Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 I discovered ’s “The Work” only this week. I tried it in my own journal, and found it quite helpful although severe emotional pain blocked a fuller appreciation of it. Today, I received an email from my family which, hit me in a very painful way again. I decided to work through it in “The Work” way, and thought I’d risk submitting it to this e-group just to check out if I am working it out rightly. Some emails I read were really enlightening to me personally. I felt that for this to really work, one must have the courage, too, to be “publicly judged” on it. Here goes then: My family shouldn’t judge without listening, shouldn’t think of their world as the only world, shouldn’t consider themselves always right and the rest of us wrong or inferior. They should get out of their worlds, their narrow, convoluted worlds to recognize that a much bigger world exists outside theirs. They should realize that there is so much that they do not know, that their judgments are of a narrow-mind, that their world is so small. They shouldn’t shoot people down and consider themselves superior, better, and above all the others. They should know that many times, they have been wrong, and that their plethora of unnamed moral codes are keeping them such joyless people. They should sometimes choose being happy over being right. Is this absolutely true? No, they can be all that they want to be. They choose their own mode of thinking, doing, being. I feel shot down and suffocated when they do all these, I feel constricted and suffocated, but it cannot, does not stop them from being all they choose to be. Is it absolutely true that they choose all these? No. It is possible that this is the only way they know how to do things, think things, are. It is possible that they do not know there are other ways of doing, thinking, being. If they consider themselves right all the time, it is probable that they see no need to get out of these patterns. It is also possible that because they are so unhappy in these set patterns of being, doing, and thinking, their unhappiness is intensified when those they judge as wrong are happy, free, and joyful. What happens when I think these thoughts? I feel a tightness in my chest, a helplessness, a powerlessness, a sense of despair. I feel angry, hurt, hateful. I return to the time as a child when I was shouted at and not allowed to speak my piece – or speak at all. I return to that old feeling of having truth trapped within my soul and having their so-called “opinions” triumph and prevail, like a rock pushing down my voice so that it stays unheard or if heard, discounted and shot down. But this trapped voice continues to speak inside of me and have a life of its own that eventually gets transformed into resentment, anger, and paralysis. What would happen if I did not have these thoughts? I be empowered to honor my own truth and voice even if it is the very truth and voice they judge as wrong and inferior. I would be stronger to give form to what I think, feel, am, and want to say. I would be free to be me, even if they do not accept or approve of me, even when they ridicule, dismiss, trivialize, or mock me. I would feel lighter, freer, better. I wouldn’t have to fight silently within me anymore. TA: I shouldn’t allow anyone to judge me without their having listened to me or without my having shared my thoughts in a fair place where each party matters and is honored. I should honor my own world as different from their world but no less right or even bearing truth. Their world is small, and mine is not infinite itself, but in between these two worlds is more than our hearts, minds, and spirits can contain. I should listen to them beyond their words, yet not allow their words to shoot down my truths. Neither of us is inferior or superior. I can choose to be joyful – and choose the places to express myself so that my joy will not be taken away from me. I need, too, to listen to myself. To be kind to myself, and to come to a place of respect and honor for myself so that I am not cowed by my family’s judgments. Thank you, maryanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Hi, Anne! Welcome to the group. On Fri, Mar 12, 2004 at 04:02:19PM +0800, Anne P. Ledesma wrote: > I discovered ’s " The Work " only this week. I tried it in my own > journal, and found it quite helpful although severe emotional pain > blocked a fuller appreciation of it. Today, I received an email from > my family which, hit me in a very painful way again. I decided to > work through it in " The Work " way, and thought I’d risk submitting > it to this e-group just to check out if I am working it out rightly. What I've heard say, on tape and in person, is, " You can't do it wrong. " She does offer guidelines, like starting out doing the work on another person (which you have done), and trusting the process of the four questions (which you have done), but she also invites us to use the process in whatever way we find works best for us. When I attended a weekend Intensive in Asheville, NC, recently, one of the focuses was on simplifying our statements so we were working with short, easily remembered phrases, like, " My family shouldn't judge me, " or " My family should listen to me. " > Some emails I read were really enlightening to me personally. I felt > that for this to really work, one must have the courage, too, to be > " publicly judged " on it. That's an interesting thought. For me, it seems like the important thing that makes it work is a willingness to get really honest with myself. I've found that sometimes sharing my work with another person or with this group can help facilitate that because I get called on it when I try to slide by with less than the full truth. > Here goes then: > > My family shouldn’t judge without listening, shouldn’t think of > their world