Guest guest Posted May 28, 2008 Report Share Posted May 28, 2008 Hi Mona I’m taking the (great) liberty of reprinting one of Steve ’ posts from December last year, because I think it might fit with the situation you are experiencing One of the things I've noted over a lot of years of watching this process: when " acceptance " shifts from tolerating difficult emotions to genuine interest and willingness to let life teach you, emotions (and memories etc) now have a very different function. Emotions are the echoes of our past into the present. They are meaningful ... but what they mean is often whispered -- while the urge to resist them and the dominance of the evaluations of them is a shout that crowds out any chance of learning. It helps to let the evaluations simmer down and be seen as for automatic mind stuff. Then see if you can adopt a posture of genuine openness and interest in the emotions, without any hidden agenda that this has to lead to any form. Watch them carefully and dispassionately as they ebb and flow; where in your body do they occur; what else comes to mind; what are you pulled to do; what do you see around you; how do your emotions impact your relationships. Then flip them over. Look for what values lie beneath. What would you have to not care about in order for this pain to be absent. Follow the pain back to those values, like breadcrumbs back to a fork in the road. See if you don't find old memories and past yearnings / hurts there. There is a lot to learn. So much that it is never finished. Within that posture, even painful emotions are just so darn helpful that it would be almost criminal to make them go away artificially -- it would be like " solving " the problem of the pain of seeing the poverty, prejudice, and abuse in the world by poking out your eyes and rupturing your ear drums. This might " work " but the cost to your own sense of caring would be so high that the " cure " would be much worse than the pain you started with. It is like that except in this case you do not yet know when the pain is really about. Life will teach you -- but it may come more as a whisper than a shout I particularly love his point that, “Emotions are the echoes of our past into the present. They are meaningful ... but what they mean is often whispered -- while the urge to resist them and the dominance of the evaluations of them is a shout that crowds out any chance of learning.” In other words, we have to accept our emotions for what they are and be with them. We don’t have a process for squirting unwanted emotions out of our minds, but if we are able to accept them willingly and notice the whispers from our past, then there is a possibility of being able to move forward with some positive learnings. Hope this is OK, Steve. Regards Kinna This e-mail is personal. It is not authorised by, nor sent on behalf of the Department of Health or the Government of South Australia. From: ACT_for_the_Public [mailto:ACT_for_the_Public ] On Behalf Of Mona Sent: Thursday, 29 May 2008 2:50 AM To: ACT_for_the_Public Subject: Question - difference between defusing words and emotions OK, I'm stuck... I can defuse a word, but not an emotion. Scenario: a loved one calls X a " whatever. " " Whatever " is but a word to defuse, but the hurt delivered by the loved one through the word and the recognition by X of the intent through which the word was delivered are hard to defuse, regardless of whether X is a " whatever " or not. An equal degree of hurt could be delivered without 'words.' For instance, the hurt could be delivered by a look, physical contact, being ignored, etc. I can devalue the 'umph' of a word, but the emotion connected with someone wanting to intentionally hurt is another matter... speaking in terms of parent/child relationship, in particular. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2008 Report Share Posted May 30, 2008 > OK, I'm stuck... I can defuse a word, but not an > emotion. > > Scenario: a loved one calls X a " whatever. " " Whatever " > is but a word to defuse, but the hurt delivered by > the loved one through the word and the recognition by X > of the intent through which the word was delivered > are hard to defuse, regardless of whether X is a > " whatever " or not. An equal degree of hurt could be > delivered without 'words.' For instance, the hurt could > be delivered by a look, physical contact, being ignored, > etc. > > I can devalue the 'umph' of a word, but the emotion > connected with someone wanting to intentionally hurt > is another matter. Hi Mona - some thoughts ... If someone gestures or speaks a word, etc. - these events are outside our skin. Inside our skin are only thoughts, feelings, and stories. " Words " by themselves as sound waves or letters are not something we can or need to defuse from. They are only vehicles - like empty railroad cars standing idle at a train depot. They take on meaning only because our minds fill them (without our realizing it) with the cargo of our thoughts & history & stories. An emotion (hurt, for example) is like a very long train made up of many, many of these railroad cars. When an event happens (someone makes a gesture, speaks a word), our mind instantly fills the cars with stories about our past (which we call memories); stories about the current situation (which are thoughts, but which we think of as " real " ); and body sensations (which we filter through our evaluations of them as good or bad, again without realizing it). The train fills up before we are even aware of it and accelerates to high speed. Now it is an emotion coming at us and all we are aware of is how powerful and solid and perhaps even terrifying it seems. Defusing is merely practicing to slow the train down so we can see how the whole thing works. Defusing isn't meant to take away hurt - hurt is part of living, part of loving relationships & everything else we value. If we are hurting and are present with that hurt and able to respond, we don't need to defuse. We are already where we need to be. However if we feel our lives narrowing - if the hurt makes us shrink away or seems to lock us into a response that does not serve us - if we feel we have " no choice " about whatever the problem is - then defusion can be helpful. With practice the train disssembles itself into its various elements and is no longer such a threat. Suddenly we are a little bit more free - we have a little bit of choice. Out of this can come all sorts of wonderful things that can't be predicted in advance. Hope this helps. I know what it feels like to be hurt & feel helpless & unable to respond. --Randy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.