openness and honesty.
But before you can be open with others, you have to be honest with yourself.
Please, don't spend your life living half heartedly.
Interesting fact.
You're allowed to pack up and start over.
You're allowed to put your mental and emotional health above everything else!
You're the only one who has to live your life.
I wasted the entirety on my 20's trying to make someone happy who was incapable of true happiness. Lasting happiness.
I bent and twisted and contorted myself until I was unrecognizable in an attempt to make them happy.
In doing so, I lost myself completely.
I let myself get to the absolute bottom of the well, starved and scabbed, before I woke up one day after yet another overly reactive episode and I saw things as they actually were.
Because while life is gray, certain things are black and white.
The wrongness of the situation one day changed to black and white.
I just decided one day that I wanted to change.
So I changed.
I'm the only one I can control.
I can't change another human
But I did try. For ten years.
Nothing on earth can describe the feeling of utter liberation once that decision was made. Really made. Permanently.
Driving away from that apartment, on February 14th, while gutting, was to date, the best decision I ever made.
Our life should light us up and fill us with enthusiasm.
No one’s life is a piece of cake and we all have troubles from time to time. However, if this has become a near constant state, we may want to think about making some major adjustments to get back on the path to peace.
Don't spend your precious time on earth, living for someone else.
Would they do the same for you?
If I were to encapsulate my upbringing, it would be a scripture in 1 Corinthians that states, " That is why if food makes my brother stumble, I will never again eat at all, so that I will not make my brother stumble".
The sentiment is pretty clear. All things we do, should be for the sake of others. To not act in accordance with this would be immoral. Never do anything that might cause unrest to another human being.
Even if that means unrest to our self.
This is Christianity at its core, if you were to boil down all of Jesus' ethical teachings.
Martydom- to constantly live or suffer for the sake of others. Never elevating yourself above anyone.
It's a wonderfully noble idea.
The idea of self-love was not even a thought to me in the slightest growing up.
I couldn't possibly do what's best for me and my needs AND do what's best for another's.
This is because each individual has different needs.
So are we living our life for someone else...
Often times we find we are living a life we weren't quite hoping for.
Most hope for similar things.
Security. Peace. Love.
Yet we find ourselves in drawn out situations that cause unrest and discomfort. We feel that familiar churning in our core, trying so hard to rectify the position we're now cemented into.
We tell ourselves that we want to be where we are. That's our choice.
But is it really? Or are we convincing ourselves because that's easier than disrupting the status quo. It's easier than disrupting the people in our life.
So this begs the question,
What's a sign we're living for someone else?
One thing is that we give in to the demands of someone else.
We're afraid to upset the apple cart.
We're afraid of the reaction.
We'd like to maintain relationships with friends and family who bring love and clarity in our life.
However,
We're asked to limit association with these people, or it's suggested in a very convincing way.
It may be recommended with an air of deep concern for our well being that we put some distance between us and our loved ones.
We'd like to pursue hobbies or a way of life that we feel would enrich our life.
However,
We're made to feel silly for wanting these things. Maybe we're even made to feel selfish.
Do you give into people's demands just to keep the peace?
Another sign is that we're emotionally and mentally exhausted all the time. There's an internal battle within us between what we really want for ourselves and what we're asked to do from someone else.
Slowly we become a different version of our self. A repressed version.
A shell.
Ask yourself, in catering to this person, am I no longer connecting with people in truly meaningful ways?
In the Japanese culture, there's this idea that we have three faces.
One that we show the world.
One that we show only to our friends and family
One that we never show anyone.
When we've stopped connecting- which could be for a plethora of reasons- due to feelings of judgment for our choices, maybe from friends, or fear of someone's reaction-that's when we either consciously or subconsciously show only the first face.
This face is not necessarily disingenuous.
But it is protected. It's walled off which doesn't allow for healthy companionship.
Relationships rely on openness and honesty.
But before you can be open with others, you have to be honest with yourself.
Please, don't spend your life living half heartedly.
Interesting fact.
You're allowed to pack up and start over.
You're allowed to put your mental and emotional health above everything else!
You're the only one who has to live your life.
