Tuesday, July 31, 2018

A Question for Shifting Perspective

I know I'm not the only person in the world who struggles with feelings of guilt.

My local family is Irish Catholic, and while I was not raised in the RCC tradition, I feel the religious traditions of my family have been very influential, although not directly.

Guilt is a huge motivator in the ways my family thinks of things.  I manage to feel guilty about things that are silly for very long periods of time.

For instance, I still regularly think about a moment in time in which I got mad at my friend for coloring most of a coloring book I left at her home.  I feel bad about it because she felt like she was making a gift for me, whereas I felt like she was using up my toy without my permission.  As the story perhaps suggests, this happened a long time ago.  I was probably about 7 years old.  I'm 33 and I still think about it at least once a week.

There are things like this in my life.  I hold grudges against myself that I can't seem to let go of, even though the more rational, forgiving parts of my brain and spirit know I am being silly.  It doesn't seem to change the ways I feel about myself.  

I think I even developed (thanks to crap boyfriends and some upbringing stuff) a tendency to smash down feelings of pride or desire and beat myself up about them.  Like, when I start to think something good about myself, my brains says, "No, stop!  This is the way to arrogance or disappointment!  You are crap!"  

This often leads me to feel like I don't deserve good things.  It is a way I learned to cope with people who treated me poorly.  A helpless feeling of loving someone who treats you poorly can make us feel like we deserve that treatment.  If this person treats me poorly, it's because I deserve it.  I start to feel like I don't deserve happiness and happiness starts to make me feel uncomfortable.  It almost feels unsafe.

Life is weird, right?

Sometimes I feel guilty about my blessings.  I don't know how to accept success because I spent a lot of time telling myself I wasn't worthy of good things.  When good things come along, I sometimes push them away because they don't feel safe to me.  

All of this is to reference something I lost.  It was an OWN (Oprah Winfrey) thing, but I can't recall who she was talking to.  The question I learned to ask myself is:

"Instead of feeling guilty, can I feel grateful?"

It's a way of orienting myself toward more truth.  It's a way of discerning whether my soul actually feels like I don't deserve something or whether it's a behavior I've learned through abuse.  

Breaking these cycles in myself will hopefully help me raise children who don't get trapped in them.

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