Saturday, April 29, 2006

FOUR


Four?

The fourth agreement is the final agreement.

I'd like to share the last part of A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom - THE FOUR AGREEMENTS - A Toltec Wisdom Book by Don Miguel Ruiz.   He shares Toltec Wisdom ... which says we all live by spoken and unspoken beliefs (agreements) that we have gathered since birth.  We can transform our lives by replacing any negative agreements with THE FOUR AGREEMENTS:  


4.    ALWAYS DO YOUR BEST

Don Miguel Ruiz says:

Your best is going to change from moment to moment; it will be different when you are healthy as opposed to sick.  Under any circumstance, simply do your best, and you will avoid self-judgment, self-abuse and regret. 

Doing your best, you are going to live your life intensely. 

You are going to be productive, you are going to be good to yourself, because you will be giving yourself to your family, to your community, to everything. 

But it is the action that is going to make you feel intensely happy.  When you always do your best, you take action.  Doing your best is taking the action because you love it, not because you're expecting a reward ... If we like what we do, if we always do our best, then we are really enjoying life. 

We are having fun, we don't get bored, we don't have frustrations ... DOING YOUR BEST REALLY DOESN'T FEEL LIKE WORK BECAUSE YOU ENJOY WHATEVER YOU ARE DOING ... Action is about living fully. 

Inaction is the way that we deny life.  Inaction is sitting in front of the television every day for years because you are afraid to be alive and to take the risk of expressing what you are.  Expressing what you are is taking action. 

YOU CAN HAVE MANY GREAT IDEAS IN YOUR HEAD, BUT WHAT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE IS ACTION.  WITHOUT ACTION UPON AN IDEA, THERE WILL BE NO MANIFESTATION, NO RESULTS AND NO REWARD ... 

God is life.  God is life in action.  The best way to say, I love you God", is to live your life doing your best.  The best way to say, "Thank You God," is by letting go of the past and living in the present moment, right here and right now. 

Whatever life takes away from you, let it go. 


When you surrender and let go of the past, you allow yourself to be fully alive in the moment.  Letting go of the past means you can enjoy the dream that is happening right now ... There is no time to miss anyone or anything because you are alive.  Not enjoying what is happening right now is living in the past and being only half alive.  This leads to self-pity, suffering and tears. 

You were born with the right to be happy. 

You were born with the right to love, to enjoy and to share your love. 

You are alive, so take your life and enjoy it. 

Don't resist life passing through you.

We can practice the FOUR AGREEMENTS every day.  Some days will be good.  Some days will be not so good.  Our circumstances may change.  Our energy level and insights might fluctuate but we can still ALWAYS DO OUR BEST.

These FOUR AGREEMENTS are not meant to be a religion, but an enhancement of our faith and beliefs ... a tool to be used to bring out the best in each of us, to uncover our authentic self, to live our best life ... a transformed life ... 

Powerful!  I have been excited about this point of view from the first time I read it.  I am sharing it with you but it is your choice what to do with it.  Just trying my best to keep the Four Agreements creates opportunities to praise myself every time I catch myself doing something right!  Over my lifetime, I have accepted other agreements about me, my life, my family, and the world and not all of them were kind to me, my life, my family and the world.  Some of those ideas held me back and opened me up to abusing myself.  Those false beliefs opened me up to receive other people's beliefs that matched my own poison and exchanging that kind of poison is just two people abusing each other.   

Bad things could have happened a year ago or ten years ago but they are in the past.  The only way they can hurt me now is if I bring them back.  Some things hurt like heck a year ago but it doesn't have to come back and hurt me 30 seconds ago!  There is no good that will come out of keeping that pain alive. 

If I can forgive me, I can apply the same forgiveness to the people who might have hurt me.  Using the Four Agreements, I can accept that what they did at the time was more about them than it was about me.  I can't make any assumption about what they did or why they did it because I do not know, and even if I asked that person, they may not know either.  Anger, Jealousy, Rage all come from fear ... and the ones who hurt us may not know or be ready to know why they hurt us because they are still so busy hurting themselves.  Doing our best means having compassion for ourselves, and the ones around us.  

If I keep my speech impeccable, if I don't take anything personally, if I don't make assumptions, and if I do my best every day for all the days of my life, that is all that I can do.  If others choose to do the same thing, that is their choice.  If others choose not to do the same thing, that is also their choice. 

I can only do what I can do to make my life a better place for me.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

THREE


Three?

I'm once, twice, THREE times a lady ... and he loves me ...

When we are together ... The moments I cherish ...
With every beat of my heart ...

I'm once, twice, THREE times a lady ... and he loves me ...

Step Three ... The THIRD agreement ... 


I'd like to talk some more about A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom - THE FOUR AGREEMENTS - A Toltec Wisdom Book by Don Miguel Ruiz.   He shares Toltec Wisdom ... which says we all live by spoken and unspoken beliefs (agreements) that we have gathered since birth.  We can transform our lives by replacing any negative agreements with THE FOUR AGREEMENTS.  The third agreement is: 


3.    DON'T MAKE ASSUMPTIONS

Don Miguel Ruiz says:

Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really want.  Communicate with others as clearly as you can to avoid misunderstandings, sadness and drama. 

With just this one agreement, you can completely transform your life. 

We have the tendency to make assumptions about everything.  The problem with making assumptions is that we BELIEVE they are truth.  We could swear they are real.  We make assumptions about what others are doing or thinking - we take it personally - then we blame them and react by sending emotional poison with our word. 

That is why whenever we make assumptions, we are asking for problems.  We make assumptions, we misunderstand, we take it personally, and we end up creating a whole big drama for nothing ... We create a lot of emotional poison just by making assumptions and taking it personally ... We only see what we want to see and hear what we want to hear.  We don't perceive things the way they are ...
When the truth comes out, we find out itwas not what we thought at all ...

Making assumptions in our relationships is really asking for problems.  This is the way the human mind works ...

Often when you go into a relationship with someone you like, you have to justify why you like that person.  You only see what you want to see and you deny there are things you don't like about that person ...

Your love will not change anybody. 

If others change, it's because they want to change, not because you can change them.  Then something happens between the two of you, and you get hurt.  Suddenly you see what you didn't want to see before, only now it is amplified by your emotional poison.  Now you have to justify your emotional pain and blame them for your choices ...

REAL LOVE IS ACCEPTING OTHER PEOPLE THE WAY THEY ARE WITHOUT TRYING TO CHANGE THEM.
 

If we try to change them, this means we don't really like them ... If others feel they have to change you, that means they really don't love you just the way you are. 

So why be with someone if you're not the way he or she wants you to be?


Things are the way they are.  Good or bad, this is where we are ... to learn from THIS moment.  We are cheating ourselves when we assume we know why people, places and things are the way they are.  ASSUMING only creates emotional poison and unnecessary drama.  We will all know what we need to know when it is the right time to know it.  Think of the trouble in our lives we could have avoided by just stopping ourselves from making assumptions! 


Powerful!  I learn something new every time I read THE FOUR AGREEMENTS.

The idea that EVERYTHING I thought ... could be wrong ... that I could actually replace those old beliefs and new agreements by not making assumptions ...

What could it hurt?

I had tried so many other things that hadn't worked.  I may as well try that!

Breaking old habits isn't easy.  I am co-dependent.  Co-dependents think we KNOW what is best for the people we love.

How can we "know" what other peopleneed when we don't even know what we need!

I also ASSUMED that everyone else thought the same way I did!  It took someone doing something that I would NEVER DO to wake up and GET REAL!  Reality will eventually topple every foolish notion you ever tried to cling to!  Seeing someone do something so violent made it very clear that we all do different things for different reasons.  

People react to life according to their own experience ...

This is true for strangers as well as the people closest to us. None of us will ever look at this old world in exactly the SAME way.  We can't think about or react to even one thing exactly the SAME way because we have different life experiences, different information, different reactions to what appears to be the very SAME thing.

The most we can ever hope for from another person is that occasionally we will share the same point of view ... but the odds are that most of us will feel TRUE KINSHIP with only a handful of people!

