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| how we feel about feelings | | the space built in by long practice of witnessing, between feeling/thought/ impulse and action is valuable. not that i no longer just react in a 'knee jerk' way, but it's the exception these days. not pushing away or wishing to be free of emotion/thought, but not ruled by it.
i experience great power and beauty in emotions of all types. my judgements about good/bad, desirable/undesirab le- i just don't take them very seriously anymore. thought is. emotion is. my understanding is that everything that is, arises out of the ultimate reality that permeates all. how could a feeling then be 'wrong'? the cultural conditioning is very strong to reach for 'positive emotion' and eradicate 'negative emotion'. these labels are ones that the culture has given them however; these states are not inherently anything. this striving for 'positivity' may be another form of pleasure seeking...the way out is always through. in fact they are often the same.
the misunderstanding around emotions is that we use them and only them for guidance when considering course of action. emotion, like thought, ego, body, etc. come with the experience of being human in the space/time construct. they can be valuable tools. the stronger my connection with the 'witness', that in me which is eternal/unchanging, the more natural it is for me to simply watch the information coming in from the emotional body, the physical body, the mind, etc and then a decision for action (including non-action) arises from a more integrated place.
emotions are not problematic at all. we need them to help us navigate. they come with the human package, and everything here is part of the limitless life energy. everything. i burned up an incredible amount of energy for years trying to do away with unpleasant emotion. then i realized they were only unpleasant because i had been taught so and conditioned away from them. when i relaxed about it all and let it be (which sounds so simple...<g>), there was nothing to be afraid of- not even fear! and so much energy freed up for other things.
emotions come and go like weather. they are part of what we create with, a color on our palette so to speak.
at the same time, it's important to cultivate a relationship with these aspects of ourselves that recognizes the ultimate reality of who we are, Awareness, as the primary prespective we wish to live from, if that is what we wish. everything else is held within this. emotions are 'not the boss of me"! or thought or even physical sensation. but all of these things provide part of the information needed to make an informed choice.
and if nothing else, when we stop struggling with ourselves so much around our feelings, thoughts, etc, a way is opened up for a peace that excludes nothing, not even our moments of not-peacefulness. it all exists within Awareness itself. and we are freed to let go into that greater awareness, knowing there is nothing really to worry about, even as what we do here is important. yet another paradox...
ã 2008 Calleaghn Kinnamon
| | Posted: 4/2/2008 at 10:44 | Read 32 times | 0 comments | Leave Comment |
 | Addicted to ...Love? | |
Long ago, I came to see that If I had not had the experiences I had as a child I wouldn't have turned to abusing substance, relationships as a way to feel normal or alive. Some people think that addicts are after feeling good, but I think many are after feeling alive, what we might think normal feels like. For example I know that my drinking and drugging years, which also included sexual acting out and romantic addiction as well, paradoxically kept me sane and alive long enough to find some better ways of coping. I had many things to grieve and no support for doing so. I didn’t even know there were other ways of coping. I didn’t even know consciously that there was anything to cope with, because I’d stuffed my feelings down for so long and hard. The human psyche is a beautifully resourceful piece of work!
My intention Isn't to blame anyone here. It's just the truth. I know that my parents, teachers, grandparents, etc. were all doing the best they could with whatever skills they had. I was a crappy parent myself until I got help and learned how to do it differently! Thankfully, I improved with work and support. I see it as a challenge that belongs to all of us, not one person or group in particular.
Kids are amazingly resilient when they are allowed to process their feelIngs, whatever they may be, in a loving, supportive atmosphere. I’ve seen this over and over. But it's key that we're allowed to fully feel our feelings, be heard, accepted and loved through the process. 'Bad' things happen. Part of being human on the planet. We have a built in system of recovery from trauma, but our culture (most cultures) for the most part teaches us early on to bypass it, toughen up, get it together, be good, quiet, whatever.
My responsibility lies in the way I responded, but response of some kind was guranteed! Substance abuse and co-dependent relationships were a common response in my family. I’m sure that if I'd been supported to process the feelings around what happened to me then I wouldn't have been such a raging addict. It was almost in the scr i pt! I was taught, by direct consequence and by example, that it wasn't okay to feel what I was feeling, much less express it. I was rejected or ridiculed if I did. Rejection to a kid is a kind of death.
Of course, later I realized that these people were simply uncomfortable with what my feelIngs triggered for them and were dealing with it the only way they knew, which was to stop me. It wasn't true that there was anything wrong with my feelIngs, but as a kid I believed the message. What else could I think? That the grownups were wrong? Even though I have since learned the truth, those early imprints on the emotions are very strong, so I get triggered by situations that touch on that old shame, the belief that my feelIngs were wrong, I was bad to feel that way.