I wasted the entirety on my 20's trying to make someone happy who was incapable of true happiness. Lasting happiness.
I bent and twisted and contorted myself until I was unrecognizable in an attempt to make them happy.
In doing so, I lost myself completely.
I let myself get to the absolute bottom of the well, starved and scabbed, before I woke up one day after yet another overly reactive episode and I saw things as they actually were.
Because while life is gray, certain things are black and white.
The wrongness of the situation one day changed to black and white.
I just decided one day that I wanted to change.
So I changed.
I'm the only one I can control.
I can't change another human
But I did try. For ten years.
Nothing on earth can describe the feeling of utter liberation once that decision was made. Really made. Permanently.
Driving away from that apartment, on February 14th, while gutting, was to date, the best decision I ever made.
Our life should light us up and fill us with enthusiasm.
No one’s life is a piece of cake and we all have troubles from time to time. However, if this has become a near constant state, we may want to think about making some major adjustments to get back on the path to peace.
Don't spend your precious time on earth, living for someone else.
Would they do the same for you?
Sunday, December 10, 2017
What to read when It's hard.
Gregory Alan Isakov- Time Will Tell
It's funny days will go by and nothing changes. The status quo remains uninterrupted.
Then suddenly a year has passed and nothing is the same.
The majority of the changes are so subtle you can't even feel them.
Time passes and you're no longer the person you were a year ago. Six months ago. Yesterday.
And that's okay.
Because we're not supposed to stay the same. We're supposed to evolve. To refine ourselves. To allow life to mold us.
Embrace that change.
There's a story called the Chinese Farmer. It goes roughly like this.
It's funny days will go by and nothing changes. The status quo remains uninterrupted.
Then suddenly a year has passed and nothing is the same.
The majority of the changes are so subtle you can't even feel them.
Time passes and you're no longer the person you were a year ago. Six months ago. Yesterday.
And that's okay.
Because we're not supposed to stay the same. We're supposed to evolve. To refine ourselves. To allow life to mold us.
Embrace that change.
There's a story called the Chinese Farmer. It goes roughly like this.
Once there was a Chinese farmer who worked his poor farm together with his son and their horse. When the horse ran off one day, neighbors came to say, “How unfortunate for you!” The farmer replied, “Maybe yes, maybe no.”
When the horse returned, followed by a herd of wild horses, the neighbors gathered around and exclaimed, “What good luck for you!” The farmer stayed calm and replied, “Maybe yes, maybe no.”
While trying to tame one of wild horses, the farmer’s son fell, and broke his leg. He had to rest up and couldn’t help with the farm chores. “How sad for you,” the neighbors cried. “Maybe yes, maybe no,” said the farmer.
Shortly thereafter, a neighboring army threatened the farmer’s village. All the young men in the village were drafted to fight the invaders. Many died. But the farmer’s son had been left out of the fighting because of his broken leg. People said to the farmer, “What a good thing your son couldn’t fight!” “Maybe yes, maybe no,” was all the farmer said.
While trying to tame one of wild horses, the farmer’s son fell, and broke his leg. He had to rest up and couldn’t help with the farm chores. “How sad for you,” the neighbors cried. “Maybe yes, maybe no,” said the farmer.
Shortly thereafter, a neighboring army threatened the farmer’s village. All the young men in the village were drafted to fight the invaders. Many died. But the farmer’s son had been left out of the fighting because of his broken leg. People said to the farmer, “What a good thing your son couldn’t fight!” “Maybe yes, maybe no,” was all the farmer said.
You don't have be intensely philosophical to understand that from where we're currently standing, we don't know the end of the story we're living. We don't know the twists and turns still to come.
So can we really label things as "good"'or "bad", when we don't know what the consequences of these things will be?
Reflecting back on our life, we'll one day see that things happened the way they were supposed to. And when life felt really wrong at certain moments in our timeline, that was only setting us up for moments that were far better.
Because we cannot appreciate the good, fully appreciate it, if we haven't drowned in some hideously, gut-wrenching and harrowing experiences.
Ones where we've second guessed ourselves, and doubted everything. Ones where we've experienced abhorrence first hand from people or life situations.
Time passes with slight changes. Barely perceptible. A stray strand of hair landing on the back of your hand.
