Author Topic: Detachment  (Read 34821 times)

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #75 on: March 26, 2008, 09:31:43 AM »
This is a very nice website that you can visit. It was helpful for me. It might be helpful for some ofmy dear friends here in the board. You can see that I am feeling wonderfuly. I am on spring brake and working very hard on meditation, let go, detahcment and forgiveness. Sorry for the redundance, and abundance. Thank you God.



http://www.forgive-yourself.com/

Leah

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2894
  • Joyous Discerner
Re: Detachment
« Reply #76 on: March 26, 2008, 09:44:52 AM »
Thank you ((( Lupita )))

Your thread is one of many that is permanently bookmarked as a much valued resource.  We seem to work in a similar way.

So glad to know that you are feeling wonderful and sounding refreshed, during your much deserved Spring break.

Thanks for this new link:  forgive-yourself  ........ which was something that I came to realise with insight regarding a real need to forgive myself and stop berating myself.

God Bless you.   Still praying for you regarding a new, better, job, come summer break time.

Love, Leah


Like a river of love and self-acceptance flowing into a pool of healing; ...the energy of forgiveness exists


« Last Edit: March 26, 2008, 09:47:10 AM by LeahsRainbow »
Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #77 on: March 26, 2008, 09:54:33 AM »
Lea, dear very dear lea very very very dear lea:

We are not working in a similar way. With out knowing you were modeling for me. I confess that I copied your way because I noticed that it was very productive for me and many others. So, I decided to do it too. And it is working.

God put you here on this board ofr a reason.

Thank you Lea. You are not here by accident. Thank you lea and thank you God for people like you.

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #78 on: March 26, 2008, 10:02:08 AM »
Also, Lea, you made me realize that writing threads of whining and complaining brought a lot of answers from nice well meaning people, but did not bring any peace to my heart. Doing this kind of threads makes me feel better. You helped me because you set an example. There is no better way to teach than setting a good example.
I admire you Lea, I have never seen you makeing a pitty party of thread, never. That is the best example you can give to others.

Again Lea, you are not here by accident, God put you here for a reason. God does not MAke junk and God made you and me.

LOL

Leah

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2894
  • Joyous Discerner
Re: Detachment
« Reply #79 on: March 26, 2008, 07:39:26 PM »
Truly, God Bless You dear (((( Lupita ))))

I really do believe that your words from your dear heart were delivered as a blessed encouragement, truly because, of my hearts cry and personal prayer, recently.

And you speak such truth Lupita, God does not make junk, and also, He knew us before we were formed, each of us in our mother's womb, you and me -- God sees us as being worthy in His eyes.  God lifts up those of whom the world looks down on and tries to trample on, yes, He truly does lift us up into His arms and steady us on a better pathway.

Praying that you find a much deserved, much better teaching placement, come summer break time.

God Bless You.

"Thank You" for your kind words of encouragement, of which I am so truly grateful.

Love, Leah
Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #80 on: March 27, 2008, 06:23:07 AM »
Thank you Lea for your kind words.

Here is more about forgiveness.

Know exactly how you feel about what happened and be able to articulate what about the situation is not OK.  Then, tell a trusted couple of people about your experience. 
   
2. Make a commitment to yourself to do what you have to do to feel better.  Forgiveness is for you and not for anyone else.   
   
3. Forgiveness does not necessarily mean reconciliation with the person that hurt you, or condoning of their action.  What you are after is to find peace.  Forgiveness can be defined as the "peace and understanding that come from blaming that which has hurt you less, taking the life experience less personally, and changing your grievance story."   
   
4. Get the right perspective on what is happening. Recognize that your primary distress is coming from the hurt feelings, thoughts and physical upset you are suffering now, not what offended you or hurt you two minutes - or ten years -ago.  Forgiveness helps to heal those hurt feelings.
   
5. At the moment you feel upset practice a simple stress management technique to soothe your body's flight or fight response.
   
