AngelKeeperJ
Sponsor
Wow, there's a LOT of helpful stuff here! I need to take notes!
One thing I have learned from being "overly empathic" for others', is that it is easier, and more comfortable for me to empathize with THEM, than it is to give myself the mercy and grace that we give to other people while empathizing with them...I often care how THEY are feeling rather than how I am feeling.
Regarding the word "hate". For YEARS, I said "I hate the holidays...I hate Christmas...because it emphasized my losses, my sadness, my painful memories. Someone suggested I "drop" the words "I hate the holidays" and try to think of ways to describe things that aren't really part of the hate about the holidays. Like pretty lights, or children's reactions to Christmas and the trees, songs, spreading joy, and remembering that my faith is more celebrated than the lack of money for gifts, or bad memories. It has worked, and I don't focus on the bad anymore. The first year was the hardest.
Along with visualizing a stop sign you can visualize a DVD player, and the "eject" button, putting in a movie that you DO like, and doing your best to remember what you like about it, etc. Scenes, words, and whatever else "speaks" to you that is good. It helps US (yep, I'm still working on it....) to "get away" from our present moments that we DON'T like.
Regarding abandonment, I "learned" from my upbringing (preacher's kid) either by absorbing an unspoken rule, or by the example shown to me from my parents, that expressing anger, or any other negative emotion, led to abandonment, or fear of abandonment.
I must be off to do some empathizing...see ya soon....:hug:
One thing I have learned from being "overly empathic" for others', is that it is easier, and more comfortable for me to empathize with THEM, than it is to give myself the mercy and grace that we give to other people while empathizing with them...I often care how THEY are feeling rather than how I am feeling.
Regarding the word "hate". For YEARS, I said "I hate the holidays...I hate Christmas...because it emphasized my losses, my sadness, my painful memories. Someone suggested I "drop" the words "I hate the holidays" and try to think of ways to describe things that aren't really part of the hate about the holidays. Like pretty lights, or children's reactions to Christmas and the trees, songs, spreading joy, and remembering that my faith is more celebrated than the lack of money for gifts, or bad memories. It has worked, and I don't focus on the bad anymore. The first year was the hardest.
Along with visualizing a stop sign you can visualize a DVD player, and the "eject" button, putting in a movie that you DO like, and doing your best to remember what you like about it, etc. Scenes, words, and whatever else "speaks" to you that is good. It helps US (yep, I'm still working on it....) to "get away" from our present moments that we DON'T like.
Regarding abandonment, I "learned" from my upbringing (preacher's kid) either by absorbing an unspoken rule, or by the example shown to me from my parents, that expressing anger, or any other negative emotion, led to abandonment, or fear of abandonment.
I must be off to do some empathizing...see ya soon....:hug: