si dawson

experiments in self-improvement

Category: life

You Are Responsible For Your Parents (.. And Their Parents..)

Who cares who’s right about Nature vs Nurture? The bottom line is – our parents affect us.

Genetically, it’s pretty obvious. Your parents are tall? You play basketball. They’re black? It’s a pretty safe bet (although not 100%, amusingly enough) that you are too, and so on.

Emotionally (or environmentally/sociologically), it’s a little more complex.

And, if you stop to think about it – given that your parents also pass on genetic proclivities to our brains – intelligence, disposition, behaviours, and so on, it’s a complicated mess we have to try and unravel.

After all, who really is in control of our lives? Us, or them?

But wait, there’s more. Where did they get their lives from? Well, their parents, of course, and so on back up the tree.

So, in summary: Our lives are (at least initially) a result of our ancestors.

Do we want to take back control? Do we want to make choices, and not just be driven by this history? Do we actually want complete free will to lead the life we want to?

Well, if so, we’re going to have to take responsibility. A lot of it.

Not just for ourselves, but also for our parents. Not for their lives (after all, that’s their job), but for the influence they’ve had, and continue to have, on us.

famdamily.jpg
image by M Bowman

One of the things that has become abundantly clear to me is how often issues I’m trying to heal in myself really aren’t mine. I’ve learned them, or had them passed on, from one or other (or both) of my parents (and back in time to them).

Now, sure, you can heal everything that’s happened in your life – but a lot of times it ends up like that old tale of heroically fishing bodies out of a river – what you really need to do is go upstream & find who’s throwing them in.

I’ll give you an example.

One thing I’ve worked on a bit is a definite need for approval. Particularly from the women in my life. This has been noticeable, and, on occasion, actually driven women I’ve cared about away. *ouch* Now, I took this to be because when I was growing up, I never felt like my mother loved me – the important point here being, how I felt, not how she actually behaved or whether she did or not. Once I had healed, I was able to see that of course she loved me – or, as she put it when I talked to her about it later “Are you crazy? You’re my first born son!!”

However, this need for approval, while lessened, hadn’t completely disappeared. Hmm, interesting. What to do, what to do?

Then, this week, I heard a very interesting story. My grandmother’s mother (on my Mum’s side), well, her mother was very young when she had her, so she was raised by her grandmother, not her mother. Keeping up? My great-grandmother was raised by my great-great-great-grandmother. Yep, it’s a pretty great story alright. Ha ha, I’m here all week, try the veal.

Imagine that though. The girl you think is your sister is actually your mother. The woman you think is your mother is actually your grandmother. Hmm. Would you ever actually truly know a mother’s love? Would you feel like something was missing from your life? I tell you, that’s crazy.

Of course, I heard this, a big lightbulb went off in my head, and I immediately went and healed on this. How? As if I was my great-grandmother. Why? Because part of me is. Genetically, big duh there. But more than that. I believe energetically a lot of stuff is passed down. But whether you believe that or not, it’s hard to argue against habits & beliefs being passed down from mother to daughter after a significant life event like that.

I’ve chosen to do similar things with every significant event I’ve heard about – from my parents & back up the tree. I’m not healing them specifically, what I am doing is healing their effect over me. I’m regaining control over my life. I’m removing the echoes from older generations, and replacing them with conscious choices about exactly the life I choose to live.

If or when I have kids, I’d be pleased if they did exactly the same thing about me – although yes, I’m aware of both the likelihood of rebellion, and the recursive irony of such a desire – I want them to choose to make the same choice I did to make their own choices to.. uhh.. oh forget it!

Regardless, the bottom line is this: If we truly want 100% freedom within our lives, it’s necessary to not only consider our immediate history, but that of our parents and ancestors too.

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    Breaking Up Is So… Easy To Do?

    I’ve just broken up from a two & a bit year relationship.

    Normally these things are incredibly painful. This time was very different though, so I’d like to talk about it a little.

    I’ve had a few serious relationships in this life, so I’ve got a pretty good handle on how these things generally go for me:

    • Three to six months of random unprovoked crying & misery
    • Lots of various forms of self destructive behaviour (alcohol, mostly)
    • Depression & general feelings of worthlessness, loneliness

    broken_heart.gif

    This time though, ohhhh, completely different.