No matter how EVOLVED ... NO matter how ENLIGHTENED ... no matter how HEALED ... Most of the things we believe and think and know are as unique as tiny little snowflakes in the blizzard of life ... and just like those snowflakes ... we are just a small part of a very big picture ...

We don't have to assume anything ...

If we keep our own speech impeccable, and we don't take other's personally, our minds will be less cluttered and our emotions will be more clear to listen with compassion and really hear other people's truths ...

And people do tell their own truths ... But we miss them or overlook them ... People tell us a lot when they talk about themselves ... When they tell a story, are they always the "winner" or do they share stories about times they learned something too?  Do they talk in a mean way about past relationships or people who aren't there to defend themselves?  It is good to remember that you have spoken in the same ways when you were under the burden of so many negative agreements.

If someone says something or does something that seems strange to you, it's okay to say, "Excuse me?  Did I just hear that right?" or "Excuse me?  Did you just do ... ?" 

If they don't answer ... their choice.  No big deal.  If they get mad at being questioned ... their choice.  No big deal.  If they explain themselves in a way that you learn something new ... their choice.  A pretty good deal!

You see, if they ignore you, it's because they don't know what to say.  

If they get mad, it's not about you.  You touched a nerve or a hurt place in them.  

If they teach you a new point of view, you both win.  Their point of view will become one that they have to explain and prove ... and it might or might not stand the test.  Your point of view may or may not be expanded to include the new information you have just heard.  Either way, you both get to make choices ... and that's pretty cool when you consider all the choices and decisions that you both will make in a day in a week in a year in your life!

So if we are impeccable in our speech and we resist the temptation to take others personally and we don't make assumptions ... what else is there for us to do?

That would be the FOURTH Agreement ...

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

TWO


Two?
 
If you are having a problem with someone ... just remember ... it takes TWO ... TWO to communicate and TWO to miscommunicate ...

I'd like to share more about A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom - THE FOUR AGREEMENTS - A Toltec Wisdom Book by Don Miguel Ruiz.   He shares Toltec Wisdom ... which says we all live by spoken and unspoken beliefs (or agreements) that we have gathered since birth.  We can transform our lives by replacing any negative agreements with THE FOUR AGREEMENTS
  


2.    DON'T TAKE ANYTHING PERSONALLY

He says:  Nothing others do is because of you.  What others say and do is a projection of their own reality, their own dream.  When you are immune to the opinions and action of others, you won't be the victim of needless suffering. 

Nothing other people do is because of you.  It is because of themselves ... whatever you feel and do is just a projection of your own personal dream, a reflection of your past agreements. 

When you feel good, everything around you is good.  When everything around you is great, everything makes you happy.  You are loving everything that is around you, because you are loving yourself.  Because you like the way you are.  Because you are content with you.  Because you are happy with your life ...

Don't take anything personally. 

Even if someone got a gun and shot you in the head, it is nothing personal.  Even at that extreme ... If someone is not treating you with love and respect, it is a gift if they walk away from you ... walking away may hurt for a little while, but your heart will eventually heal. 

Then you can choose what you really want ...

"The gun thing" was Don Miguel Ruiz's example ... not mine, but the fact that he chose "THAT EXAMPLE" certainly made me sit up and take notice!

What people say to you says more about them than it does about you ... good or bad.  People can only see the world the way the world has treated them.  If the world has been kind to them, they are kind to you and expect you to be kind.  If the world has been cruel to them, they will be cruel to you and expect you to be cruel.  Maybe it isn't even about being kind or cruel at all ... Maybe, we just crossed their path at the end of a really bad day?

Powerful!  I have been excited about this from the first time I read it.

The idea that EVERYTHING I thought ... could be wrong ... that I could actually replace those old beliefs with new agreements like not taking anything personally ...

What could it hurt?

I had tried so many other things that hadn't worked.  I may as well try that!

Breaking old habits isn't easy.  I am co-dependent.  Co-dependents spend a LOT of time trying to please every one else.  If we are giving people the "gift" of our personal attention without taking the time to REALLY know what someone truly wants or needs from us, they might not like our "gift" and when we see they don't like it or don't even notice all our "effort", we take it personally.

The TRUTH is that most of the things that you and I do are unintentional.  We don't evaluate every little thing.  We are just doing what feels RIGHT at the time ... We are following our heart ... We are just reacting to life.  It is the same thing with other people too.

What would happen if I intentionally chose NOT to take you personally and you intentionally chose NOT to take me personally?  Would our conversations improve?  Couldn't we all be ourselves much more easily if we quit worrying about what the other person was thinking or saying or doing?

Don't be offended!   

We all have "our stuff".  "Our stuff" gets in the way of everything we want and need and hope for ... It is all as it should be ... My obstacles and challenges are meant strengthen my weaknesses.  Your obstacles and challenges are meant to strengthen your weaknesses.

We all have our weaknesses.  Some obstacles are easy to overcome and others are not ... in YOU and in ME ... If we truly accept that in ourselves and others, how can we take someone personally?
 
You see ... the same way we shouldn't take others personally ... We could also tell our closest friends and relatives not to take us personally either!


So if we are impeccable in our speech and we resist the temptation to take things personally ... what else is there for us to do?

That would be STEP THREE ...

Sunday, April 23, 2006

ONE

 
Just ONE Step?!!!

Just one step ... ONE day at a time ...

The whole "gun thing" created quite a crisis for me!  I had 100 thoughts going through my head all at the same time!

How could I have been so wrong?
What happened?
Why?
Was it my fault?
What did I do?
What should I have done?
What could I have done differently?
What do I do now?
How could I have been SO WRONG?
How could I have been SO WRONG about him?
Did I put my faith in the WRONG person?
Why do I always trust the WRONG people?
Why didn't I see the REAL person?
REAL?!!!
What is REAL?!!!
Do I really know?
Have I EVER really known?
WHAT IS REAL?!!!
Who is the REAL me?
What if EVERYTHING I've always thought was REAL isn't REAL at all?

So many questions!

So few answers!

So many thoughts scrambling around my head that they were bumping into each other!  Crisis are chaotic.  They bring even more chaos!  For me, fighting the chaos meant filling my mind with even more thoughts, reading books about co-dependency and recovery, psychology, philosophy, therapies ... obsessively fighting the BIG, LOUD questions with BIGGER and LOUDER answers!

Remembering that time or dwelling too long on remembering, even to describe it to you, brings back the way I felt back then:

My head hurt.
My jaw hurt like I had been clenching my teeth for decades.
My neck hurt from all the tension.
My shoulders ached like I had the weight of the world on them!
My chest felt HEAVY ... as in "I have a HEAVY HEART" ...
It hurt to breath!
My lower back hurt.
My whole body felt weak ... like I had the flu ...
WITH NO END IN SIGHT ...


What IF everything I've ever thought
and believed was JUST WRONG?



It was in that place that I found the FOUR AGREEMENTS.

I'd like to share A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom - THE FOUR AGREEMENTS - A Toltec Wisdom Book by Don Miguel Ruiz.   He shares Toltec Wisdom ... which says we all live by spoken and unspoken beliefs (agreements) that we have gathered since birth.  We can transform our lives by replacing any negative agreements with THE FOUR AGREEMENTS


1.    BE IMPECCABLE WITH YOUR WORD

Don Miguel said:

Speak with integrity.  Say only what you mean.  Avoid using the word to speak against yourself or to gossip about others.  Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love. 

The word is the most powerful tool you have as a human; it is the tool of magic.  Your word can create the most beautiful dream, or your word can destroy everything around you.  Depending on how it is used, the word can set you free, or it can enslave you even more than you know. 

If you make an agreement with yourself to be impeccable with your word, just with that intention, the truth will manifest through you and clean all the emotional poison that exists within you.

I heard what he was saying.

Your words have power ... the power to bless or curse so why not use them to bless yourself and others?  It's easy to give in to random negative thoughts, to judge, to criticize, to doubt, to worry, to fret, but what if all those negative words had gone unsaid?  What would happen if we were committed to making our speech more authentic and infused our words with more wisdom and integrity?  What if we always meant what we said and said what we meant?