6. Give up expecting things from other people, or your life , that they do not choose to give you.  Recognize the "unenforceable rules" you have for your health or how you or other people must behave.  Remind yourself that you can hope for health, love, peace and prosperity and work hard to get them. 
 
   
7.  Put your energy into looking for another way to get your positive goals met than through the experience that has hurt you.  Instead of mentally replaying your hurt seek out new ways to get what you want.
 
   
8.  Remember that a life well lived is your best revenge.  Instead of focusing on your wounded feelings, and thereby giving the person who caused you pain power over you, learn to look for the love, beauty and kindness around you.  Forgiveness is about personal power.
   
9. Amend your grievance story to remind you of the heroic choice to forgive.
   
  The practice of forgiveness has been shown to reduce anger, hurt depression and stress and leads to greater feelings of hope, peace, compassion and self confidence. Practicing forgiveness leads to healthy relationships as well as physical health. It also influences our attitude which opens the heart to kindness, beauty, and love.

 
 

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #81 on: March 27, 2008, 06:25:13 AM »
For many people forgiveness is one of the hardest steps of all in our progress toward freedom of spirit. Yet it is essential. For as long as we are unable to forgive, we keep ourselves chained to the unforgiven. We give them rent-free space in our minds, emotional shackles on our hearts, and the right to torment us in the small hours of the night. When it is time to move on, but still too hard, try some or all of these steps. (Note that these steps are appropriate for events resulting from an ongoing adult relationship with anyone. They may not all be appropriate for the random act of violence from a stranger, nor for someone who was abused as a child or while in some other position of true helplessness.)

1. Understand that forgiving does not mean giving permission for the behavior to be repeated. It does not mean saying that what was done was acceptable. Forgiveness is needed for behaviors that were not acceptable and that you should not allow to be repeated.



2. Recognize who is being hurt by your non-forgiveness. Does the other person burn with your anger, feel the knot in your stomach, experience the cycling and recycling of your thoughts as you re-experience the events in your mind? Do they stay awake as you rehearse in your mind what you would like to say or do to 'punish' them? No, the pain is all yours.



3. Do not require to know 'why' as a prerequisite to forgiveness. Knowing why the behavior happened is unlikely to lessen the pain, because the pain came at a time when you did not know why. Occasionally there are times when knowing why makes forgiveness unncessary, but they are rare. Don't count on it and don't count on even the perpetrator knowing why.



4. Make a list of what you need to forgive. What was actually done that caused your pain? Not what you felt, what was done.



5. Acknowledge your part. Were you honest about your hurt or did you hide the fact that the behavior hurt you? Did you seek peace by reassuring the perpetrator that it was all right? Did you stay when you could or should have left? If so, then you, too, have some responsibility. (Here you start to move away from being a victim.)



6. Make a list of what you gained from the relationship, whatever form of relationship it was. Looking back you may be focusing on the negatives, the hurts. Yet if they were repeated, you must have stayed to allow the repetition. You did not remove yourself. Why? There must have been some positives if you chose to stay around. What were they?



7. Write a letter to the person (no need to mail it). Acknowledge what you gained from the relationship, and express forgiveness for the hurts. Allow yourself to express all your feelings fully. Do not focus only on the hurts.



8. Create a ceremony in which you get rid of your lists and the letter, so symbolizing the ending of the link between you. You may choose to visualize placing them on a raft and watching it drift gently away down a river. You may prefer to burn them and scatter the ashes. You may invent some other form of ritualized separation.



9. Visualize the person you are forgiving being blessed by your forgiveness and, as a result, being freed from continuing the behavior that hurt you.



10. Now that you have freed yourself from the painful links and released the pain, feel yourself growing lighter and more joyous. Now you are free to move on with your life without that burden of bitterness. Do not look back in anger.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About the Submitter
This piece was originally submitted by Diana Robinson, Ph.D., Professional Life Coach, Writer, Editor, Counselor, who can be reached at Diana@choicecoach.com, or visited on the web. Diana Robinson wants you to know: As a Professional Life Coach I welcome the chance to work with people seeking to reconnect with their own strengths and their own authenticity, people who are seeking balance in their lives, and to whom inner, as well as outer, success is important. I offer a half-hour complimentary coaching call and a free twice-monthly e-mail newsletter. For more information see my web site.