Tiny changes occur and suddenly all those things you thought were holding you down, have receded.
You thought there was no way out, when all of the sudden, like the sunrise teasing the horizon, a pink and orange mist saturates the air...
And the road appears before you.
The things I've learned this past year included acceptance and love.
To accept the things I cannot change. To accept I will not understand everything and everyone, their choices or their actions.
To accept myself. That I am worthy.
Of respect. Of kindness. Of non-judgment.
Of love.
Both self-love, and love from another kindred spirit.
I'm worthy of a simple love that's pure. I'm worthy of having my heart cared for not just by me, but tenderly and compassionately by another if I so choose.
I'm worthy of a simple love that's pure. I'm worthy of having my heart cared for not just by me, but tenderly and compassionately by another if I so choose.
I've learned that I'm capable of giving love. And that despite my cruel past, I'm able to be vulnerable. And I did indeed dive into that and continue to feel the sting of vulnerability.
I learned how to stand up for myself. Not lowering my head to someone who hurts me. Also not elevating myself above anyone.
From my broken heart I learned I have a lot to learn. And that sorrow will lead to happiness. I say this for one reason.
Because the Universe always balances itself out if we respect it enough to take a moment and listen to its direction.
This doesn't always mean following our fickle heart either. Not always.
Sometimes the Universe uses other things to help direct us. Loving friends. Critical thinking. The sage wisdom of teachers. Philosophers.
I learned to take risks. Put myself out there. Tell someone the extent of my feelings, consequences be damned, because I refuse, after a life of submissiveness and tip toeing, to be inauthentic and disingenuous.
Because the only time you ever grow, is when you take part in things that terrify you. The two most terrifying things I've done this year, were cultivate the courage to leave the abusive man I loved for a decade.
The second was to actually express the full scope of my feelings in the most raw, messy and borderline embarrassing way possible.
I fall and I rise as many times as I need to.
It shapes me, and the person I will become.
I'm recognizing that I'm constantly humbled by life, it's situations and the people in it.
I'm proud that the abuse I experienced didn't desensitize me to where I couldn't see the beauty in others and experience love.
I'm proud that the deplorable experiences I've had didn't blind me so badly that I couldn't see when someone mistreated me clearly and take action to create those boundaries. Because setting boundaries as an empath may be the most difficult but life enriching step you will ever make.
I'm proud at my determination to remain non-judgmental. Because one, that's too heavy a burden to bear. And two, I could never know every aspect or perspective of a single situation even if I tried.
I also recognize that everything I've learned, will be a continual learning. There will be setbacks. I'll make mistakes.
I'm not perfect.
I also recognize that everything I've learned, will be a continual learning. There will be setbacks. I'll make mistakes.
I'm not perfect.
Life isn't black and white. It's a gray soup. It undulates.
And all my ups and downs. The ebbs and flows. They make my years worth living.
Not halfway. Not in suffering. Not feeling unsettled..
But authentically.
And like that pink sunrise that peeks over the horizon.
It'll eventually burst fractals of light off of everything it touches. Absorbing the shadows and warming it's surroundings.
And so will I.
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Truth.
Why so much introspection lately Elyse, dagnabbit?
It seems incredibly self-centered for you to be so inner-directed. As if your thoughts and feelings are in any way ground-breaking.
I know they're not. And that these observations and internal dialogue have been felt by millions of others on various levels.
In speaking with my friend, let's call her Jo, I found that she had been experiencing serious life-altering changes in this past year. Physically, emotionally and spiritually.
Her level of introspection rivaled my own.
Jo had been raised as a very strict Christian
She had a solid foundation, a core set of beliefs.
A spiritual family.
And a twinkling of doubt with each passing year.
Each flicker of doubt was then followed by intense guilt.
A dull nagging right at the rear parietal ridge.
It begged the question, "do I look deeper into my imperfect, doubt riddled brain? Or keep the status quo?"
What's going to happen if I find out information that potentially changes my entire view of life?
It'd be like a gargantuan tear in a well constructed, thoughtfully crafted painting that had taken decades to create. With tender hands and a sentimental, open heart, these beliefs had been coddled and watered.