Powerful!  I have been excited about this point of view from the first time I read it.

The idea that EVERYTHING I thought could be wrong ... that I could actually replace those old beliefs and agreements by consciously controlling my speech ...

What could it hurt?

I had tried so many other things that hadn't worked.  I may as well try that!

One thing at a time ... One day at a time ... One thought at a time ... I started asking myself, "Is this the TRUTH?" ...

I started THINKING about what I said BEFORE I said it.  

Breaking old habits isn't easy.  I am co-dependent.  I have always tried to "sugar-coat" life, glossing over the low spots and glorifying the high spots.  Co-dependents are not direct.  We are not DIRECT with our words and we are not DIRECT with our thoughts.  Getting to the HEART of anything doesn't come naturally for me.  It felt awkward to me ... At first, I just STOPPED talking ... like the old saying, "IF you can't say anything nice than don't say anything at all" but that is what I had always done ... I wasn't dealing with the TRUTH.  I was avoiding it.

I kept practicing ... Eventually, THOUGHTFUL communication replaced INDIRECT communication ... My speech wasn't the only thing that changed.  The way I thought and felt about the things I said changed ...

That was just the FIRST AGREEMENT and already I felt different!  

I am sharing this with you but it is YOUR CHOICE what you do.  

Just trying my best to keep the Four Agreements created opportunities to praise myself every time I caught myself doing something right! 

Over my lifetime, I have accepted a lot of crazy ideas and agreements about me, my life, my family, and the world.  Most of those ideas and agreements were not KIND to me, my life, my family or the world.  Some of those ideas held me back and opened me up to abusing myself.  Those false beliefs opened me up to receive other people's false beliefs that matched my own poison.  Exchanging that kind of poison is just two people abusing each other!   

Bad things could have happened a year ago or ten years ago but theyare in the past.  The only way they can hurt me now is if I bring them back.  Some things hurt like heck years ago but it doesn't have to come back and hurt me 30 seconds ago! 

There is no good that will come out of keeping that pain alive.


I learned that I could quiet the things I thought and the things I said by being impeccable.  Would you like me to tell you about the SECOND AGREEMENT? 

Thursday, April 20, 2006

The Side Effects Of HEALING!


There are side effects to recovery that I am just beginning to realize.

For those of you who may just be joining this story, I am an abuse survivor.  The last abuser ended our relationship with a cocked and loaded shotgun!  Aydan was trying to prove to me who was in control.  He only proved to me that my life was spinning out of control ... if I was willing to waste even one more minute with a guy like that!

It was the final wake-up call.  I have written about things I have learned along the way ... GREAT BIG HOLY COW THINGS ... but there are subtle changes that happen while healing too.

Let me give you an example. 

I am the oldest of 10 kids.  I have been helping my Mom cook since I was 9-10 years old.  With all that practice, I had learned to be a pretty good cook ... I am not a measure exactly kind of cook, but a pinch of this and a pinch of that cook.  I mix flavors by how they smell ... I have gone through gourmet cooking phases ... Let's just stop for fast food phases ... Do I have to cook one more meal phases ... but the worst phase of all was under the critical scrutiny of the last man who abused me ...

Aydan would direct me to do this and do that ... He would fuss if I used the wrong knife or the wrong utensil ... He hated when I tried new spices and said so ... He had weird "rules" ... no bacon or ham ... no cheese ... no macaroni ... no pasta ... no meatloaf ... no tuna ... absolutely no comfort food ... no tomatoes ... squash was okay ... potatoes and sweet potatoes were okay ... in fact, all starchy vegetables were fine ... broccoli and asparagus were not.  He liked to cook everything on high (to save electricity?) but butter and most other things burn on high ... I think he wanted to stir fry everything ... but only in the stir fry pan ... and with the right utensils and in butter instead of oil?  It gives me a headache to even think about all the rules ...

It was like asking Michael Angelo to paint the Sistine Chapel but only letting him use pink, purple and day-glow orange paint!  It wasn't fun for me and it couldn't have been much fun for Aydan either.

The food prepared in that place was barely edible ... I would cook at home and bring it over to Aydan's house ... Aydan liked the things I brought to him, but he never really got that I could cook just fine when he would shut up and get the heck out of my way with all his stupid rules!

During my recovery, I started growing fresh herbs and flowers in containers on the back deck ... The routine of planting, watering and nurturing were good therapy for me ... It was the growing that I concentrated on ...

It just naturally followed that I started cooking with herbs again ... and used more fresh vegetables, raw or steamed.  I started using herbs and other seasonings, combining flavors by smell more than taste ... I was surprised at how good some of the things tasted!  Joey would drop by occasionally and mention things he had watched on the food network.  We talked about cooking oils, spices, vegetable combinations ... what wines complimented what meats ... what kind of cheeses worked better than others for different things.

Bless his heart, Joey has always liked my cooking.  

Joey can cook pretty well, himself, so there were times when we cooked together.  We made a game of going to a nice restaurant and coming home and trying to duplicate the recipe.  Cream Brulee was our first experiment.  YUMMMY!  Who knew that Cream Brulee could be so easy?  Joey brought me a little torch and I practiced "browning" sugar ... Fun!!!

We went to an Italian restaurant and taught ourselves how to make a Seafood Alfredo with scallops, shrimp, mushrooms, bits of steak and grilled chicken, mushrooms and prosciutto.  We figured out a few secrets like using a little nutmeg and a lot of garlic and our's ended up being as good as the restaurant's!

I experimented with Chili and Minestrone because I have always liked hearty soups in the winter.  Joey experimented with oven-barbecuing and slow cooking meats.

Joey loves fish but I don't like the "fish camps" here where the fish is cold and greasy ... So I started pan frying orange roughy and talapia the way my folks pan fry wall-eye at home ... by rinsing and drying it, dipping it in whipped eggs and them rolling it in crushed crackers, mixed with a little flour and spices and then, pan frying it in really HOT oil until golden brown and then patting any extra oil away ...

Every time we finished an experiment, we were amazed at how much better our's was than the restaurant!  Joey compliments me and tells me what his favorite part was.  We talk about things wecould do next time ... like generals plotting another attack strategy ... or kids planning out the next game ... lol ...

My friends and kids have gotten in on the game.  They will call and list six or seven things they have on hand and ask me what they can make with them ... We laugh at the dessert one of them made from pieces of cake stirred into a bowl of jello with whipped cream on top ... or the killer vegetable quiche we "invented" ...
 
I heard Joey on the phone bragging about my cooking to a friend and smiled ... He is always so complimentary.  His enthusiasm is contagious.  It's fun to find new ways to surprise him.  (It's nice when he cooks and surprises me too.)  Joey was sharing how nice it was to have a wife who could cook.

My mind wandered a little during his conversation ...

I never noticed the change because it all happened so gradually ... and cooking is such a small part of everything else ... But I AM a BETTER COOK than I ever have been!  I compared what it was like to cook with all this praise and encouragement to what it was like to cook under all the judgment and criticism and how much different the end product was ... how different I am ...

I had on of those "ah-ha" moments ...

My life really has changed. 

Co-dependents live "on the edge" ... Whether we are truly "on the edge" or not is almost inconsequential ... You all have at least one friend (it might be YOU!) who always seem to be on the brink of one disaster or another ... living life LARGE ... with extreme ups and downs ... bigger than life decisions about the smallest things ...

How is it my friend, Daisy said it?  Making mountains out of mole hills is pole-vaulting over mole hills when we could have just as easily kicked it out of the way with our shoe?  Living life that way, immersed in anxiety and stress, somehow feels normal to us co-dependents ... It feels like home ... It probably is EXACTLY like home!

What was our role?  To be PERFECT, of course.  We are the dysfunctional side of positive thinking ... We believe that if we are just a little bit better and a little bit nicer and a little bit smarter, we will finally have the life we always wanted if we can only be a little more PERFECT!

What nonsense!
 
NOBODY'S PERFECT, AND NOONE EVER WILL BE!

A side effect of accepting myself just as I am, forgiving myself and others for not being perfect and rejoining the human race ... was choosing to live in an environment where we are ALL just human ... we can relax and let life unfold naturally.  We can be more understanding and tolerant of each other. 