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #82 on: March 27, 2008, 06:28:25 AM »
Forgiving the Unforgivable

 

Religious teachings say that we have to forgive each other.  Turn the other cheek.  From our earliest childhood memories, our parents were telling us that we have to forgive our siblings when they hurt us or break our things.  Forgive and forget.  To hold a grudge will get you shunned and even ridiculed by others in society, “Ah just get over it.  They said they were sorry.”  We get this huge guilt complex dumped on us from all directions.  We are expected to forgive everyone no matter what they do and no matter what their motivation was for doing it.  Often, people aren’t even sorry that they have caused us pain and sorrow, yet we still have to offer up our forgiveness anyway.  To refuse to forgive someone is often considered a greater sin then whatever the original crime was.  But what about big stuff like infidelity, murder, kidnapping, and rape?  What about the crimes of one society against another, like slavery, genocide, or destroying all of the art and history books of the losing team in a war?  How do you forgive the really bad stuff and what if deep down in your most private heart you really don’t forgive them?  Then what?

 

I tell you this, you are human, a perfectly natural normal human being.  Do not treat yourself like you are the bad guy because you are honest with yourself and you refuse to live the lie of a forgiveness that you do not feel.  If someone has committed a crime against your body, a crime against your heart, or a crime against your soul, you have a natural right to feel fear, anger, resentment, outrage and whatever else rushes through your heart and mind.  What you do with that anger and rage is one thing, but you have the right to feel what you feel.  Do not lie to yourself and pretend that you do not feel it.  Do not try to force yourself to begin feeling something completely different.  Real forgiveness will come if and when you are ready and not a moment before. 

 

Does that mean that you are going to let that anger control you?  No!  You already had to suffer through the ugliness of someone else’s behaviors and choices, you should not allow the anger you feel to also rule over your life.  Part of taking back your life and walking a path that is happy and healthy and eventually healing is by controlling what will and will not be allowed to dominate over you.   That is why our personal freedoms are so vital to our well-being.  A woman who has been raped has every right to hate the man who did it to her and she has the right to forgive him or to not forgive him in her own time.  Until she is ready to forgive, she needs to make sure that the memory of that crime against her body and soul does not rule over her and keep her from moving forward with her own healing, her own life, and her own dreams.  A group of people that are persecuted for their religious beliefs have a right to be angry and to not forgive those who would deny them religious freedom.  However, if they allow that anger to control them, then they are never really free are they?  Feeling anger and living anger are two very different things.  Denying someone the right to feel anger insures that they will live the anger instead.  Therefore, real forgiveness never happens.

 

Real forgiveness requires time - time to heal, time to forget, time to laugh, time to cry, time to breath deeply, time to rebuild, time to thrive, and time to detach.  Then and only then can we really forgive each other for the horrible things that we do.  Some things like a broken toy can be forgiven after a day or two.  Other things like infidelity may take months and even years.  Sometimes it never happens.  Something like slavery can take many generations of time and distancing before we can detach enough to fully forgive.  It is a matter of perspective and directionally proportional to the amount of pain and psychological damage that was caused. 

 

It is naturally easier to forgive someone that appears to be truly sorry for their actions.  It also helps if someone shows signs of trying to make things right again.  Sometimes the person who is sorry is not always the one who makes things right again.  One man may rape a woman, but a second man comes along and teaches her again that her body is a sacred and holy temple to be treasured.  That second man makes her healing and forgiveness of the first man easier.  A society who realizes that they have harmed a minority group but then later tries to make it right by educating their children and providing medical care with no strings attached goes a long way to begin the healing process. 