Delicately pruned.
Carefully protected like chicks under a hens wing.
Layers of thick, vibrant oil paint on canvas.
Now peeling. Ruined. Devastated.
I truly believe you can justify anything.
You can find support for almost any belief.
If you WANT to believe in something, you can coil carefully selected facts and figures, undulate ideas, curlicue and convolute until something that from a logical, black and white standpoint churns into a gray, soupy mess.
Pol Pot was able to convolute ideals to such an extent that he truly in his heart was able to justify the genocide of Khmer Rouge.
Adolf Hitler was able to take an obvious injustice: wrong:sin, that of torture and murder of innocent men, women and children, and helix these obviously horrific thoughts and then actions into something that was actually accepted by society.
There are people who believe in every fiber of their being that the earth is flat. Flat-Earthers. They use "science", "logic" and most importantly, they use their heavy, saturated hope that what they're preaching is in fact, fact.
So yes, people can very easily use scripture to support ideas of heaven, hell, the immortality of the soul, the trinity, and worse, the inferiority of women, judgment of others, slavery etc.
This is because when someone wants to believe in something desperately, they can easily research out of context information, compile it into a nice package, organized and manipulated beyond recognition if needed, to support what they hope to be true.
But what is truth?
Can intangible truth even be found?
That's not for me to say.
It seems incredibly self-centered for you to be so inner-directed. As if your thoughts and feelings are in any way ground-breaking.
I know they're not. And that these observations and internal dialogue have been felt by millions of others on various levels.
In speaking with my friend, let's call her Jo, I found that she had been experiencing serious life-altering changes in this past year. Physically, emotionally and spiritually.
Her level of introspection rivaled my own.
Jo had been raised as a very strict Christian
She had a solid foundation, a core set of beliefs.
A spiritual family.
And a twinkling of doubt with each passing year.
Each flicker of doubt was then followed by intense guilt.
A dull nagging right at the rear parietal ridge.
It begged the question, "do I look deeper into my imperfect, doubt riddled brain? Or keep the status quo?"
What's going to happen if I find out information that potentially changes my entire view of life?
It'd be like a gargantuan tear in a well constructed, thoughtfully crafted painting that had taken decades to create. With tender hands and a sentimental, open heart, these beliefs had been coddled and watered.
Delicately pruned.
Carefully protected like chicks under a hens wing.
Layers of thick, vibrant oil paint on canvas.
Now peeling. Ruined. Devastated.
I truly believe you can justify anything.
You can find support for almost any belief.
If you WANT to believe in something, you can coil carefully selected facts and figures, undulate ideas, curlicue and convolute until something that from a logical, black and white standpoint churns into a gray, soupy mess.
Pol Pot was able to convolute ideals to such an extent that he truly in his heart was able to justify the genocide of Khmer Rouge.
Adolf Hitler was able to take an obvious injustice: wrong:sin, that of torture and murder of innocent men, women and children, and helix these obviously horrific thoughts and then actions into something that was actually accepted by society.
There are people who believe in every fiber of their being that the earth is flat. Flat-Earthers. They use "science", "logic" and most importantly, they use their heavy, saturated hope that what they're preaching is in fact, fact.
So yes, people can very easily use scripture to support ideas of heaven, hell, the immortality of the soul, the trinity, and worse, the inferiority of women, judgment of others, slavery etc.
This is because when someone wants to believe in something desperately, they can easily research out of context information, compile it into a nice package, organized and manipulated beyond recognition if needed, to support what they hope to be true.
But what is truth?
Can intangible truth even be found?
That's not for me to say.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Consequences of Upbringing
How can being raised in an environment of uncertainty, irrational behavior, unreasonable reactions and abuse, shape us?
How does this affect our choice of partner?
In my inconsistent, decade long, flighty, caffeine-fueled research, I came across 5 points that stuck out to me. They resonated with me in that either I've experienced these or witnessed these behaviors in other survivors of abuse.
adjective
When the majority of your life has been picking up the pieces from some form of abuse, sometimes that's how it feels.
Would you prefer terrible or horrible?
How does this affect our choice of partner?
