Pay Attention
The Victim
For example, a man named James wanted to interview for a company where a woman was the CEO. His past work relationships with women had high conflict. But this was his dream job. So he did everything right to prepare for the interview and made sure he knew his stuff. In the interview, however, he showed little initiative and presented as cold and distant.
When he received his rejection notice a week later, his negative thoughts about working with women were confirmed. He felt unseen and ignored. If he applied presence to his feelings, he could realize he has felt victimized by women ever since his stepmother refused to let him spend the summers with his father as a child.
James applied labels to his experience and continued to believe that women are overbearing and always trying to put men down. He disempowered himself by being a victim. While it’s true that James was a victim of a woman’s misuse of authority as a child, he is not an adult victim of women’s power. He is the victim of his mind.
Of course, James doesn’t claim to be a victim because that would require him to look at himself. Instead, he judges women’s behavior and plays the victim by default. He can’t connect to his childhood victimization because he has hidden his inner child voice. His thoughts, actions, and feelings won’t align until he goes within.
Acknowledgment of early victimization is sometimes a prerequisite for healing. We must come out of denial and be present with the reality that our past affects us. This doesn’t require us to return to the past. It requires us to acknowledge that our past is present with us.
Some people are so hell-bent on surviving that they have never accepted that they were once helpless, much less acknowledge that the past affects their present. Instead, they attempt to reject all vulnerability, run from any potential of getting hurt, and refuse to take risks.
James showed no initiative in the interview because he wanted to be safe from criticism or conflict with the woman CEO. It’s a conundrum where you create the very situation you try to avoid. Being present to observe your behavior up close and from within is necessary to stop the cycle.
The Presence of Time
Even if James were willing to go within, he would not likely have made an immediate connection to his childhood. Transformation through presence is a practice. Consistency opens opportunities for the Aha! experiences.
Carrying emotional weight is similar to physical weight. You can’t lose 15 pounds in the day even if you fast and work out. You commit to a life of fitness that allows you to lose weight and keep it off over time. Suddenly losing weight is usually a sign of illness, not health. The body isn’t designed for rapid changes. Neither is the mind.
Implementing a healthy emotional life heals the heart and mind. We must give ourselves permission to be present in our pain rather than be in a hurry to heal it. No matter how evolved, conscious, or developed a person wants to be, pain should be explored, and trauma should be addressed. Our past takes time to unfold.
The goal is not to wait for it to unfold but to build a life of allowance. Remain open to growing into authenticity, where you see yourself clearly. No pain is too old or ugly to explore. Hiding, ignoring, or denying pain does not heal. Observing is key.
Time by itself does not heal. More than observation is required. Observation plus time make for a life of presence. Being present with a particular moment doesn’t shift your life. A life of presence shifts your moments.
The Personal Journey
Healing is personal rather than scripted. All instructions from books, sermons, and guides are available routes. They are not the transportation itself. When you buy an airline ticket from NY to LA, you hover around the airport and wait. At the designated time, you board the aircraft and try to relax for six hours as best you can. You will likely drift off to sleep after an attendant offers you a snack and you are tired from reading your book.
Transformation is not at all like flying, but driving. You must drive yourself to the land of inner peace. You hover in line to wait for your assigned car at the car rental place. Once the keys are placed in your hand, you are on your own. GPS will keep you on track, like your healing books, mentors, and meditations. However, guides hardly determine the trip.
You must pay attention to the traffic patterns at all times. You will make many decisions on your travel, which will take infinitely longer than 6 hours. Stop for gas, food, and rest can be preplanned. Still, you may detour to avoid congestion or follow a more scenic route. When you want to rest, you must come off the road.
The comfort of your travel will depend on your resources. How much money you spend on food, hotel, gas, and tolls can influence your motivation to travel slower or faster.
You may have rented a car with internet radio stations to keep you entertained for comfort. Your expertise as a driver will play a role as well. Averaging just ten miles an hour faster or driving two hours longer each day will save significant time. These differences will make every driver’s experience unique.
Each car driver can have a different experience traveling from NY to LA. However, they will have enough similar experiences to assure them they made the same trip. They will share the major highways and travel in the same direction. Still, how they position themselves as a traveler will yield unique experiences.
Substitute driving from NY to LA with the healing journey. You can see how long it takes is an unknown. Some travelers pull off the road every time they get into a new relationship or start a new job. Novice travelers get on the road without guidance and get lost a lot. Some travelers go too fast and crash. Many travelers are ill-prepared for the journey.
Conclusion
Healing is an adopted lifestyle, not an accomplishment. There are setbacks, triggers, and blind spots along the path. Healing isn’t measured by the traveler’s pace but by the traveler’s peace. Along the way, you must settle into the journey, unfazed by traffic jams, synchronizing with weather patterns, and in-tuned to your travel needs.
Shift the question to “How am I showing up on the healing journey right now?” Observe if you are currently showing up as a victim or attached to a label that is no longer useful. Settle in by being present with whatever comes up.
Where you are on the journey right now is exactly where you should be. You don’t need to figure out how to heal any faster. Healing is a natural process. You adopt a lifestyle of healing and allow nature to take its course.
We aim to live with authenticity and transparency as we bring presence to our internal and external responses to the world. We all travel this journey at our own pace and chart our course. The thing we have in common is the journey will last a lifetime.