Develop Self-Awareness and
Improve Your Relationships
“Let us not seek to fix the blame for the past. Let us accept our own
responsibility for the future."- John F. Kennedy
The other day I got upset over something silly that triggered difficult
feelings with deep roots from my past. Someone I love made a
reasonable request that for various reasons, I didn’t want to honor, partly
because I felt my feelings weren't being taken into account. But I had no
good reason to suspect this. I thought this because it was a pattern for me.
For most of my young life, I believed my needs wouldn’t be met if I didn’t
push and fight for them. I saw everything as a battle—it was everyone else
against me. Though I’ve learned to see others as on my side, and know that I’m
on theirs, I still worry that people aren’t looking out for me at times.
In the aftermath of this recent disagreement, I talked through my
feelings with my partner. I told her I understood my emotional response, and I
knew where it came from—when I first recall feeling this way and why, and how it’s been a
pattern in my life.
Then I posed a question: In recognizing where and how I learned this
behavior, am I blaming people and circumstances from my past, or merely being
self-aware? What, exactly, is the difference?
I think it’s an important question to ask, because we’ve all been
wronged before.
We do ourselves a disservice if we sit around blaming other people for our maladaptive reactions and behaviors. We’re better able to change when we understand how we developed these responses in our former relationships and prior life events.
I’ve spent a lot of time learning to let go of victim stories, which is
a big part of why I don’t write about some of the most painful events of my
life. Still, for better or for worse, they shaped who I am.
When I allow myself to look back and acknowledge wrong-doing, I
reinforce to myself that I did not deserve to be mistreated, and that it’s not
my fault that I struggle in certain ways as a result. I know, however, that it is my responsibility
to change my responses and behaviors. And that, right there, is the
difference between self-awareness and self-victimization.
Self-awareness allows us to understand what’s going on in our heads—and
why; Self-victimization
prevents us from accepting that we’re responsible for our experience now—and
for what we do with it as a result.
Expanding on this train of thought - self-victimization includes:
Expanding on this train of thought - self-victimization includes:
·
Dwelling and obsessing
about the ways we feel we’ve been wronged.
Complaining about painful,
seemingly unfair events without ever considering if and how we played a role in
them.
Using these events to
justify negativity; bitterness; or selfish, hurtful, or irresponsible actions.
Feeding off other people’s
sympathy and maybe even depending on it.
Telling sad stories from
the past as a means of avoiding judgment or trying to win approval.
Believing that everything
would be better if the world or other people would change.
As someone who’s done all of these things in the past, I can attest that this is often the result of immense pain. Sometimes we play the victim because we were victims. We learned that we didn’t have control, and then adapted to that. Because we once felt powerless, we learned to give our power away.
On the other side of the spectrum, self-empowerment includes:
Consciously choosing to let
go of victimizing thoughts.
Considering that we may have played a part in some of the most painful events from our pasts.
Learning from these events
how we can respond proactively to similar events in the future.
Feeding our own emotional needs instead of coming to other people with a void that won’t ever be filled.
Accepting responsibility for our actions, and the consequences of them.
Realizing things will only improve if we make a change, internally or externally.
Self-awareness includes:
Understanding our emotions—what we’re feeling and what triggered it—so we can effectively work through and transform our emotional responses (instead of using them to justify unhealthy choices).Recognizing our destructive thought patterns so we can redirect them.
Tuning into what’s going on in our bodies so we can learn from it and access our intuition.
Noticing our behavioral patterns and habits so that we can make adjustments to change negative ones.
Understanding our beliefs, assumptions, and expectations, and how they influence what we choose to do.
Accepting that we are responsible for our actions—even if we developed certain patterns in response to events from our past.
The fundamental difference between self-awareness and self-victimization, when it pertains to acknowledging we’ve been hurt: Self-awareness is about observing our response to what happened; self-victimization is about feeding into the story of what happened.
This isn’t always easy to do. Sometimes the mere act of remembering
something painful can bring up all kinds of old feelings. It helps if we learn
to immediately redirect our thoughts to a positive, empowering affirmation.
This means that next time I find myself questioning whether the other
person really has my best interests at heart, when I have no reason to believe
they don’t, I can tell myself something like this:
“I give people I love the benefit of the doubt. I release my instinctive
emotional response from the deepest root cause and do my part to create happy
relationships.”
In changing my thoughts, I can change my feelings, and then effectively
redirect my actions.
This process can apply to all kinds of unhealthy relationship patterns
that stem from former relationships, but it requires us to work at developing
self-awareness.
One way we can do this is by journal-ing about our feelings and
triggers—if, for example, you tend to feel mistrusting, or defensive, or angry
when specific events occur—and then come up with affirmations to use when we
get caught up in those patterns.
Some examples of situations and affirmations:
If you frequently mistrust someone, in large part because someone else
formerly abused your trust, you could use this affirmation when those old
feelings arise:
“This is a new relationship. I release my instinctive emotional response from the deepest root cause, and accept that I can change it and improve my relationship by trusting.”
If you frequently feel
guilty in your relationship, in large part because you were emotionally abused
in the past, you could use this affirmation when those old feelings arise
(assuming you’re in a healthy relationship now):
·
“I choose not to blame
myself. I release my instinctive emotional response from the deepest root
cause, and free myself from shame and self-judgment.”
If we’re willing to be self-aware, we can empower ourselves, and transform
our relationships and our lives in the process.
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