as the only world, shouldn’t consider themselves always > right and the rest of us wrong or inferior. They should get out of > their worlds, their narrow, convoluted worlds to recognize that a > much bigger world exists outside theirs. They should realize that > there is so much that they do not know, that their judgments are of > a narrow-mind, that their world is so small. They shouldn’t shoot > people down and consider themselves superior, better, and above all > the others. They should know that many times, they have been wrong, > and that their plethora of unnamed moral codes are keeping them such > joyless people. They should sometimes choose being happy over being > right. > > Is this absolutely true? > > No, they can be all that they want to be. They choose their own mode of > thinking, doing, being. I feel shot down and suffocated when they do all > these, I feel constricted and suffocated, but it cannot, does not stop them > from being all they choose to be. > > Is it absolutely true that they choose all these? > > No. It is possible that this is the only way they know how to do things, > think things, are. It is possible that they do not know there are other > ways of doing, thinking, being. If they consider themselves right all the > time, it is probable that they see no need to get out of these patterns. It > is also possible that because they are so unhappy in these set patterns of > being, doing, and thinking, their unhappiness is intensified when those they > judge as wrong are happy, free, and joyful. > > What happens when I think these thoughts? > > I feel a tightness in my chest, a helplessness, a powerlessness, a > sense of despair. I feel angry, hurt, hateful. I return to the time > as a child when I was shouted at and not allowed to speak my piece > – or speak at all. I return to that old feeling of having truth > trapped within my soul and having their so-called “opinions” > triumph and prevail, like a rock pushing down my voice so that it > stays unheard or if heard, discounted and shot down. But this > trapped voice continues to speak inside of me and have a life of its > own that eventually gets transformed into resentment, anger, and > paralysis. > > What would happen if I did not have these thoughts? > > I be empowered to honor my own truth and voice even if it is the > very truth and voice they judge as wrong and inferior. I would be > stronger to give form to what I think, feel, am, and want to say. I > would be free to be me, even if they do not accept or approve of me, > even when they ridicule, dismiss, trivialize, or mock me. I would > feel lighter, freer, better. I wouldn’t have to fight silently > within me anymore. > > TA: I shouldn’t allow anyone to judge me without their having > listened to me or without my having shared my thoughts in a fair > place where each party matters and is honored. I should honor my own > world as different from their world but no less right or even > bearing truth. Their world is small, and mine is not infinite > itself, but in between these two worlds is more than our hearts, > minds, and spirits can contain. I should listen to them beyond their > words, yet not allow their words to shoot down my truths. Neither of > us is inferior or superior. I can choose to be joyful – and > choose the places to express myself so that my joy will not be taken > away from me. I need, too, to listen to myself. To be kind to > myself, and to come to a place of respect and honor for myself so > that I am not cowed by my family’s judgments. > > Thank you, Thank you, Anne. This is my work, too. I have a similar family. Some turn-arounds that come up for me as I think about myself and my family: - I should not shoot myself down. (they can't shoot me down without my cooperation. All they do is load the gun. *I'm* the one who aims and pulls the trigger.) - I should not judge myself without listening to me. (perhaps I can't control whether someone else judges me without listening, but can I at least give myself the respect I want?) - I should not judge my family without listening to them. (can I give my family the kind of respect I want? Can I live what I want them to do?) - I should not shoot my family down. - I should not take away my own joy. (how do I use my family's words to take away my own joy? Can I allow myself to stay in joy, no matter what they say? No matter what thoughts float through my head? Just because a thought floats through doesn't mean I have to believe it.) Thank you again, Anne. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 ---anne, Thanks for inviting us into your Work. Here's a few turnarounds you may want to consider: (1) I should not judge my family. (2)I shouldn't consider myself always right and my family always wrong and inferior. (3) I realize there is much I do not know. (4)I am a joyless person when I... (5) I would rather be right than at peace. Blessings, In Loving-what-is , " Anne P. Ledesma " <anneled@a...> wrote: > I discovered 's " The Work " only this week. I tried it in my own > journal, and found it quite helpful although severe emotional pain blocked a > fuller appreciation of it. Today, I received an email from my family which, > hit me in a very painful way again. I decided to work through it in " The > Work " way, and thought I'd risk submitting it to this e-group just to check > out if I am working it out rightly. Some emails I read were really > enlightening to me personally. I felt that for this to really work, one must > have the courage, too, to be " publicly judged " on it. > > Here goes then: > > My family shouldn't judge without listening, shouldn't think of their world > as the only world, shouldn't consider themselves always right and the rest > of us wrong or inferior. They should get out of their worlds, their narrow, > convoluted worlds to recognize that a much bigger world exists