In my inconsistent, decade long, flighty, caffeine-fueled research, I came across 5 points that stuck out to me. They resonated with me in that either I've experienced these or witnessed these behaviors in other survivors of abuse.
- We live life from the viewpoint of victims and we are attracted by that weakness in our love and friendship relationships.
- We get guilt feelings when we stand up for ourselves instead of giving in to others.
- We confuse love and pity and tend to "love" people we can "pity" and "rescue."
- We judge ourselves harshly and have a very low sense of self-esteem.
- We are dependent personalities who are terrified of abandonment and will do anything to hold on to a relationship in order not to experience painful abandonment feelings, which we received from living with sick people who were never there emotionally for us.
People who've experienced any form of abuse it seems either become overly empathetic individuals or very callused, and "black and white", in their thinking.
There's danger in both. The first was covered in the initial blog. Overly empathetic, to the point of detriment.
The latter, is equally as dangerous and at it's very best, will cause us to ostracize well meaning people in our life. Shutting down.
callous
[kal-uh s]
adjective
- made hard; hardened.
- insensitive; indifferent; unsympathetic:They have a callous attitude toward the sufferings of others.
As a physical callous hardens overtime with repeated force- so does a person's psyche.
When you've been hurt enough in your life, human nature dictates that we protect our self.
This can close us off to loving, meaningful relationships.
It also protects us from volatile, emotional knock down-drag out, gut-wrenching, dagger in the chest, "I just want to die", pain.
Do we HAVE to pick from those two choices?
Are our only realistic choices to be walled off emotionally from people, desolate and unattached, or so vulnerable, it's as if we're in a crowded room of flu patients with an immune deficiency?
"Feel free to cough directly into my mouth!"
Are our only realistic choices to be walled off emotionally from people, desolate and unattached, or so vulnerable, it's as if we're in a crowded room of flu patients with an immune deficiency?
"Feel free to cough directly into my mouth!"
When the majority of your life has been picking up the pieces from some form of abuse, sometimes that's how it feels.
Would you prefer terrible or horrible?
I tend to believe hardened apathy is a more common response to being hurt than that of becoming more empathetic, vulnerable and tender.
However for some unknown reason, I've become MUCH more tender hearted with each passing difficulty. (Despite the sarcastic, humor-laden outer shell)
I cannot see an elderly person walking on the street, struggling with each harrowing step, no one to assist, longing for a past filled with cart-wheels and sprinting, and NOT get welled up with emotion.
I also cannot hear a story of someone's negative past, whether it be an alcoholic mother, child abuse, caustic marriage, or anxiety ridden depression, and not instantly want to scoop up said individual and rock them in my arms until their anguish subsides.
Whether they're a friend or an absolute stranger.
I truly believe a chest to chest, heart to heart, embrace, could fix the majority of the world's social dilemmas.
-Sincerely,
Naivete
I cannot see an elderly person walking on the street, struggling with each harrowing step, no one to assist, longing for a past filled with cart-wheels and sprinting, and NOT get welled up with emotion.
I also cannot hear a story of someone's negative past, whether it be an alcoholic mother, child abuse, caustic marriage, or anxiety ridden depression, and not instantly want to scoop up said individual and rock them in my arms until their anguish subsides.
Whether they're a friend or an absolute stranger.
I truly believe a chest to chest, heart to heart, embrace, could fix the majority of the world's social dilemmas.
-Sincerely,
Naivete
I sometimes, however, wish for the alternative mindset.
One where I could shut it off.
Not care.
Where I could observe the world though a Morphine haze. Unaffected.
Watching but not seeing.
One where I could shut it off.
Not care.
Where I could observe the world though a Morphine haze. Unaffected.
Watching but not seeing.
Yet I cherish the relationships I've been able to cultivate due to my softer nature.
One thing I've noticed in myself is being drawn to to those who have been victims.
I have a hard time relating to people who appear to have had relatively "easy" up-bringings or lives.
That comes across as incredibly egoic.
I'm a work in progress ;)
But, how could such ones possibly relate to me? Or understand my struggles? How could someone who has lived a very vanilla, standard life, ultimately become close enough to me to where we could share a mutually beneficial emotional relationship?
Whether platonic or romantic or even familial.
