Your Point of Power

serenityI’ve been paying attention to the emails and post comments following my last few posts and decided it was a good idea to write a post about power, our power.

Last week I wrote a post, The Hard Question: What do you really want? The post was about different kids of “support”, specifically the difference between “skinny support” {validation and commiseration, no questions asked}  or gutsy, juicy, genuine support of the sort that believes {straight from the heart, all the way believes} you deserve to move forward and experience health, healing, and happiness?

At the end of my post I asked, “What do you really want?” hoping to encourage my readers to consider the kind of support they look for and how they feel about the support the receive. However, as is often the way, the comments (and emails I’ve received) are tuning into something else, and are more about people’s heartfelt wishes in respect to estrangement (thank you all for sharing!)

          “I want to see everyone who has played a role in my own estranged family                            situation to take responsibility for his or her role in creating it…”

         “What I want most is to be accepted by my family.”

         “I want my son and grandkids in my life. I want my granddaughter in my life. I                  want  the brother, sister, and parents I grew up with in my life. Of course, all                        these things should be with the stipulation that they all like me and accept me                      again.”

“I want the rest of my family to see how manipulative my brother is.”

“i.d love to see my adult children.”

“I really want people to understand what I’ve been through and be more supportive.”

There’s nothing wrong with any of the desires that people have expressed, they are sincere and genuine. It is what it is.

Do I have the power?

What I want to encourage people to think about today, is their point of power. The things they can control and the things that they cannot control. Essentially the easiest way to look at this is, “does what I want depend on another person to think, feel, believe or do something different?” If the answer is “yes” – you’ve got a problem.

Back to my weight loss analogy from my post How Do You Heal? If someone tells me that the thing they most want is to lose 20 pounds and the way that they hope to lose those pounds is contingent on someone or something else changing, I am going to challenge that.

What would you think, for instance, if someone told you, “I want to lose 20 pounds so I am going to write letters to my member of parliament calling for a ban on all fast food restaurants?” How about if they said, “I want my sister/husband/father etc. to lose 40 pounds so I can lose my 20 pounds.” Or what if they said, “I want people to move my legs for an hour everyday so that I can burn extra calories.”

Of course these examples are a little absurd, but I hope they make a point. We wouldn’t be holding out much hope for that person to lose their 20 pounds if those are the sorts of things they planned to make it happen.

Control the things you can

If we want to move ourselves forward from our estrangement experience, we’re going to have to get real. We’re going to have to have a good look at the things we want and the ACTIONS that are most likely to create the results that we want. We’re going to have to ask ourselves, “What are the things I can do, all by myself, to move me closer to the way I want to think, feel and live?” 

If our success is dependent upon someone else doing something or changing something, we are essentially at the mercy of something we have no control over.

This is one of the biggest reasons why people who are estranged get stuck and stay stuck. The have valid desires, things they really want to see happen, and they can’t make them happen. They can’t force it. Their health, well-being and happiness are firmly held hostage by what other people do or don’t do.

The natural fall out of this is people feel powerless, hopeless, frustrated and angry because they want what they want, and they also have no way to make it happen.

Rather than looking at what they want and asking whether they can make it happen, all that emotional guck  {powerlessness, hopelessness, frustration and anger} is either projected outward to the people who aren’t doing what we want them to do. This has the unhappy follow on effect of often decreasing other people’s desire to do the things we want them to do and creating even more distance.

Or we internalize all the emotional guck and we feel terrible about ourselves, “What’s wrong with me?”, “Why don’t people love me and care about me?”, “I must be unworthy or unlovable”, “why can’t I make my family get along?”

Accept the things we cannot change

It’s difficult, I know. We have a vision, it seems like a good and healthy vision to us. We can’t understand why everyone doesn’t share our vision and give us what we want. We think everyone would be so much happier if they did.

Here’s some gutsy, juicy, genuine support for you.