It becomes okay to take chances because what's the worst thing that could happen? 
|
It might not turn out?  But ... Couldn't it also turn out GREAT?

Sure it could, but we won't ever know if we don't ever try!

At my worst, I only heard other people's criticism and judgment ... but nothing anyone else said could even come close to matching the criticism and judgment I heaped on myself.  I couldn't do anything right!  Stir in the influence of an abusive relationship and natural disasters could occur on an hourly basis! 

No wonder I was so tired!

I was stressed.  I didn't sleep very well.  I hadn't thought about it much lately, but I was sick all the time back then!  I would get colds and flu that hung on for weeks and months.  I made stupid mistakes.  Things just didn't turn out.  I am a good cook, but in the middle of all that, I couldn't cook anything.  It felt like nothing was going right. 

Is it possible to forget how to cook?  I hadn't forgotten how to cook, but I had forgotten how to live!  I let the criticism from myself and others turn everything SOUR!  When I was afraid of making even one mistake, I made a boatload of them!  When I began to truly believe that ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE, all things became possible.

My aha moment?

My aha moment was remembering how I felt in that toxic space and realizing how much things have changed ... how much I have changed ... how GOOD my life is now, especially when I compare it to how BAD it was then!  I don't compare life now to life then very often.  I'm too busy living life now to worry too much about life then, but with God as my witness, I don't know when things changed! 

It seems like I went from thinking about Aydan and the abuse every second of every minute of every hour of every day of every week of every month ... to THIS PLACE where I live one day at a time ... one moment at a time ... savoring every conversation and cherishing every person ...

When did it change?  I don't know!  But it did!

I don't know if it's time or faith or the work done in recovery or the influence of people in my life now or the inner work I have done or the change in seasons or writing to you or the last book I read or ALL OF THE ABOVE!

It's MAGIC!

I feel like a cripple who is healed and so excited about being healed that I run all the way home before I realize I ran all the way home!!!  Hug me somebody!  I'm healed!  Look at this!  I can run and I can hop and I can skip and I can jump on one leg and I can stand on my head and I can leap over tall buildings and outrun locomotives!!!

LOL!!!
  


(spinning and whirling like a dervish!)

I am HEALED!!!  I can cook and I can paint and I can write and I can sew and I can grow the best herbs and vegetables and the prettiest flowers!  I can find joy in every day miracles and my life is CHOCK FULL of them!  Come meet my friends!  I want them to meet you!  You guys are AMAZING!  Do you know YOU inspired me too? 

Group Hug!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Come celebrate with me!  Life is GOOD!  It doesn't have to be full of judgement and criticism!  We can be FREE!  Our loved ones can be FREE!  Heck, our enemies can be FREE too!  There's enough HEALING for everyone ... It started with just one step ... just ONE STEP ...

Let me tell you about it!


Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Tulip Time!















Good Morning!

I hope you all had a good spring holiday.  This Easter was the kid's turn to celebrate with the in-laws so Joey and I made plans of our own.
 
We drove to Asheville (in the mountains) to go to a brunch buffet at the Grove Park Inn ... This wasn't your ordinary buffet, by any means!  There were omelets, a breakfast casserole, bacon, sausage, ham, steak, salmon, several kinds of eggs, all sorts of pastries, waffles, pancakes ... then fruits, sliced and some marinated vegetables, vegetable casseroles, cheeses, baked brie and strawberries, sliced tomatoes with herbed mozzarella cheese, smoked salmon, smoked turkey, crab salad, shrimp salad, potato salad,  pasta salad, artichoke salad ... roast beef, prime rib, several fish served several ways, boiled shrimp, fried shrimp, potatoes, baby carrots, green bean casserole, some sort of stuffing dish, grilled squash and baked eggplant, sweet potato hash ... chocolate mousse, key lime pie, raspberry torte, carrot cake, chocolate torte, apple cheesecake, a tray of chocolate pastries, cream puffs, eclairs, toffee bars, cookies, an ice cream bar for the children (with everything including sprinkles!), strawberries and whipped cream, banana yogurt something (kids seemed to really like that one) ... rolls and breads ... too much good food!

My strategy was to have just a teaspoon of what looked the best ... Joey LOVES seafood so his strategy was to skip the stuff he could get somewhere else and enjoy the gourmet seafood and vegetables ... Neither of us ate too much dessert because the whole meal felt like a dessert! 

I noticed one man near us filled up a plate at every section!  There were two rooms of tables so he had a plate of breakfast, a plate of salads, a plate of meat, a plate of vegetables and a plate of desserts!  He was eating when we sat down and still eating when we left ... I bet that hurt later!

I had a chance to watch other people.  There were two children playing hide and seek under the buffet tables ... I wondered where their parents were?  In fact, I noticed several children unattended and allowed to roam around the restaurant, jumping on chairs and running from place to place ... Gosh, my parents would have insisted that I behave like a lady in my Easter best or my father would have taken me to the car and spanked me ... Perhaps these parents didn't want to bother the valet to get the car?  My children didn't have many opportunities on a single mom's budget to go to really fancy restaurants, but when they did, they were on their BEST behavior ... OR ELSE!  Even my son with ADHD knew to mind his Ps and Qs ... OR ELSE! 

It got me to thinking about my own children and their parenting styles ... My oldest daughter and her husband are both teachers.  I sometimes think they are TOO STRICT but their children are well-mannered and they do not have to be told something twice to obey.  They are both outgoing and LOUD, but they will be quiet if you remind them where they are likes quiet!  LOL!!!  My second daughter is a friend to her son ... They have adult sounding conversations.  He is a good natured boy.  He likes almost anything.  My third daughter isn't married and doesn't have any children, which is good because she is still a kid herself!  My son (the one with ADHD) never knew a boundary he would not cross so he and his wife are raising their daughter with NO BOUNDARIES at all.  She writes all over the walls, screams and stomps for attention, breaks and throws things and makes a huge mess wherever she goes with no consequences!  If she "expresses herself" at my house, I will "express myself" by disciplining her.  When she screams and stomps at my house, I stop what I am doing and say, "No Ma'am" and take her by the hand and make her sit in the time-out chair near me.  She doesn't scream and stomp at my house anymore, but if she does, I still have the time out chair and I am not afraid to use it again.  When she makes a mess at my house or my daughter's house, my oldest daughter and I take a special interest in showing her how to clean up after herself.

I guess every family has their own characteristics and their own characters and holidays bring out the best and worst in all of them.

I also watched the parade of Easter dresses passing by ... I like all the flowers and ribbons that are in today's dresses.  Some of the smiles take me back to the 50s and 60s ... It's fun to see styles come back again ...

I saw funny pairings ... several couplesthat could have won the unlikeliest couple award ... and others that looked like they were made for one another.  I smiled when I thought of what other people see when they see Joey and me ...

They see a couple that smile and laugh a lot.  They saw me put cream and sugar in our coffees while he was at one of the buffets.  They saw him bring an extra roll ... one for him and one for me ... I don't usually eat bread but he knows how much I like good baked rolls and this one had a little cinnamon (my favorite) ... He said, "I knew you'd like this one." and he was right, but best of all, they saw two people who both feel lucky to be with the other ...

Brunch was over way too fast ... but we had other plans.  We sat in rockers at the front of the Grove Park Inn while we waited for them to bring the car.  We hardly ever use valet parking but the parking lots were full and neither of us wanted to walk very far in our dress shoes!  It was a beautiful day ... blue sky and spring flowers blooming everywhere.
 
We left there and drove to the Biltmore House.  They were having an Easter Egg Hunt on the grounds so most of the children were playing on the front yard, getting their little faces painted and playing games before the big Easter Hunt.

The Biltmore House is a huge mansion with 250 rooms (they even count closets as a room though) that include 45 bathrooms!  It was cool in the house with open windows and fans blowing everywhere.  We were treated to the pipe organ playing in the grand dining room (neither of us had ever heard that before)!  We took the tour at a slower pace and saw things neither of us had noticed before. 