 

Yes, we are the ones who ultimately benefit the most from being able to forgive those who harm us, but it must be a real forgiveness and not someone else’s dogma thrown in our face.  Forgive those who have harmed you as much as you can in the moment.  Be honest with yourself.  Then forgive yourself for not being able to forgive 100%.  Later when you have had some time to heal, forgive them a bit more.  Do not torture yourself with guilt, just allow yourself real honest healing, in real honest time.  If you never forgive them, then so be it.  Perhaps in generations to come, your children, grandchildren, or great grandchildren will forgive them for having hurt you so deeply.  Some things are simply too big to forgive in one lifetime.  I am sorry that we still do such things to each other.  I am also sorry that we further complicate the victims’ lives by requiring them to live the lie of forgiveness when there is no possible way for them to ever really feel it. 

 

Copyright 2005, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow’s Edge


Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #83 on: March 27, 2008, 06:58:31 AM »
Interesting article about forgiveness.
Unforgivable injuries are the injuries of intimate people. When they happen, hearts are broken, and the essence of intimacy is destroyed. So, the worst kind of human wounds occur not on battlefields but in our homes. The worst injurers are not enemies or strangers in a foxhole but our husbands and wives, children, parents, and friends. Where love has been a part of the relationship, the shrapnel of human destruction is strewn in our living rooms and bedrooms in the form of aborted dreams and wounded hopes. Wars may terminate with the signing of peace treaties, but intimate injuries have no such formal mechanism for ending them. The most intimate of injuries are often left festering and unresolved-either unforgiven or unforgivable.Still, forgiveness is possible to achieve. The reality is that more often than not, forgiveness occurs not as part of a transaction with the injurer but as the result of a solitary process doggedly and painfully pursued by a person who has been badly injured. In other words, forgiveness happens, but it too often happens with no outside help at all.

Unfortunately, an unforgivably wounded person must heal himself. The church or therapists may help, but without the opportunity to confront an offender directly, the offended person must still repair his own heart. Otherwise, he might waste his life waiting for either a chance to face his injurer, or a sincere apology that might never come. It is the “solitary model” of forgiveness and its phases that we will be discussing here. The ability of human beings to forgive the unforgivable-even if they have to do it alone-is a testament to all that is right about our species. It speaks to the fact that there remains, even at the start of the twenty-first century, an inner conscience-a need to make things right when people have hurt and been hurt by each other. Forgiveness, whether a mechanism for survival or a basic need of the conscience, nonetheless happens. And when it is final, it imparts peace to the forgiver and restores a modicum of kindness to the human community as a whole.






http://www.iloveulove.com/forgiveness/unforgivable1.htm
« Last Edit: March 27, 2008, 07:04:34 AM by Lupita »

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #84 on: March 27, 2008, 07:41:55 AM »
Interesting books




http://www.forgivenessweb.com/RdgRm/forgiving_the_unforgivable.htm


Home  Reading Room  Message Board
 
 
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Forgiving the Unforgivable

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Forgiving the Unforgivable    by Beverly Flanigan

 
 
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Aba Gayle's Story

Forgiving the Unforgivable

Forgiving the Unforgivable: Part 1

Sandy MacGregor Forgave the Unforgivable

Forgiving the Unforgivable by Lisa Collier Cool

Forgiving the Unforgivable - An Interview with Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Forgiving the Unforgiveable by Lynn Kaska

13 Steps to Forgiving the Unforgivable

Forgiving the Unforgiveable

 

 

Leah

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2894
  • Joyous Discerner
Re: Detachment
« Reply #85 on: March 27, 2008, 08:10:45 AM »

Hi Lupita,

Have quickly read through the 3 articles just posted and intend to read them again, and post, later on.

Really interesting subject "Forgiveness"

Personally, initially, I forgave too soon, then sometime later on, as healing had progressed, I felt a deep desire to forgive, which I did.

Love, Leah
Jun 2006 voiceless seeking

April 2008 - "The Gaslight Effect" How to Spot & Survive by Dr. Robin Stern - freedom of understanding!

