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I have counseled individuals, couples, families and business
partners for the past 35 years and authored eight published
books. All this experience has resulted in the development of
a profound healing process, called Inner Bonding, which anyone
can learn and use throughout the day (free course available -
see resource box at the end of the article). Inner Bonding is
a process that, when practiced, creates the ability to take
full responsibility for all our own feelings and behavior.
One of our greatest challenges is to understand what it means
to take personal responsibility for our own feelings and
behavior. This is especially difficult when someone is
behaving in a way that feels unloving to us -- attacking,
blaming, lying, guilting, and so on. It is so easy to believe
that our unhappy feelings are coming from their behavior
rather than from our own response to their behavior.
If we pay careful attention to our feelings, we will discover
that it is not another's behavior that is creating our
unhappiness but rather our own unloving response. When we
respond to another's unloving behavior by getting angry,
blaming, withdrawing, complying, or ignoring it, we will
likely end up feeling badly. Our own unloving behavior towards
another is also unloving toward our own Inner Child. For
example, if we respond to another's anger by getting angry
back rather than setting an appropriate limit against being
attacked, our Inner Child will not feel safe. We have not
responded from our loving Adult in a way that leads to being
treated respectfully. Instead, we have responded from our
wounded self, trying to have control over the other's
behavior. Since the other is likely to respond with more anger
or withdrawal, our Inner Child ends up feeling badly from the
interaction.
I have discovered that whenever I do not set good limits
against being treated badly - such as disengaging from the
interaction and stating that I don't want to talk when there
is anger or blame - or I respond with anger or blame to
another's anger or blame, I feel awful. It is so easy to think
I feel awful because of how I have been treated by the other
person rather than because of how I am treating myself and
others. When my Adult is present and I respond to another's
anger, blame or other violating behavior by either moving into
an intent to learn and/or setting an appropriate limit without
anger, shaming or blaming, I feel terrific. In fact, I feel on
top of the world. It has been deeply gratifying to me to know
that my feelings are always my responsibility because then I
can do something about feeling badly -- I can practice
responding lovingly no matter what.
On one of my morning walks while dialoguing with my spiritual
Guidance, she told me that one of my soul's lessons is to
learn to respond lovingly no matter what -- no conditions
under which it is okay to respond unlovingly. I find this very
challenging. As soon as I get it right in one situation, my
Guidance arranges for me to be challenged by new situations.
This appears to be the way our souls grow when we have opted
for spiritual growth. However, we are never given more than we
can handle, and each time I manage to respond lovingly in a
new situation, my Inner Child feels more and more loved, safe,
and valued.
It is so easy to revert to our wounded self and claim that
this time my feelings are not my responsibility. This time it
really is the other person's fault. This time they have gone
too far and no one could expect me to feel okay in this
situation. But each time I manage to keep my Adult present and
take good care of my Inner Child, the lesson hits home anew --
all my feelings really are my responsibility.
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Margaret
Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of eight
books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By
You?", "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By My
Kids?", "Healing Your Aloneness","Inner
Bonding", and "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved
By God?" Visit her web site for a FREE Inner Bonding
course: http://www.innerbonding.com
or mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com
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