The Latin saying that said, "God bring us peace in our days" ... the carvings, especially one just like a chair I had purchased last fall at an auction.  Joey spotted the first carving and then, we began to notice the same carving in different places in the house ... like our own private scavenger hunt ... Joey and I played Biltmore Trivia with each other, asking each other questions that we didn't think the other would know ... We weren't keeping track but Joey said, "how do you know that?" a lot more times than I did ... lol ...
 
We left the house and took a small break for some COOL orange sherbet and ICE COLD bottled water.  It was starting to get warm and we were still dressed up ... I stopped in the rest room and got rid of my panty hose and Joey took off his tie a little later ... Isn't it funny how the little things can make such a big difference?

We walked through the grounds, taking lots of pictures of the flowers ... I teased Joey about wanting our yard to look like that ... He teased me about picking a big bouquet of tulips for me to have as a souvenir ...

The wooded pathways had that just rained in the Carolinas clean, earthy smell ... DELICIOUS ... but the best smell of all was a LILAC BUSH in full bloom!  I didn't know they even grew this far South ... Well, now I know and I WILL try to add that to the landscape at home ... I also got the idea of how pretty weeping willows would be along the river ... with azaleas on the hill between the house and the river ... 

We stopped by the winery, tasted a few wines, purchased our favorite and had a small glass of wine at the end of the tour while listening to a few sets of jazz in a patio area ...

The day was filling with long shadows, getting close to sunset.  I love that time of day.  The light is perfect.  The temperature was perfect.  The company was perfect.  Life is good ... 
 
 
As I was writing this, I made a cup of tea and walked out on the back porch.  It had rained last night.  There was a slight fog coming from the river.  The sun was trying to peak out.  The birds were singing and the woods were full of that woodsy smell I was describing to you!  I wish you could be here to share a cup of tea and smell that smell ... It's WONDERFUL!
 
Love and Light from HEALING Creek,

Taylor     

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Easter Sunday




THE LITTLE BOY FROM THE CARPENTER SHOP

(Words and Music by Dwayne Friend)

Born in a stable, His mother a virgin;
Raised in a carpenter shop,
His people were slaves; His parents were poor,
His friends were a lowly lot;
His chances in life are very slim,
He's expected to be a slave;
But people in darkness saw light in Him
And hope in the freedom He gave.

(Chorus)
Who is the King of Glory!
The Lord God mighty in battle is He.
Who is the King of Glory?
The Master of the host of Heaven Supreme.
Who is the King of Glory?
The one that not even death could stop,
Who is the King of Glory?
The Little Boy from the carpenter shop.
The Little Boy from the carpenter shop.

(Chorus)

All of the power of heaven and earth
God has invested in Him.
He's to die on the cross, descend into hell,
Meet the devil, take the keys from him.
He yielded Himself to the death of the cross,
Cried, "It's finished!" and slumped to die;
In the regions of hell, the devil celebrated,
"We've destroyed the King," they cried.

(chorus)
 
In the midst of the celebration,
Footsteps were heard walking the corridors of hell.
Then the shouting stopped when a voice rang out;
A voice that rang like a bell;
Satan then trembled as he recognized Him
Who came to deliver His own.
"Shut and lock the gates," he cried,
"Don't let Him ascend to His throne."

(chorus)

Then the gates swung shut in the face of the King
To prove God's salvation untrue;
But He shook hell's gates and cried,
"Lift up your heads, the King is coming through!"
Then out of the devil's prison house
Came a procession lead by the King,
Shouting "Now, oh grave, where is thy victory
And death, where is thy sting!"

(Chorus)
Who is the King of Glory!
The Lord God mighty in battle is He.
Who is the King of Glory?
The Master of the host of Heaven Supreme.
Who is the King of Glory?
The one that not even death could stop,
Who is the King of Glory?
The Little Boy from the carpenter shop.
The Little Boy from the carpenter shop.




Friday, April 14, 2006

Good Friday


 
     

OBITUARY
Jerusalem, 33 AD
Calvary

Jesus Christ, 33, of Nazareth, died Friday on Mount Calvary, also known as Golgotha, the place of the skull.  Betrayed by the apostle Judas, Jesus was crucified by the Romans, by the order of the Ruler Pontius Pilate.  The causes of death were crucifixion, extreme exhaustion, severe torture, and loss of blood.

Jesus Christ, a descendant of Abraham, was a member of the house of David.  He was the son of the late Joseph, a carpenter of Nazareth, and Mary, His devoted mother.  Jesus was born in a stable in the city of Bethlehem, Judea.  He is survived by his mother Mary, His faithful Apostles, numerous disciples, and many other followers.

Jesus was self educated and spent most of his adult life working as a teacher.  Jesus also occasionally worked as a medical doctor and it is reported that he healed many patients.  Up until the time of His death, Jesus was teaching and sharing the Good News, healing the sick, touching the lonely, feeding the hungry, and helping the poor.

Jesus was most noted for telling parables about His Father's Kingdom and performing miracles, such as feeding over 5,000 people with only five loaves of bread and two fish, and healing a man who was born blind.  On the day before his death, He held the Passover Feast, at which He foretold His death.

The body was quickly buried in a stone grave, which was donated by Joseph of Arimathea, a loyal friend of the family.  By the order of Pontius Pilate, a boulder was rolled in front of the tomb.  Roman soldiers were put on guard.

Graveside services were not held but friendsand family will be gathering this Sunday in celebration of Jesus' life and resurrection.  Everyone is welcome to attend.

In lieu of flowers, the family has requested that everyone try to live as Jesus did.  Donations may be sent to anyone in need.

 

Thursday, April 13, 2006

In The Shadows of The Full Moon ...





I couldn't sleep last night ... I went to bed too early, had time to have several good dreams and woke up at 2:00 a.m. with all kinds of ideas going through my head for the flower garden and raised gardens for vegetables and an idea for a trellis ...
 
I got up, grabbed a good book and went in the living room where I was treated to moonlight bright enough to seem like day!  I didn't turn the lamp on, but instead, I basked in the moonlight ... looking outside and watching for the deer ...
 
I saw two little one at the middle feeder ... but only because there shadows were visible and sometimes not ... as they moved through the moonlight.  It was like watching two ghosts come into view and then, fade again ... and then reappearing a few feet down the path ... I smiled ...
 
And realized I was looking at a metaphor of my life ...

                                                                                                         
 
Everyone loves to think they have a "sunny" disposition ... living "the brighter side of life" ... with BRILLIANT sunshine oozing through their life ... But none of us is ever thrilled when our life suddenly turns dark ... Things aren't so easy ... We can't really see very clearly ... Our depth perception is almost useless in the shadows ... The rules have changed.  The same place that felt so sure, now feels uncertain and full of obstacles ...

But it's only in the dark that we can appreciate the beauty of the moonlight!  The dark is where the stars are most visible and the lightning bugs fly!  The dark is where ghostly figures on the path ahead are really two deer ...

And we could have missed it all if we had skipped the dark!

               
 
I smiled again at the magic in the moonlit woods, snuggled into my favorite chair and picked up the book my son asked me to read.  This is what I read:
 
In our willingness to turn our attention towards the shadow in our own hearts and lives, we find an integrity that is true and unshakable.  An ethical life is not a state of sanctuary that we arrive at, but a verb; we discover genuine integrity in those significant moments when we follow the pathway of ending harm and sorrow rather than causing it ...
 
We learn to pause with mindfulness and care in the moments of such patterns so we can come to understand them and no longer be imprisoned by them.  We welcome our shadow and demons and learn to befriend them, to explore all their textures and forms, and find a way of being in which they no longer compel us ...
 
Through learning to find peace and balance within them, rather than avoiding, suppressing, or denying them, we will find unshakable freedom.  There is no spiritual path which is ethically neutral.  A path of awakening is directed toward peace, openheartedness, compassion, and freedom.  To treasure awakening is to treasure the end of sorrow and alienation in all forms, to bring an end of to the causes of sorrow ... A commitment to integrity enables us to be taught by the ordinary moments in our lives and to approach them with reverence.
 