The Truth About Abuse VIDEO

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #86 on: March 27, 2008, 08:17:45 AM »
Dear Lea, as I start to understand my mother, I start to forgive her. I want to forgive my coworkers. It is difficult. I have never been able to confront my abusers. Never.

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #87 on: March 27, 2008, 08:27:06 AM »
OK Lea, let us work together, I need to forgive the librarian who is poisoning children against me and behaves like a maffia person, and I need to forgive the bible teacher who also behaves like a maffia person.

I will not be able to confront them in the next couple of months. I just cant.

So, I have to forgive on my own with out any external locus of control. Just my inner strenght.

How did you forgive your abusers?

I need to survive the year the school year. Just four students misbehave, but four too many. Handfull. But if librarian and bible teacher are constantly "helping" I will never end.

OK, I need to renew my self.

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #88 on: March 29, 2008, 10:03:12 AM »
Accepting Powerlessness

Some of us have an easy time accepting the premise in this Step: that we are powerless over others. By the time we get to this Step, we're ready to give up and give in, Others have a struggle accepting powerlessness.

I love this Step. But I hate that I can't control. I hate being vulnerable and helpless. I don't like feeling uncomfortable or being in emotional pain. I get sick of having to detach and surrender. But the love affair with this Step comes in when I admit the truth. I am powerless over much in life, and when I try to have power where I have none, I get crazy. I can't control others, no matter how much I want to, no matter how much better I think I know what's right for them.
 
I can't control what others do, think, or feel, whether or how they choose to interact with me, whether or when they choose to grow and change, and whether or when they choose to recover from their addictions.

Sometimes I can't control myself.

I'm powerless over the backlog of feelings and negative beliefs I've accumulated. I'm powerless over my own and other people's addictions, including addictions to alcohol and misery. I can't control my children or other people's children. I'm powerless over results, life, circumstances, events. I can't control the course of relationships. I can't control timing.

God, I wish I could control timing.

But I can't.

When I try to control myself by rigidly repressing my thoughts and feelings, I lose myself. I fall deeper into the pit of myself and the morass of codependency.

When I try to control other people, I make them and myself crazy. When I try to control addictions, the addictions control me. When I try to control what others think of me, I turn into a puppet on strings. Controlling makes me and others crazy. It puts me under the control of whatever I'm trying to influence, I lose myself. I lose touch with myself.

And other people get angry with me and tend to back off.

When I try to control situations and circumstances, I set up blocks to events moving forward. When I spend my time and energy trying to have power when I have none, I lose my ability to live my own life.

Controlling sets up a peculiar energy. People can feel it — even if we're just thinking about it and not acting on it. People react to it — sometimes by deliberately doing what we are trying to make them stop doing, or not doing what we are trying to make them do. It's an energy controlled by fear.

It's natural to want to control others, especially when they're hurting themselves or us, or when things aren't working out to our liking. But it isn't our job to take care of others — to take care of their feelings, thoughts, decisions, growth, and responsibilities. It is our job to do that for ourselves.

Step One does not imply irresponsibility or helplessness. We are not saying, "I can't help myself because of what others are doing or have done to me." We are saying the opposite: that we are responsible for ourselves and our affairs. Others are responsible for themselves and their affairs — whether or not we like how they are handling them.

We are responsible for ourselves, for directing our life energy toward our path, for creating a wholesome, fulfilling life for ourselves. When we become open to allowing that to happen, then it will.

We are responsible for stopping our own pain, facing and dealing with our own fears, saying no, giving ourselves what we need, setting boundaries we need to set, and making choices and decisions we need to make to take care of ourselves — in any circumstance or situation.

We are not victims.

When we accept powerlessness, we will become empowered to take care of ourselves. When we begin taking care of ourselves, we will begin living our lives, and all that is meant to come to us will be ours. When we stop controlling others, we can allow and trust them to live their lives.

This Step grounds us in reality and in ourselves. It centers us. It balances us. It brings us back home to ourselves.

