This week’s topic comes from a question from a reader in
response to my Befriending
wild cats and other disowned things. KM wrote “My question is what do you
do if that disowned part decides to rush you instead of shrinking back?” Thanx
for asking KM.
The simple answer
is grab your sled or snow board, hang on and ride the avalanche…or not. Like so many things, this is much easier to
talk about or think about than it is to do. Whether you’re talking about a wall
of snow or a ferocious cascade of emotions, avalanches are overwhelming. An
avalanche of feeling has just as much power to sweep us away or bury us as a
snowslide does. Emotional avalanches can feel just as life threatening.
Often our initial
reaction is to try and stop the avalanche or get out of the way. Some of that
is basic biology. Humans are wired to leap into that fight, flight or freeze
reaction when we’re threatened or anticipate being threatened. We can’t change
that wiring. We can choose to recognize when we’re in that fight, flight or
freeze place and respond rather than react.
Some of our mad
scrambling to hold everything in place when the avalanche starts is a result of
socialization. Most of us live in societies where our mental and emotional
health is measured by how well we can keep it all together. But does that
really make sense? Growth and change are messy. Growth involves reexamining
beliefs, moving through emotions and doing things differently, which are all
forms of falling apart.
So deciding to
grow, change and keep it all together puts me in an impossible position. I can
only poke at the edges of what’s happening and have to back off when my ability
to keep it all together is threatened. The other option is to stay so focused
on keeping the “I have my shit together” mask in place that I expend all my
energy on managing who I look rather than moving with the avalanche. I believe a
truer measure of our health is how fast we can let it all fall apart.
The choice to ride
the avalanche begins with acceptance. I’m overwhelmed. I’m not sure what’s
happening. This is messy. I’m messy.
Another vital piece
is recognizing the opportunity in what I’m experiencing. Avalanches are
powerful. In riding them I have the chance to plow through a whole bunch of
beliefs, wounding, past experiences and emotional ick that no longer serves me.
Within the avalanches destructive force is the possibility of greater freedom and
being more comfortable in my own skin. That’s something I want.
Recognizing the opportunity
is not about liking the avalanche or being happy about it. It’s simply
acknowledging all of what is. This is an opportunity and it sucks.
Staying aware of
the opportunity and the gifts it offers also helps me both stay out of
self-pity and victim and step away when I fall in those holes. We’re human. Very
few of us can ride an avalanche without sliding into self-pity and feeling like
a victim.
When I find
myself in the middle of an avalanche, I know I’m going to throw myself a couple
pity parties along the way. My self-pity is just as worthy of expression as
anything else I’m feeling. Resisting the self-pity just feeds it. If I give
myself permission to go ahead and throw the pity party, I can move through it.
Pity parties can
be fun if I let myself follow the emotion through all its exaggerations’. I
start with the first thing that comes up, often “why me?” and go from there.
Why me? Why does this always happen to me? Why is it always something with me while
everyone else goes skating along? Why am I alone in the sea of humanity singled
out to have to deal with her shit over and over? If I let myself keep going, the
whole thing gets absurd. Then I can laugh at myself and let it go.
This brings up
another sticking point, judgment. When I’m riding an avalanche you’re going to
crash into feelings, beliefs, wounding, memories and probably behavior that I
don’t like. Platitudes like “don’t’ judge yourself” are pointless. I’m going to
judge myself at least a little. My judgments are often fueled by the distorted
belief that judgment is a way to control or change whatever I’m judging. That
doesn’t work.
Staying mindful of
what I’m judging myself about and how attached I am to those judgments gives me
the chance to move through them rather than being held hostage.
Judgment is often
a distraction tactic that can become of form of self-sabotage. When I focus on judging what I’m feeling or how I’m
handling something I’ve shifted my attention away from effectively meeting the
avalanche.
Another big one is
feel first, analyze later. Avalanches move according to emotional logic not
brain logic. But my brain wants to know what’s going on. It wants to take apart
my experience so it can be defined and categorized. I do need my brains ability
to see patterns and make links between present and past experience to
understand what the avalanche is about. But that comes later when I’m not so
consumed by feeling.
Emotions are
sources of information. They’re one of the strongest ways we communicate with
ourselves. Emotions are also energy. That energy needs to be moved and
expressed before I can sit quietly and look at what’s happening. Sometimes my emotions need a more physical
expression than crying, yelling or talking to someone. My current favorite tool
for that is dancing. When I dance I can both expend and express that emotional
energy.
This brings up
another important bit. In an avalanche, nothing is going to feel good. So
riding the avalanche means shifting into choosing my actions based on what I
know, not what I think will feel good.
Just as a
physical avalanche isn’t a single snowball rolling down hill, emotional
avalanches aren’t just about whatever set them off. By the time the snow hits
my head, the initial trigger has gathered up a bunch of other experiences where
I felt the same way and all of that is falling on me.
When the avalanche
first hits I often jump to wondering how I’m going to take care of other life
stuff while this is happening. Although I
haven’t found a way to suspend an avalanche so it goes away when I need to work
with a client, I can negotiate with it. The more willing I am to make time to
give the avalanche my full attention; the more willing it is to take a back
seat when I need to do something else.
That is the most awesome description of an answer, maybe ever. >^..^<
ReplyDeleteThanx KM
ReplyDelete