    Very little pain, almost no tears, no depression, no self-destruction (unless you count a couple of cups of coffee). Aloneness, obviously, but no loneliness.

    What’s changed? Well, here’s what I did (and continue to do):

    • Every time I’ve thought about my ex, I’ve released on the thought
    • Every time emotions (even ones I can’t specifically pinpoint) have become overwhelming, I’ve tapped them out.

    I admit this is, uhh, a little aggressive, but there are two ways you can do any breakup – short & sharp, or long & drawn out. I choose the former.

    I’ve talked about releasing before (here), but to recap: I imagine the thought or feeling inside me, then just let it go. I imagine it floating up out of me. This is something I got to practice a lot with the juice feast I was on since it’s also super useful for food cravings. In terms of repetitive thought patterns, this kills them dead. A lot of the time there would be a sudden rush of emotion, some very brief (5-10 seconds of) crying, and then gone. It’s the hanging on to pain that amplifies it, with this it disappears before it can grow into something worse.

    In terms of the tapping (EFT – lots more on my site there), a lot of times I didn’t even tap on anything specific – I just tapped while letting my mind churn away. This just helped even out my energy field (and hence emotions), and calm everything the hell down.

    After all, where does most of the pain of a breakup come from?

    1. Emotional trauma (from things said & done)
    2. Negative memories
    3. Self-inflicted repetitive thought patterns (obsessing over the past)

    If you get rid of those, what’s left?

    Well, the acid test, as always, is how things are when you next see the ex. And the proof? I spent a day with her this week, and the only negative thing that occurred was me saying a few stupid nasty things, from a habit I had left over of wanting those who’ve caused me pain to suffer. Once I realised what was happening I tapped it the hell out, but really, that was it. And, unsurprisingly, once I’d tapped out the habit, it disappeared instantly & everything was fine between us. Yes, I explained & apologised, of course.

    And the rest of the day? I was calm as a hindu cow. Inside & out. No negative thoughts, no negative emotions, nothing. After she’d left, I cried for half an hour – realising I was going to miss her, but some tapping & just releasing all the emotion that came up, and I felt great again.

    Now, to be fair, there are a couple of situations I can think of that I’m not sure how I would deal with yet:

    1. Finding out that I’d been lied to about something serious, for example, that she’d slept with someone else while we were involved (or very shortly after)
    2. When she gets involved with someone new

    But really, I suspect these will involve maybe five minutes of tapping each, and they’ll be gone too. So, frankly, if they are going to happen, the sooner the better.

    What’s a good litmus test going forward? We’ve been broken up for a week or two now, and I only think about her maybe 20-30 times a day – this is with continued contact. Given how closely involved we were (24 hours a day for 2 years – living & working together), I probably would have thought about her at least every 5 minutes – particularly once you include the many fleeting thoughts that spin through our minds (how often do you think aboutt someone while you’re talking to them?) .. So once every half an hour or so (if that) is a huge step forward.

    I’ll continue releasing & healing. I’m damn sure things will drop away to nothing, or near nothing, very, very quickly.

    Now, this doesn’t mean I’m ready to jump back on the horse (uhh, so to speak) just yet. It is still important for me to re-ground, re-centre & get comfortable with who I am as an individual again. However, in terms of speedy & painless resolutions, this has surprised the hell out of me.

    I don’t want to hide from the world. I feel calm & positive about myself, my future.. and my ex. It’s far better than I ever could have imagined. It’s a whole new way of being.

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      Who Teaches Us To Live?

      With everything that’s been happening lately, I’ve been wondering why it is that years of education only teach us how to read, write, and so on.

      Who teaches us how to live? How to deal with painful emotions? How to survive, or better yet, to thrive?

      study.jpg
      pic byJim Moore

      Traditionally, this is the role our parents have – but the big assumption is that they already know, and they’re not still picking it up themselves.

      Personally, it feels like so much of what I’ve learned in terms of dealing with the world and truly living I’ve only discovered in the last few months & years.

      To my complete lack of surprise, my Aikido sensei pointed out that this train of thought has already been well covered (by someone far more eloquent than I):

      THE VASTEST THINGS ARE THOSE WE MAY NOT LEARN

      The vastest things are those we may not learn.
      We are not taught to die, nor to be born,
      Nor how to burn
      With love.
      How pitiful is our enforced return
      To those small things we are the masters of.

      – by Mervyn Peake

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