When we stop controlling, things fall into place. And we find that our place in this world is a good place. Eventually, we become grateful for the way things work out because it's better than what we could have accomplished with our controlling behavior.

We are powerless over so much more than anyone taught us. Accepting that means we're free to own our true power in life, which is also so much more than anyone told us. We have power to think, feel, solve problems, set boundaries, set and reach goals, create, heal, take care of and love ourselves unconditionally, and love those around us unconditionally.

What am I powerless over? Almost everything I want to control.

The Detachment Step

The First Step is the Step that helps us begin detaching — a recovery concept that means we release and detach from others — lovingly, whenever possible.

This Step helps us begin to identify the proper use and abuse of willpower. We begin feeling instead of running from our emotions. We identify how we have neglected ourselves, so we may better love ourselves in any circumstance.

It is the first step toward removing ourselves as victims of others, of ourselves, of life.

This is the Detachment Step.

This Step is about boundaries. We learn the limits and extent of ourselves and our responsibilities. We learn to identify what we can and cannot do. We learn to identify when we're trying to do the impossible or trying to do that which is not our job.

Then, we stop doing the impossible and focus our attention on the possible — living our own lives, taking care of ourselves, feeling and responding appropriately to our feelings. We can love ourselves and others without feeling the overwhelming need to control and manipulate them and their situations to our liking.

Often, this Step puts us in touch with our feelings: feelings of fear, hurt, or shame. It puts us in touch with grief. At first, this Step can feel dark and frightening. It doesn't have to, not for long. It renders us powerless over what we cannot control, so we can become empowered. Once we accept whatever loss or area of powerlessness we're facing, we're free to feel and deal with our feelings, then move forward with life.

We'll take this Step when we're ready. When we're worn out, when we've exerted all our attempts to manage and control, when we're tired of feeling crazy and fighting battles we cannot win, we'll surrender. When it's time, this Step will find us and do its work.

Let it. Let it bring us home. Let it take the burden of controlling and feeling so responsible for others off our backs. Let the peace, relief, and comfort of this Step sink in.

Detach. Detach from the fear. Detach from the need to control. Focus on ourselves, and let ourselves be. Stop trying so hard and doing so much, when doing so much doesn't work.

Love and accept ourselves, as is, no matter what our present circumstances. The answer will come. The solution will come. But not from trying so hard.

The answer will come from detachment.

We are powerless over others, and our lives have become unmanageable. And for now, that's all we need to be. That's who we are, and it's good enough.

Become sensitive to feelings of powerlessness and unmanageability. Become sensitive to what it feels like — on the overt and the more subtle levels.

Take this Step in the beginning of recovery. Then take it again as needed. Take it whenever the codependent crazies set in. Take it whenever we believe that things are out of control and our lives are a mistake. Take it when we find ourselves taking care of others and wondering if we have a right to take care of ourselves. Take it when we start ignoring our feelings. Take it when we start obsessing about others or worrying about our future or the future of another. Take it when we start believing others control our happiness.

Take it when we neglect ourselves.

Take it when we get stuck.

When we don't know what to do next, we can take this Step.

Think about it. Let it sink in. Let it define us, and our present and past circumstances. Let it heal, help, and comfort. It always brings us home — to ourselves, to reality, and to mastering the spiritual lesson in our current circumstances.

The first word in this First Step is we. Self-acceptance, based on this simple definition of ourselves, feels good. We are not alone, not anymore. There are many of us practicing this Step daily. There are many of us who share the problem. We may have felt alone, but we are not unique in our pain or our dilemma. Neither are we isolated in our solution. There is power in the community of recovery, power in taking this Step in the privacy of our own homes, and in group settings with others. We come together in this Step, as a "we," to share our common problem and solution. The sharing in community makes the problem grow smaller and the solution more imminent.

There is a place I get to in my relationships with people, and life, that is dark and ineffective. It is a place ruled by fear and an instinctive desire to control.

I have done it overtly — trying to control an alcoholic's drinking by focusing my life around that person.