I simply struggle to maintain a "surface" relationship.
I crave relationships that will enrich my life and refine me. Challenge me. Cause me to become introspective and productive.
Am I looking at something the wrong way?
Tell me.
Am I down-playing a situation again?
Tell me.
Am I being too critical or acting like a subservient floor mat again?
Please be a good friend and don't indulge my whims.
Help refine me.
I'll take sincere advice without getting defensive, I'll mull it over. I've never been reactionary. I react after I've thought things through.
Generally.
I'll take sincere advice without getting defensive, I'll mull it over. I've never been reactionary. I react after I've thought things through.
Generally.
A relationship that lacks these core ideals will simply wither. Not because I do not respect the other party involved, but because I won't feel a real connection.
I need a chest to chest connection, whether you're a friend, or romantic partner.
And when I ask you "So what are your hopes and dreams", dismissively with a laugh, I'm hoping you'll actually open up and tell me.
When I make sincere eye contact as you speak from the heart, it's because I'm actually listening to you.
And when I open up to you, it's because I trust you'll use that information in a kind, productive way.
"We can only understand another person when are able to truly listen to them. When we can listen to others we can understand their pain and difficulties. Listening deeply to another is a form of meditation."
-Thich Nhat Hanh
"We can only understand another person when are able to truly listen to them. When we can listen to others we can understand their pain and difficulties. Listening deeply to another is a form of meditation."
-Thich Nhat Hanh
Tuesday, November 28, 2017
Balance in Empathy
Empathy.
The most important and the most under- utilized trait in the human experience.
The most important and the most under- utilized trait in the human experience.
em·pa·thy
ˈempəTHē/
noun
- the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.
- There's a movie called Powder, created in 1995 about a teenager who has this ultra-sensory gift which allows him to perceive others emotions to the extent that he absorbs their pain.
- In one scene, a hunter has just killed a deer. Powder is devastated and in an attempt at teaching this callused hunter a lesson, he places one hand on the dying animal and another on the hunter. Using himself as a catalyst, he transfers the physical and emotional pain the tormented creature is experiencing into the man.
- Empathy by force.
The man is trembling and crying by the end of the experience.
While this man may not be malignant by nature, he was however ignorant in the full scope of the consequences of his actions.
He simply needed a widening of his perception.
Which begs the question, is there benefit in seeing all things from all perspectives?
Or does this hinder us?
I always believed that the conscious and mindful choice to see circumstances, both good and bad, from all perspectives, could only result in a deeper, more positive and enriched life.
Because hate and intolerance is near impossible when you understand the perspective of those that are causing pain.
Pain breeds pain.
Pain seeks out pain. subconsciously.
But when you recognize the pain in others, especially in those who have hurt you, how could you possibly hate them?
How could you hate someone when you've understood their traumatic, tumultuous and desperate upbringing?
You can't.
You simply can't.
Not without numbing some of our humanity.
Not without numbing some of our humanity.
Even if they've brought you to the brink of destruction.
Why?
Empathy.
Thich Nhat Hanh says,
"When another person makes you suffer, it is because he suffers deeply within himself, and his suffering is spilling over. He does not need punishment; he needs help."
What a beautiful thought...and it is so true. But this must be applied with caution and boundaries.
Some people need help to be more empathetic and mindful. The majority of people do. Myself included!
However, most don't recognize this need in themselves. They hear what you say, recognize the merit in it, and never make application of this life enriching information.
Some may even be obstinate.
They may resent you for even offering support in this area.
People want to believe they're already whole. They've got life figured out. No one could ever really understand their struggles, so why on earth would they accept help from someone who's never walked in their shoes.
They may nod their head, thank you for your kindness, and never let your intentions reach their barricaded heart.
Empathy.
What If being compassionate and empathetic to a toxic human, begins to have negative consequences on ourselves?
Do we continue down the empathetic trail?
It was only 4 months into my marriage, that my husband became physically abusive.
His back story however, tugged at my empathetic nature. So while I didn't agree with how he treated me, I understood why he did it.
It was the only example of "love", that was ever set before him.
He wanted to display a healthy love so badly. But in the course of the 11 years we were together, his ability, willpower and desire to improve himself only diminished.
