sun seeker
Diamond Member
I am going through a massive internal rearranging process. The latest thing I am working on is having compassion for myself. It's hard to explain how I got to this point, but there was a sudden shift recently and even though for many years I've heard "it wasn't your fault" over and over relating to past abuse, it never sunk in. I could understand that for others, but not for myself, nor could I apply it to my life and make decisions based on it. They were just words. That's shifted significantly and for the first time, I know that the abuse was not my fault, that I was innocent, and so am going through a shift in how I look at and feel about my life. Compassion for myself is very new.
Along with compassion comes vulnerability. I found - and again, could not have known this had I not felt it, even though I could have parroted the words - that letting go of blaming myself meant opening myself to a flood of emotions. If it wasn't my fault, if I had no control over it, that meant feeling how small and vulnerable I actually was and beginning to feel the extent of the trauma.
So far, so good. It seems like life keeps putting lessons in front of me to make sure I've got the point though, and I must remember to ask that the lessons come gently and kindly instead of with the force of a sledgehammer. I started catastrophizing over the situation I am in right now, which I won't get into in detail, but there is some financial uncertainty and being in a position of waiting for other people - which I am terrible at - and relying on the good will of others. I am not able to work right now. My mind started going into some terrible places over what could potentially happen - worst case scenario stuff. And then wondering why, after such a huge breakthrough, I was back in what felt like the same place, worrying over the same stuff, with other people ruling my life.
This morning I was sick of this and went for a walk, and on the walk I opened myself to the possibility that this was not actually "being in the same place again" but a new learning opportunity. And I saw it: the word for what I was feeling was "vulnerable." There was a difference from how I would have felt about this in situation in the past. I was feeling my vulnerable position and the fear and uncertainty that come with it, but with compassion for myself. There was no shame, no self blame, no telling myself I'm in this position because I'm bad/lazy/undeserving, etc. I understood clearly that my vulnerable position right now is because of what happened to me in the past, that I am not any of those things I used to call myself, that I am on a healing journey and doing the best I can. And that I am willing to accept help, and that there is actually every reason to suppose this situation will resolve and be just fine.
I still feel a bit shaky and scared, and wish it could be resolved NOW. But it feels like I'm experiencing the situation as it really is, NOW, and not mixing it up with all the baggage of THEN.
I'm wondering about other people's experiences in learning to apply compassion for self and how it relates to vulnerability in the present, and whether this makes it easier to separate past and present. I hope my rambling thought process makes sense... do ask me to clarify if not!
Along with compassion comes vulnerability. I found - and again, could not have known this had I not felt it, even though I could have parroted the words - that letting go of blaming myself meant opening myself to a flood of emotions. If it wasn't my fault, if I had no control over it, that meant feeling how small and vulnerable I actually was and beginning to feel the extent of the trauma.
So far, so good. It seems like life keeps putting lessons in front of me to make sure I've got the point though, and I must remember to ask that the lessons come gently and kindly instead of with the force of a sledgehammer. I started catastrophizing over the situation I am in right now, which I won't get into in detail, but there is some financial uncertainty and being in a position of waiting for other people - which I am terrible at - and relying on the good will of others. I am not able to work right now. My mind started going into some terrible places over what could potentially happen - worst case scenario stuff. And then wondering why, after such a huge breakthrough, I was back in what felt like the same place, worrying over the same stuff, with other people ruling my life.
This morning I was sick of this and went for a walk, and on the walk I opened myself to the possibility that this was not actually "being in the same place again" but a new learning opportunity. And I saw it: the word for what I was feeling was "vulnerable." There was a difference from how I would have felt about this in situation in the past. I was feeling my vulnerable position and the fear and uncertainty that come with it, but with compassion for myself. There was no shame, no self blame, no telling myself I'm in this position because I'm bad/lazy/undeserving, etc. I understood clearly that my vulnerable position right now is because of what happened to me in the past, that I am not any of those things I used to call myself, that I am on a healing journey and doing the best I can. And that I am willing to accept help, and that there is actually every reason to suppose this situation will resolve and be just fine.
I still feel a bit shaky and scared, and wish it could be resolved NOW. But it feels like I'm experiencing the situation as it really is, NOW, and not mixing it up with all the baggage of THEN.
I'm wondering about other people's experiences in learning to apply compassion for self and how it relates to vulnerability in the present, and whether this makes it easier to separate past and present. I hope my rambling thought process makes sense... do ask me to clarify if not!