outside > theirs. They should realize that there is so much that they do not know, > that their judgments are of a narrow-mind, that their world is so small. > They shouldn't shoot people down and consider themselves superior, better, > and above all the others. They should know that many times, they have been > wrong, and that their plethora of unnamed moral codes are keeping them such > joyless people. They should sometimes choose being happy over being right. > > Is this absolutely true? > > No, they can be all that they want to be. They choose their own mode of > thinking, doing, being. I feel shot down and suffocated when they do all > these, I feel constricted and suffocated, but it cannot, does not stop them > from being all they choose to be. > > Is it absolutely true that they choose all these? > > No. It is possible that this is the only way they know how to do things, > think things, are. It is possible that they do not know there are other > ways of doing, thinking, being. If they consider themselves right all the > time, it is probable that they see no need to get out of these patterns. It > is also possible that because they are so unhappy in these set patterns of > being, doing, and thinking, their unhappiness is intensified when those they > judge as wrong are happy, free, and joyful. > > What happens when I think these thoughts? > > I feel a tightness in my chest, a helplessness, a powerlessness, a sense of > despair. I feel angry, hurt, hateful. I return to the time as a child when > I was shouted at and not allowed to speak my piece – or speak at all. I > return to that old feeling of having truth trapped within my soul and having > their so-called " opinions " triumph and prevail, like a rock pushing down my > voice so that it stays unheard or if heard, discounted and shot down. But > this trapped voice continues to speak inside of me and have a life of its > own that eventually gets transformed into resentment, anger, and paralysis. > > What would happen if I did not have these thoughts? > > I be empowered to honor my own truth and voice even if it is the very truth > and voice they judge as wrong and inferior. I would be stronger to give > form to what I think, feel, am, and want to say. I would be free to be me, > even if they do not accept or approve of me, even when they ridicule, > dismiss, trivialize, or mock me. I would feel lighter, freer, better. I > wouldn't have to fight silently within me anymore. > > TA: I shouldn't allow anyone to judge me without their having listened to me > or without my having shared my thoughts in a fair place where each party > matters and is honored. I should honor my own world as different from their > world but no less right or even bearing truth. Their world is small, and > mine is not infinite itself, but in between these two worlds is more than > our hearts, minds, and spirits can contain. I should listen to them beyond > their words, yet not allow their words to shoot down my truths. Neither of > us is inferior or superior. I can choose to be joyful – and choose the > places to express myself so that my joy will not be taken away from me. I > need, too, to listen to myself. To be kind to myself, and to come to a > place of respect and honor for myself so that I am not cowed by my family's > judgments. > > Thank you, > maryanne > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Thank you, Tom. Yes, brevity is not among my strengths especially when it comes to writing. But I do try because simplicity is really more powerful than the complex. I like your words, “You can’t do it wrong.” I guess that was one of my difficulties. I was trying to work through my thoughts and counter-thoughts were working along with and against them. The mantra “You can’t do it wrong” is in itself a turn-around! I also liked the message underlying the “turn-arounds” you presented for consideration. I seemed to hear beneath them the words, “Be kind to yourself. You deserve to be joyful. And yes, be kind to your family as well.” Like cool rain on parched soil. Your suggested “turn-arounds” for me had a gentle, soothing effect. I received two sets of “turn-arounds” for the email I sent yesterday, both profoundly helpful. This allows me this insight: “turn-arounds” can both be painfully truthful (and in accepting their truth, one is set free from the pain) and quietly healing (like ointment on a throbbing wound.) A gentle “turn-around” alone might serve to comfort but not incise the root of the wound. A painful turn-around alone might be too violent at times for a still unprepared heart. Or – maybe I do not know. (How freeing to say, “I do not know.” That is another turn-around.) Thanks again, Tom. I feel welcomed indeed. maryanne Re: Trying " The Work " Hi, Anne! Welcome to the group. On Fri, Mar 12, 2004 at 04:02:19PM +0800, Anne P. Ledesma wrote: > I discovered ’s " The Work " only this week. I tried it in my own > journal, and found it quite helpful although severe emotional pain > blocked a fuller appreciation of it. Today, I received an email from > my family which, hit me in a very painful way again. I decided to > work through it in " The Work " way, and thought I’d risk submitting > it to this e-group just to check out if I am working it out rightly. What I've heard say, on tape and in person, is, " You can't do it wrong. " She does offer guidelines, like starting out doing the work on another person (which you have done), and trusting the process of the four questions (which you have done), but she also invites us to use the process in whatever way we find works best for us. When I attended a weekend Intensive in Asheville, NC, recently, one of the focuses was on simplifying our statements so we were working with short, easily remembered phrases, like, " My family shouldn't judge me, " or " My family should listen to me. " > Some emails I read were