I have done it quietly — trying to control and repress my feelings, trying to control a particular situation, ferreting into myself until I barely existed, repeating unsuccessful similar efforts to solve a problem, or pretending a particular problem doesn't exist. I get to that dark place when I allow others to control me or when I allow negative beliefs or unresolved feelings from my past to control me.

I get to that place when I don't do what I need to do to take care of myself with people, because I am afraid to do so.

This Step takes me out of that dark place. It helps me remember who I am. I can't control others, and I get crazy when I try to. I don't have to control others. I don't have to take care of them. I don't have to control life, or situations, for life to work.

It is safe now to trust. It is safe now to detach. I can accept myself, my problems, my current situation, and all my unmanageability. I can detach, because holding on so tightly doesn't work. I can relax and just be me. And I can love, accept, and take care of myself.

The first time I took this Step on my codependency issues, when it really sank down from my head to my soul, it brought freedom and the gift of detachment. For the first time, I understood, in my heart, that I could not control another. This Step brought relief and the ability to begin tending to the affairs of my own life.

This Step still brings relief, each time I take it.

This Step gives us permission to be who we are. This is the Step where we accept ourselves, our powerlessness, and our present circumstances, in peace, grace, and trust that all is, and will be, well.

We surrender. Then we watch as manageability sets in.

This Step takes us to a safe place, a comfortable place. Let ourselves go there, as often as we need to. We can trade in lives based on fear, control, and shame for lives that are manageable.

Each Step has its own work to do in our lives. Each Step is important,

The work, the healing, begins with the First.

Activities

1. Have you been trying to exert power or influence where you may, in reality, have none? Have you been trying to control someone or something, trying harder and harder with less and less beneficial results?

2. Who or what in your life is making you feel crazy and causing you stress? Whom do you feel victimized by? Who do you feel is now controlling you, your emotions, or some other area of your life? What situations, feelings, or realities have you been running from, denying, or avoiding?

3. What would you have to face in your own life if you stopped trying to control someone or something? What might happen if you stopped allowing someone or something to control you?

4. What are some areas in your life that may reflect unmanageability? What is your current condition in these areas: emotions, finances, spirituality, physical health, career? What are you doing for fun, pleasure, and enjoyment?

5. What is the current state of your relationships with these people: family, friends, co-workers. Do you have any relationships, or are you feeling alone and isolated?

6. Does your mind feel clear and consistent? Who are you holding responsible for your emotions, finances, and health? Who are you holding responsible for the state of your relationships?

7. What are you doing in your life that you feel resentful about? What do you feel you have to do but don't want to? In what areas of your life do you feel you have no choices, no options? Who or what is trapping you? Whom do you most want to say something to? Why do you feel you can't say it?

8. What is the particular incident that propelled you to begin attending a Twelve Step group? If attending for a time, what is the issue that has been plaguing you most recently? Who or what are you most Worried about? When was the last time you did something loving and nurturing for yourself? Is there someone in your life that you feel is causing you misery? Do you feel that if he or she behaved differently, you would be happy?

« Previous   

Copyright © 1990 by Melody Beattie

About the Author

Melody Beattie is the author of numerous books about personal growth and relationships, drawing on the wisdom of Twelve Step healing, Christianity, and Eastern religions. With the publication of Codependent No More in 1986, Melody became a major voice in self-help literature and endeared herself to millions of readers striving for healthier relationships. She lives in Malibu, California.

More by Melody Beattie    In this book
»  Step One
»  Other Stories of Unmanageability
»  The Roots of Control
»  Accepting Powerlessness, The Detachment Step
Related Topics
Addictions
Self-Esteem
Reflection and Self Discovery
 
 

 

Lupita

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2457
Re: Detachment
« Reply #89 on: March 30, 2008, 10:03:55 PM »
Thank you Besee, thenk you so much. Vwery few people thank me for my work. But I am trying to detach from teh results, just enjoy the journey. Thank you again Besee. God bless you for giving me some validation.