Why?
My empathic nature enabled his toxicity.
My empathic nature... enabled his toxicity.
My empathy, caused more harm.
Not just to myself. But to him, and his personal growth.
My love for him had entirely unloving consequences for him.
It stunted him.
I was TOO understanding?
My willingness to understand, on a deep level, why he was angry, violent and negative, WIDENED my tolerance of his abuse.
Should our tolerance of abuse on any level, ever widen?
What If it's all we've ever known?
What If it's our default?
Whether physical abuse, emotional abuse- through manipulation, being possessive, jealous or overly reactionary) or any other kind of abuse...
It wasn't until this past year, fairly recently, a kind, tender-hearted new neighbor, taught me the term self-love. Not by their personal example, but by directing me to the teachings of others.
I left my husband. I moved to a new city and started a new life. But not because of self-love.
I was raised to constantly think of others before myself. A good Christian. Noble. But dangerous when misapplied.
And it was, by myself.
“You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.” Buddha
In my 11 year long relationship with an emotionally abusive and manipulative human, I can honestly say that my empathy for him had detrimental effects on not only his personal growth, but on mine.
I feared his reactions. I coddled his bad behavior. I returned to him over and over despite that relationship nearly killing me.
Because an abuser knows how to manipulate their target. They know how to get what they want.
Fortunately for us, we have choices.
We can continue down the same pattern of abuse until it consumes us so entirely, we become a shell of ourselves, a shadow of who we really are, twisted and deformed into a version that our abuser deems more palatable.
Or we can find the strength to break free.
For some this takes years, decades, like myself.
For others, they never love themselves enough to find the strength to leave. Almost finding comfort in familiar pain.
Each journey is a personal decision and a choice.
Are we choosing happiness or destitution?
Really, when it boils down to it, those are the choices.
I know what I have to offer both in friendship and romantic relationship.
What I bring to the table is empathy, compassion, understanding, maturity, comfort and joy.
Most importantly I need to remember
-I am healing slowly, but surely, day by day, one step at a time.
-I am putting the past well and truly behind me to focus on the present and future.
-I am a loveable person who deserves the care, affection, and respect of others.
-I am making self-care a priority.
And most important,
I feared his reactions. I coddled his bad behavior. I returned to him over and over despite that relationship nearly killing me.
Because an abuser knows how to manipulate their target. They know how to get what they want.
Fortunately for us, we have choices.
We can continue down the same pattern of abuse until it consumes us so entirely, we become a shell of ourselves, a shadow of who we really are, twisted and deformed into a version that our abuser deems more palatable.
Or we can find the strength to break free.
For some this takes years, decades, like myself.
For others, they never love themselves enough to find the strength to leave. Almost finding comfort in familiar pain.
Each journey is a personal decision and a choice.
Are we choosing happiness or destitution?
Really, when it boils down to it, those are the choices.
I know what I have to offer both in friendship and romantic relationship.
What I bring to the table is empathy, compassion, understanding, maturity, comfort and joy.
Most importantly I need to remember
-I am healing slowly, but surely, day by day, one step at a time.
-I am putting the past well and truly behind me to focus on the present and future.
-I am a loveable person who deserves the care, affection, and respect of others.
-I am making self-care a priority.
And most important,
-I have firm boundaries and the strength to stick to them.
I've come too far in my mental and emotional strength to slip back into self destructive behaviors now. I will never again be with someone who makes me feel pain. Any relationship I cultivate now will be of my choosing and will be because they bring only joy and positivity into my life.
When I feel weak, I'll rely on loved ones.
When I'm confused, I'll listen to and trust my closest confidants.
When I'm sad, I'll see it, acknowledge it and I'll let it pass.
But never again will I allow someone into my life to have such negative consequences. Never again.
I am stronger than I ever knew.
With peace and gratitude,
When I feel weak, I'll rely on loved ones.
When I'm confused, I'll listen to and trust my closest confidants.
When I'm sad, I'll see it, acknowledge it and I'll let it pass.
But never again will I allow someone into my life to have such negative consequences. Never again.
I am stronger than I ever knew.
With peace and gratitude,
-Elyse
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