Definitive moments of right and wrong are superceded by many more moments where we simply do not know.  Moral certainty is possessed by those who have not looked deeply into the countless ambiguities of human life ... We do not always have the right answer but we accept that life asks of us a quality of compassion and understanding that is beyond the realm of right and wrong ... With empathy, we go beyond the boundaries of opinion and judgment, and sense what it might mean to live within the heart and life of the person before us.
 
I smiled again at the way life illustrated the very thing I was reading about ...

I remembered a poem that was written by my children's great, great grandfather, William Foster Hayes, I  (Side note: There is now a William Foster Hayes, IV).  

The poem goes like this:
 



When our way leads through the shadow
Let us always bear in mind
That the shadow owes it's being
To the light that shines behind
 
When whatever shade beclouds us
We may feel that all is right,
Indubitably knowing
That the shadow proves the light.




Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Spring ... New Beginnings ... New Growth

 

Sing ... Dance ... Climb

                                - William Arthur Ward

Sing a new song; dance a new step; take a new path ...

Think a new thought;
Accept a new responsibility; memorize a new poem ...

Try a new recipe;
Plan a new adventure; entertain a new idea ...

Learn a new language;
Blaze a new trail;
 Enjoy a new experience ...

Make a new friend;
Read a new book; see a new movie ...

Climb a new hill; scale a new mountain;
Launch a new career ...

Find a new purpose; fill a new need;
Light a new lamp ...

Exercise a new strength;
Grasp a new truth; practice a new awareness ...

Add a new dimension;
Encourage a new growth:
A
ffirm a new beginning ...

Discover a new answer;
Envision a new image; conceive a new system ...

Dream a new dream;
Chart a new course; build a new life ...

Open a new door; explore a new possibility ...

Start a new chapter; seek a new challenge ...

Write a new plan
Turn a new page
Follow a new direction ...

Be a new person; radiate a new enthusiasm ...

Monday, April 10, 2006

Co-Dependent No More - Part 6


(excerpt from Co-Dependent No More by Melody Beattie)
  

Learning To Live And Love Again  

The two deepest desires most people have are: to love and be loved, and to believe they are worthwhile and know someone else believes that also.  I have also heard this phrased more simply, with one item added: To be happy we need someone to love, something to do, and something to look forward to.  

For many of us, that means we have to learn to do things differently, because the ways we have gone about getting our needs met haven't worked.  We've talked about some concepts that will help us do that: detachment, a non-rescuing approach to people, not controlling the object of our attention, directness, paying attention to ourselves, working a twelve-step program, and becoming un-dependent.  I believe as we get healthier, love will be different.  I believe love will be better, perhaps better than ever before, if we let it and if we insist on it.  

I don't think love has to hurt as much as it did in the past.  I don't think we have to allow love to hurt us as much as it has.  We certainly don't have to let it destroy us.  As one woman put it, "I am sick of letting men work out their unfinished business in my life!"  It's not God's will that we stay miserable and stay in miserable relationships.  That's something we are doing to ourselves.  We don't have to stay in relationships that cause pain and misery.  We are free to take care of ourselves.  We can learn to leave destructive relationships and enjoy the good ones.  

I believe God allows certain people to come into our lives.  But I also believe we are responsible for our choices and behaviors in initiating, maintaining, and discontinuing these relationships when appropriate.  

If we believe we are important, we are free to set our own goals and reach for our dreams.  

The good things probably won't happen without some struggle and pain, but at least we will be struggling and stretching for something worthwhile, instead of simply suffering.  

It's okay to succeed, to have good things, and to have loving relationships that work.  These things may not come easily or naturally.  That's okay.  That's how growth feels.  If it feels too comfortable, too natural, or too easy, we're not growing and we're not doing anything different.  

Much of recovery is finding and maintaining balance in all areas of our lives.  We need to balance giving and receiving; we need to find a balance between solving problems and learning to live with unsolved problems.  Much of our anguish comes from having to live with grief of unsolved problems, and having things not go the way we hoped and expected.    

Getting Started  

It's called HOW: Honesty, Openness, and Willingness to try.  Get honest, keep an open mind, and become willing to try to do things differently, and we will change.    

Growing Forward  

Some of us may be facing tough decisions, decisions about ending relationships that are miserable and destructive.  If the relationship is dead, bury it.  We can take our time, work on ourselves, and we will be able to make the right decision when the time is right.  

Some of us may try to repair damaged but still alive relationships.  Be patient.  Love and trust are fragile, living entities.  They do not automatically regenerate upon command if they have been bruised.  Love and trust do not automatically reappear.  Love and trust must be allowed to heal in their own time.  Sometimes they heal;  sometimes they don't. 

Find friends to love, be loved by, and who think we are worthwhile.  Use our time alone as a breather. Let go.  Learn lessons we are to be learning.  Grow.  Develop.  Work on ourselves, so when love comes along, it enhances a full and interesting life.  Strive toward goals.  Have fun.  Trust God and his timing.  

Whatever our situation, we can go slowly.  Our hearts may lead us where our heads say we shouldn't go.  Our heads may insist we go where our hearts don't want to follow.  Sometimes our attraction to frogs may take us where neither our hearts nor heads choose to be.  That's okay.  There are no rules about whom we should or shouldn't love and relate to.  We can love whomever we love, however we want to.  But slow down and take time to do it in a way that doesn't hurt us.  Love from our strengths, not from our weaknesses.  I hope we will find people we will enjoy loving - people who enjoy loving us and challenge us to grow.   

All the old crazy feelings will come rushing in.  Don't be frightened.  This is normal.  See it through.  Don't be ashamed and don't hide.  We can pick ourselves up again.  We will get through it.  Talk to trusted friends; be patient and gentle with ourselves.  Just keep doing the things we know we need to do.  It will get better.  Don't stop taking care of us no matter what happens.

Co-Dependent No More
by Melody Beattie


 

Getting our balance and keeping it once we have found it is what recovery is all about.  If that sounds like a big order, don't worry.  We can do it.  We can learn to live again.  We can learn to love again.  We can even learn to have fun at the same time.

Sunday, April 9, 2006

Co-Dependent No More - Part 5


(excerpt from Co-dependent No More by Melody Beattie)  

Communication  

Co-dependents are indirect.  We don't do it on purpose.  We do it because we've learned to communicate this way.  I believe most of us are afraid to tell people who we are because we don't believe it is okay to be who we are.  Many of us don't like and don't trust ourselves.  We don't trust our thoughts.  We don't trust our feelings.  We may feel ashamed for having our problems.  

Talking clearly and openly is not difficult. In fact, it's easy.  And fun.  Start by knowing that who we are is okay.  Our feelings and thoughts are okay. Our opinions count.  It's okay to talk about our problems.  And it's okay to say no.  

Say what we mean and mean what we say.  If we don't know what we mean, be quiet and think about it.  If our answer is, "I don't know." say "I don't know."  Learn to be concise.  

  • Express our feelings.
  • We can say what we think.
  • We can even be wrong.
  • We can say what we expect.
  • We can express our wants and needs.
  • We can tell the truth.
  • We don't have to be controlled by what other people say.
  • We can learn to ignore nonsense.
  • We can be assertive and stand up for ourselves.
  • We can show compassion and concern without rescuing.
  • We can discuss our feelings and problems without expecting people to rescue us too.  

Learn to listen to what people are saying and not saying.  Talking is a tool and a delight.  We need to take responsibility for communication.  In love and dignity, speak the truth ... as we think, feel, and know it ... and it shall set us free.    

Work A Twelve-Step Program  

  1. We admitted we were powerless ... that our lives had become unmanageable.
  2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
  3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood him.
  4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
  5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
  6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.
  7. Humbly ask Him to remove our shortcomings.
  8. Made a list of persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.
  9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible except when to do so would injure them or others.
  10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it.
  11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understand Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry it out.
  12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to others, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.  

One nice thing about meetings is that people can be who they are.  They don't have to pretend they don't have a particular problem, because everybody there has the same problem.  If they didn't have that problem, they wouldn't be there.  