really enlightening to me personally. I felt > that for this to really work, one must have the courage, too, to be > " publicly judged " on it. That's an interesting thought. For me, it seems like the important thing that makes it work is a willingness to get really honest with myself. I've found that sometimes sharing my work with another person or with this group can help facilitate that because I get called on it when I try to slide by with less than the full truth. > Here goes then: > > My family shouldn’t judge without listening, shouldn’t think of > their world as the only world, shouldn’t consider themselves always > right and the rest of us wrong or inferior. They should get out of > their worlds, their narrow, convoluted worlds to recognize that a > much bigger world exists outside theirs. They should realize that > there is so much that they do not know, that their judgments are of > a narrow-mind, that their world is so small. They shouldn’t shoot > people down and consider themselves superior, better, and above all > the others. They should know that many times, they have been wrong, > and that their plethora of unnamed moral codes are keeping them such > joyless people. They should sometimes choose being happy over being > right. > > Is this absolutely true? > > No, they can be all that they want to be. They choose their own mode of > thinking, doing, being. I feel shot down and suffocated when they do all > these, I feel constricted and suffocated, but it cannot, does not stop them > from being all they choose to be. > > Is it absolutely true that they choose all these? > > No. It is possible that this is the only way they know how to do things, > think things, are. It is possible that they do not know there are other > ways of doing, thinking, being. If they consider themselves right all the > time, it is probable that they see no need to get out of these patterns. It > is also possible that because they are so unhappy in these set patterns of > being, doing, and thinking, their unhappiness is intensified when those they > judge as wrong are happy, free, and joyful. > > What happens when I think these thoughts? > > I feel a tightness in my chest, a helplessness, a powerlessness, a > sense of despair. I feel angry, hurt, hateful. I return to the time > as a child when I was shouted at and not allowed to speak my piece > – or speak at all. I return to that old feeling of having truth > trapped within my soul and having their so-called “opinions” > triumph and prevail, like a rock pushing down my voice so that it > stays unheard or if heard, discounted and shot down. But this > trapped voice continues to speak inside of me and have a life of its > own that eventually gets transformed into resentment, anger, and > paralysis. > > What would happen if I did not have these thoughts? > > I be empowered to honor my own truth and voice even if it is the > very truth and voice they judge as wrong and inferior. I would be > stronger to give form to what I think, feel, am, and want to say. I > would be free to be me, even if they do not accept or approve of me, > even when they ridicule, dismiss, trivialize, or mock me. I would > feel lighter, freer, better. I wouldn’t have to fight silently > within me anymore. > > TA: I shouldn’t allow anyone to judge me without their having > listened to me or without my having shared my thoughts in a fair > place where each party matters and is honored. I should honor my own > world as different from their world but no less right or even > bearing truth. Their world is small, and mine is not infinite > itself, but in between these two worlds is more than our hearts, > minds, and spirits can contain. I should listen to them beyond their > words, yet not allow their words to shoot down my truths. Neither of > us is inferior or superior. I can choose to be joyful – and > choose the places to express myself so that my joy will not be taken > away from me. I need, too, to listen to myself. To be kind to > myself, and to come to a place of respect and honor for myself so > that I am not cowed by my family’s judgments. > > Thank you, Thank you, Anne. This is my work, too. I have a similar family. Some turn-arounds that come up for me as I think about myself and my family: - I should not shoot myself down. (they can't shoot me down without my cooperation. All they do is load the gun. *I'm* the one who aims and pulls the trigger.) - I should not judge myself without listening to me. (perhaps I can't control whether someone else judges me without listening, but can I at least give myself the respect I want?) - I should not judge my family without listening to them. (can I give my family the kind of respect I want? Can I live what I want them to do?) - I should not shoot my family down. - I should not take away my own joy. (how do I use my family's words to take away my own joy? Can I allow myself to stay in joy, no matter what they say? No matter what thoughts float through my head? Just because a thought floats through doesn't mean I have to believe it.) Thank you again, Anne. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 21, 2004 Report Share Posted March 21, 2004 On Sat, Mar 13, 2004 at 09:09:00AM +0800, Anne P. Ledesma wrote: > Thank you, Tom.... You're very welcome, anne. > ... I > also liked the message underlying the “turn-arounds” you > presented for consideration. I seemed to hear beneath them the > words, “Be kind to yourself. You deserve to be joyful. And yes, > be kind to your family as well.” Like cool rain on parched soil. Yes. Something I'm discovering for myself is that being kind to my family is a way of being kind to myself. When I'm unkind to them (as I perceive it), I feel terrible. > ... > Thanks again, Tom. I feel welcomed indeed. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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