So most of us look for relief however we can, through attempts to control- others or ourselves. The pain has to go somewhere. We develop coping skills that get us through because otherwise we feel like we might die. As a child I was addicted to approval and sugar. As a teenager cigarettes, alcohol and any mood altering substance I could get my hands on. As a sober/clean adult I was hooked on relationships, approval, straight A’s, distractions of all kinds. All the time improving, learning, healing, expanding. When I started going through a period of loss bigger than any I'd ever known In my early 40's I 'discovered' gambling and turned to that to get me through until I was ready to face my world falling apart and all the feelIngs that brought up.
Now this doesn't mean I hadn't been doing the work earlier! The healing comes around at deeper levels. We get comfortable at the point that we've grown to and then life asks us to stretch some more. It can seem like the same old struggle but it isn't. We don't go in circles, we go in spirals, deeper and deeper into the truth of ourselves and our lives each time.
The way out of the cycle is through. We must give ourselves the support and love that we didn’t get when the original wounds were incurred. This can be seen this as a sort of 're-parenting' oneself. When we meet any state fully in the moment and find the love that's always there, we find that we don't need to 'fix' anything. It's just fine the way it is. And eventually it changes, like the weather. Sometimes the deeper, older wounds come up again and again, but they get gentler and our way with them easier. Deep sorrow is like this. It's when I suppress it that I'm in trouble. It sneaks up on me in destructive ways. Like an upset child that wants and deserves attention, when they’ve been ignored long enough they’re likely to act out ‘negatively’ to get the attention they need.
Our addictive behaviors are our broken hearts, our deepest love and joy crying out to be heard.
ã 2008 Calleaghn Kinnamon
| | Posted: 3/26/2008 at 15:24 | Read 32 times | 0 comments | Leave Comment |
 | New Year Resolutions | New Year Resolutions 2008
A friend and I were talking yesterday about new year resolutions. Some years ago, I had only one: I resolve to refrain from making any new year resolutions.
This is the only one I’ve ever kept 100%. This has been a first for me, to stick to one completely. It feels pretty good.
He told me that he makes them as a way to set his intentions and that if he doesn't keep to it (which, he informed me, he never does) he sees the effort as a way to create space for the change to take place. It usually does eventually, he added.
None of us need another reason to beat ourselves up. Setting intentions for positive change is a wonderful thing, as long as we don't turn it into a way to be negative. What kind of sense does that make?
Make the change in this moment. That's all we have anyway. And if you don't make it in the next moment, try to make it a source for loving amusement towards yourself.
"Blessed are they who can laugh at themselves, for they shall never cease to be amused" anon.
Try for nonjudgement. what could it hurt? Then focus on when you did do it the new way. Remember how it felt. Embrace it softly with your mind and heart. Continue, whenever it occurs to you, to do this. Over time, the new way will become part of you effortlessly.
Approaching new year resolutions the way my friend did seems pretty healthy to me. Unfortunately, I couldn't seem to pull it off. if i couldn't hold to a resolution totally, I’d feel like a loser s**t (again) and give up altogether. Then i'd try the same thing again next year, next month, next week only to play out the pattern again. Is it any surprise that the shine of positive changes lost it's luster? There was nothing for it: I had to quit cold turkey.
The new relationship I have with changes works much better for me. Here and now, anyway. Here and now, the best resolution I ever made was to be as gentle with myself as I can manage. I need an easy balance between discipline and compassion. This tends to be easier for me to attain with other people. Well, most other people. But with myself it's difficult.
My friend and I ended our talk with plans to get together at the end of the week. He said we could break a couple new year resolutions together. I laughed and replied, "Yeah, let's set the bar really low right outta' the gate!". He was down with that.
I resolve to be a better friend and lover to myself, to know that whatever I’m doing at the moment is the best I can do at the moment.
I think I just made a new year resolution. So much for 100% of anything!
100% human.
copyright 2008 Calleaghn Kinnamon | | Posted: 3/24/2008 at 13:46 | Read 29 times | 0 comments | Leave Comment |
 | if you're not here to make money then you don't need to read this... | so this is to be my first blog...( i promise it won't be my last...)
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peace! | | Posted: 3/23/2008 at 14:43 | Read 22 times | 0 comments | Leave Comment |
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| calleaghn | 45 years old Female Arcata, CA Hometown: Fresno, CA (eek!)
Last Login: 2/19/2009
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|  ""When the Power of LOVE overcomes the Love of Power the world will know peace." Jimi Hendrix" |
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