Something happens when we go to these meetings and work a program.  A peace and a healing sets in.  We start to change and feel better.  The steps are something we work on, but they also work on us.  There is magic at these meetings.  

We never have to do anything we are not able to do, truly find offensive, or don't want to do.  When it is time to do or change a certain thing, we will know it is time and we will want to do it.  There will be a rightness and an appropriateness to it.  Our lives begin to work this way, too.  Healing ... growth ... becomes a natural process.  The Twelve Steps are a formula for man's natural healing process.  

Some of us may be embarrassed to go.  All I could do at the first meetings I attended was sit and cry, and I felt terribly awkward.  But for once, it was a good cry.  My tears were tears of healing.  I needed to sit and cry.  When I stopped crying and looked around, I saw other people crying too.  

Our co-dependent characteristics become habits and may be tendencies we lean toward for the rest of our lives.  Go whether the other people in your life are better or sicker.  Go until you feel grateful that you can go.  Go until the magic works on you.  And don't worry ... if you go long enough, the magic will work.

A Few More Things We Need To Talk About ...  

Expectations  

See if they're realistic.  For example, expecting healthy behavior from unhealthy people is futile; expecting different results from the same behaviors, according to Ernie Larson, is insane.  Then, let go.  See how things turn out.  Let things happen - without forcing.  If we are constantly disappointed, we may have a problem to solve - either with ourselves, another person, or a situation.  

We have a right to expect good things and appropriate behavior.    

Fear of Intimacy  

For many of us, it feels safer to be alone or in relationships where we are "unemotionally involved" than it does to be emotionally vulnerable, close, and loving.  We don't risk people abandoning us; we don't risk.  And we don't have to go through the awkwardness of initiating relationships.  When we don't get close to people, at least we know what to expect: nothing.  Denial of love feelings protects us from the anxiety caused by loving.  

Love and closeness challenge our deepest fears about who we are and whether it is okay to be ourselves, and about who others are and whether that is okay.  Love and closeness - involvement with people are the greatest risks a man or woman can take.  They require honesty, spontaneity, vulnerability, trust,responsibility, self acceptance, and acceptance of others.  Love brings joy and warmth, but it also requires us to be willing to occasionally feel hurt and rejection.  

Many of us have learned to run from closeness, rather than take the risks involved.  We run from love and prevent closeness in many ways.  We push people away or do hurtful things to them so they won't want to be close to us.  We do ridiculous things in our minds to talk ourselves out of wanting to be close.  We find fault with everyone we meet; we reject people before they have a chance to reject us.  We wear masks and pretend to be something other than who we are.  We scatter our energies and emotions among so many relationships that we don't get too close or vulnerable to anyone.

Forgiveness  

Compulsive disorders such as alcoholism twist and distort many good things, including the great principle of forgiveness.  We repeatedly forgive the samepeople.  We hear promises, we believe lies, and we try to forgive some more.  Some of us may not want to, because to forgive would leave us vulnerable to further hurt and we believe we cannot endure more pain.  Forgiveness turns on us and becomes a painful experience.  

Forgiveness can be wonderful.
It wipes the slate clean.  It clears up guilt.
It brings peace and harmony.
 

We cannot forgive someone for doing something if we have not fully accepted what this person has done ... Forgiveness comes in time ... in its own time ... if we are striving to take care of ourselves.  Don't let other people use this principle against us.  Don't let other people help us feel guilty because they think we should forgive someone, and we are either not ready or believe forgiveness is not the appropriate solution.  Take responsibility for forgiveness.  If we are taking care of us, we will understand what to forgive and when it's time to do that.  

While we are at it, don't forget to forgive ourselves!

The Frog Syndrome  

"Did you hear about the woman who kissed a frog?  She was hoping it would turn into a prince.  It didn't.  She turned into a frog too."  

Many co-dependents like to kiss frogs.  We see so much good in them.  Some of us even become chronically attracted to frog after kissing enough of them.  Alcoholics and people with other compulsive disorders are attractive people.  They radiate power, energy, and charm.  They promise the world.  Never mind that they deliver pain, suffering, and anguish.  The words they say sound so good ...    

Fun  

We can schedule fun into our routine.  We can learn to recognize when we need to play and what kinds of things we enjoy doing.  Start doing things just for ourselves, just because we want to.  

Let go and enjoy life.  

People may get angry at us for setting boundaries; they can't use us anymore.  But boundaries are worth every bit of time, energy, and thought required to set and enforce them.  Ultimately, they will provide us with more time and energy.   What are out limits? 

What boundaries do we need to establish?    

Physical Care  

Don't abandon the importance of exercise.  

Taking care of ourselves means taking care of our bodies and grooming.  Make both a daily practice.  

Taking care of our emotional selves is also connected to our bodies.  The more we take care of our emotional selves ... the more we get our needs met ... the less we find ourselves sick.  If we refuse long enough to take care of ourselves, our bodies will rebel and become sick, forcing us and the people around us to give us the care-taking we need.  It's easier to take care of ourselves before we get sick.

Professional Help  

We need to seek professional help if:  
  • We are depressed and thinking about suicide.
  • We want to do an intervention and confront an alcoholic or other troubled person.
  • We have been the victim of physical or sexual abuse.
  • We are experiencing problems with alcohol or other drugs.
  • We can't seem to solve our problems or get "unstuck" by ourselves.
  • For any other reason, we believe we might benefit from professional help.
Strokes  

Most of us need people.  Most of us have at leasta few relationships.  We can say honest, tender, appreciative things, and they can say those things back to us.  The idea is to strive for good relationships.  If we don't have people to be honest, tender, loving, and appreciative with, find some.   

Strive for good physical treatment too.  We don't ever have to let people hit us.  

Co-dependents also frequently have difficulties accepting compliments ... positive strokes.  We can stop fighting the fact that we are good people with good qualities.  If someone tells us something good about ourselves, we can accept it unless instinct tells us the person has ulterior motives.  Even if he or she is trying to manipulate us, take the compliment and refuse to be manipulated.  Let it go all the way down to the heart.  We deserve compliments.  We need them.  We all need them.  They help us believe what we are working so hard to believe ... we are good people.  The beauty of compliments is, the more good things we believe about ourselves, the better we get.  

We can pass out compliments and spread positive energy.  We can share what we like about people and say what we appreciate in them.  Make it honest, but make it good.  

We can learn to recognize when we need to give a stroke.  Learn to recognize when we need to be around people and get some strokes.  Real love says, "You're having problems.  I care, and I'll listen, but I won't and can't do it for you."  Real friendship says, "I think so highly of you that I'll let you figure out how to do it for yourself.  I know you can."    

Trust  

Co-dependents frequently aren't certain whom or when to trust.  We can trust ourselves.  We can trust ourselves to make good decisions about whom we trust.  Many of us have been making inappropriate decisions about trust.  But we can trust people to be who they are.  We can learn to see people clearly.  Is what they say the same as what they do?  

If we pay attention to ourselves and the messages we receive from the world, we will know whom to trust, when to trust, and why to trust a particular person.  We may discover we've always known whom to trust ... we just weren't listening to ourselves.

 

Saturday, April 8, 2006

Co-Dependent No More - Part 4


(excerpts from Co-Dependent No More by Melody Beattie)
  

Feel Your Own Feelings  

Sometimes we withdraw emotionally to avoid being crushed.  Being emotionally vulnerable is dangerous.  Hurt becomes piled upon hurt, and no one seems to care.  We may withdraw emotionally from certain people ... people we think may hurt us.  

Fear can be a stopper; it can prevent us from doing the things we want and need to do to live our lives.

Our feelings can trick us too.  Our emotions can lead us into situations where our heads tell us not to go.  

In spite of the darker side of emotions ... the painful ones, the ones that linger, and the tricky ones ... there is an even bleaker picture if we choose to become unemotional.  Not feeling our feelings, withdrawing emotionally, and pushing that part of us away can be unpleasant, unhealthy and self-destructive.  Repressing or denying feelings can lead to headaches, stomach disorders, backaches, and generally weakened physical conditions which can open the door to many illnesses.  Repressing feelings ... particularly if we are doing it during the denial stage of the grief process ... can lead us into trouble with overeating, under-eating, alcohol and other drug use, compulsive sexual behaviors, compulsive spending, not sleeping enough, sleeping too much, obsessing, controlling gestures, and other compulsive behaviors.  

Feelings are energy.  Repressed feelings block our energy.  We do not do our best when we are blocked.  

Another problem with repressed feelings is they don't go away.  They linger, sometimes growing stronger and causing us to do many peculiar things.  We have to stay one step ahead of the feeling, we have to stay busy, we have to do something.  We don't dare get quiet and peaceful because we might feel these emotions.  And the feeling might squeak out anyway, causing us to do something we never intended to do: scream at the kids, kick the cat, spill on our favorite dress, or cry at the party.  We get stuck in feelings because we're trying to repress them, and like a persistent neighbor, they will not go away until we acknowledge their presence.      

Anger  

As co-dependents, we may be frightened by our anger and other people's anger.  Maybe we believe one or more of the myths.  Or maybe we're frightened anger for other reasons.  Someone may have hit or abused us when he or she was angry.  Sometimes the raw level of energy that accompanies someone's anger can be frightening, particularly if that person is drunk.  

We react to anger, both ours and other people's.  It is a provocative emotion.  It can be contagious.  And many of us have so much to react to.  We have so much anger that accompanies grief.  We have the anger that comes from the persecution phase of rescuing and care-taking.  We have unreasonable anger feelings that may be unjustified and caused by reactive, disastrous thinking; the shoulds, awfuls, nevers and always.  We have justified anger ... all the mad feelings anyone would feel if someone did that to him or her.  We have the anger that covers up hurt and fear,  Sad and scared feelings convert into anger that comes from feeling guilty.  Guilt, both earned and unearned, easily converts into anger.  Co-dependents have a lot of that too.  Believe it or not, so do alcoholics.  They're just more adept at converting it into anger.  

And we have reactive anger.  We get angry because the other person is angry.  Then they get angrier, and we get angrier because they got angrier.  Soon everybody's angry, and no one is sure why.  But we're all mad ... and feeling guilty about it.  

Sadly, many of us have had no place to go with all that anger.  We swallow it, bite our tongues, stiffen our shoulders, push it into our stomachs, let it rattle around in our heads, run from it, medicate it, or give it a cookie.  We blame ourselves, turn anger into depression, put ourselves to bed, hope to die, and get sick because of it.  Finally we ask God to forgive us for being such horrible people for feeling anger in the first place.  Many of us have a real dilemma with our anger, especially if we are living in a family system that says, "Don't feel; especially don't feel angry."  The alcoholic certainly doesn't want to hear about how mad we feel.  He or she probably thinks our anger is unreasonable anyway, and it may bother him or her when we discuss it.  Our anger may push the alcoholic's guilt buttons.  The alcoholic may even overpower us with his or her anger just to keep us feeling guilty and repressed.  

So what do we do with all this pent up steam?  The same thing we do with almost everything that has to do with us: we repress it and feel guilty about it.  Repressed anger, like other repressed emotions, causes problems.  

You cannot live with active alcoholism without being profoundly affected.  Any human being who is bombarded with what you've been bombarded with is to be commended for sheer survival.  You deserve a medal for the mere fact that you're around to tell the story!  

Here are some suggestions for dealing with anger:  

  1. Address any myths we have subscribed to about anger.
  2. Feel the emotion.
  3. Acknowledge the thoughts that accompany the feeling.
  4. Examine the thinking that goes with the feeling.
  5. Make a responsible decision about what, if any, action we need to take.  Figure out what our anger is telling us.  Is our anger indicating a problem in us or in our environment that needs attention?  Sometimes while we're asking God to help us stop feeling angry, He's trying to tell us something.  Do we need change?  Do we need something from somebody else?  Much anger comes from unmet needs.  One quick way to resolve anger is to stop screaming at the person we're angry with, figure out what we need from that person, and ask him or her for that.  If he or she won't or can't give it to us, figure out what we need to do next to take care of ourselves.
  6. Don't let anger control us.  We don't have to react to anger, our's or anyone else's!  Try it sometime.
  7. Openly and honestly discuss our anger, when it's appropriate.  Don't even try to talk to a drunk when he is drunk.  Anger frequently begets anger.
  8. Take responsibility for our anger.  We are responsible for our angry feelings ... even if they are an appropriate reaction to someone else's inappropriate behavior.
  9. Talk to people we trust.  It helps to talk about our feelings.  It helps to accept ourselves.  Remember, we can't move forward unless we accept where we are.
  10. Burn off the anger energy.  Clean the kitchen.  Play softball.  Exercise.  Go dancing.  Shovel the snow.  Rake the yard.  Anger is extremely stressful, and it helps to physically discharge that energy.
  11. Don't beat ourselves or others for feeling angry.  Don't let other people hit us or abuse us in any way when they feel angry.
  12. Write letters we don't intend to send.  Once our anger is out on paper we can get past the guilt and figure out how to deal with it.
  13. Deal with guilt.  Get rid of the unearned guilt.  Get rid of it all.  Guilt doesn't help.  God will forgive us for anything we have done.  Besides, I bet He doesn't think we've done as much wrong as we think we have.      

Yes, You Can Think  

The larger significant decisions we face, such as how to solve our problems, what to do with our lives, and who to live with, can overwhelm us.  Many of us simply give up and refuse to think about these things.  Some of us allow other people or circumstances to make these choices for us.  

We may be living with people now who are telling us directly or indirectly that we can't think.  Some of them may even be telling us we're crazy, but alcoholics do that to people they live with.  Maybe we've started wondering if we're crazy!  But don't believe any of it for one moment.  

The following suggestions may help us gain confidence in our mental abilities:  

  1. Treat our minds to some peace.  Detach.  Get calm.
  2. Ask God to help us think.  He does help.  But he expects me to try to do my part and think.  Some days go better than others.
  3. Quit abusing our minds.  Worry and obsession constitute mental abuse.  Stop doing those things.
  4. Feed our minds.  Give our minds information.  Get the information we need about problems and decisions, whether that problem is overeating, alcoholism, relationships, or how to buy a computer.  Give our minds reasonable data, then let them sort through things.  We will come up with good answers and solutions.
  5. Feed our minds healthy thoughts.  Indulge in activities that uplift our thoughts and give us a positive charge.  Find something that leaves us saying "I can" instead of "I can't".
  6. Stretch our minds.  Get interested in the world around us.  Learn something new.  Take a class.
  7. Quit saying bad things about our minds.  It's just as easy to say good things about ourselves.  We'll probably start believing the positive things and find out they're true.  Isn't that exciting?
  8. Use our minds.  Make decisions.  Create!       

Set Your Own Goals  

There is magic in setting goals.  Things happen.  Things change.  I accomplish important projects.  I change.  I meet new people.  I find myself in interesting places.  I make it through difficult times with a minimum of chaos.  Problems get solved.  My needs and wants get met.  Dreams come true.  

Goals give us direction and purpose.  Goals are fun.  They generate interest and enthusiasm in life.  They make life interesting and, sometimes, exciting.  

When you surrender to your goal, the goal works itself into your subconscious mind.  Your subconscious mind is always in balance.  Your conscious mind is not, unless it is in tune with what your subconscious mind is thinking.  Without full cooperation from the subconscious mind, a person is hesitant, confused, indecisive. 

Some things that might help you set goals:  

  1. Turn everything into a goal.
  2. Omit the "shoulds".
  3. Don't limit ourselves.
  4. Write our goals on paper.
  5. Commit our written goals to God.
  6. Let go.
  7. Do what we can, one day at a time.
  8. Set goals regularly and as needed.
  9. Check off the goals we reach.  Our wants and needs will be met.  When that happens, cross off that goal, congratulate ourselves, and thank God.  We will gain confidence in ourselves, in goal setting, in God, and in the rhythm of life this way.  We will see for ourselves that good things do happen to us.
  10. Be patient.  Trust in God's timing. 
Things happen when the time is right ... when we are ready, when God is ready, when the world is ready.  Give up.  Let go.  But keep it on our list.