You cannot control other people. Stop making your health, happiness and well-being be about what other people do or don’t do, say or don’t say, feel or don’t feel. You can’t win. You won’t reach the goal. Your life will be hijacked by things you have absolutely zero power over.

You can control you. You are your instrument of change. You are your hope and your future. You are mighty, you are vast, your power is of epic proportions – as long as you focus on yourself.

It’s time for courage

You’re going to need to get ruthless about your goals and the things that you want. You need to write them out where you can see them and then check and see whether they are something you can do something about. You are going to have to call on your inner wisdom and figure out the difference.

Make your time and effort count. Think carefully about what you want. What can you do? What can you change? What are the things you can control that would make a difference?

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6 Responses to Your Point of Power

  1. Stephanie says:

    My therapist and I had this conversation several years ago and it was a life changer for me. I always thought that If I just did X, Y, Z better, my parents would stop treating me so poorly. If I could just find the RIGHT approach, I could change their behavior towards me. Well, while I think it’s important to make sure that you are not contributing to a negative pattern of behavior, which includes self-awareness about your responsibility in interactions, that doesn’t guarantee the other person will react or behave differently. After several years, and police intervention, I finally was able to accept that my parents were not healthy influences in my life and the only way I could have control over my life and my space was to cut them out completely.

    They were my crash course in the “Your crazy is not my crazy” lesson, and it has been incredibly valuable for me ever since. I don’t take on other people’s emotional responses to things. I used to be incredibly angry and often unpredictable, stemming from a lot of feeling helpless. I have found a lot more peace and calm since realizing I am not helpless to other people’s whims and reactions.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Fiona says:

      Hi Stephanie,

      Thanks for your comment and for sharing a bit about your process. I can totally relate to your comments about trying to fix our behaviour in the hope that it will change other people or their behaviour and somehow improve relationships. In a way, choosing to alter our behaviour as a means of making someone else change, is the antithesis of healthy change. We’re still not thinking about what we want / need or how to take care of ourselves – we’re not focused on moving forward or healing, we’re focused on trying to make other people change so that we can feel better and get what we want! Crazy, unproductive stuff!

      So pleased to hear you had the support of a good therapist and you aren’t being held hostage by other people’s emotional intensity anymore. It sounds like you have put heaps of work into your healing!

      Warm regards,
      Fiona

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  2. Nea says:

    Once you can get your mind and heart around the notion that you do not have the power or ability to make someone change – no matter how much you reach out/love them/help them/ explain your perspective – that is when the healing begins. The bottom line is they are who they are. My healing comes from exactly this – MY power. Being ruthless and understanding that I was letting other people hijack my emotional wellbeing because I kept expecting them to be something different than who they are. Once you find your power and clarity and say ” this person is who they are. I cannot change them. What part (if any) of my life do I want them to be a part of?” My two key phrases are kindness and respect. If you cannot treat me with those, I cannot accept you in my life – be you family or not.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Fiona says:

      Hi Nea,

      Thank you for your comment and for sharing a bit about your experience of moving your life forward following estrangement. You’ve got some great guiding questions “if this person is who they are, and they never change, where do they fit (if they fit) in my life?”

      Also loved your two key phrases – kindness and respect. Mine are authenticity and kindness! I think we’re onto something!

      Warm regards,
      Fiona

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  3. Serenity says:

    I try to breathe
    Memories overtaking me
    I try to face them but
    The thought is too much to conceive
    I only know that I can change
    Everything else just stays the same
    So now I step out of the darkness
    that my life became ’cause
    I just needed someone to talk to
    You were just too busy with yourself
    You were never there for me
    To express how I felt
    I just stuffed it down
    Now I’m older and I feel like
    I could let some of this anger fade
    But it seems the surface I am scratching
    Is the bed that I have made
    So where were you?
    When all this I was going through
    You never took the time
    To ask me just what you could do
    I only know that I can change
    Everything else just stays the same
    So now I step out of the darkness
    that my life became ’cause
    ………………………………………………..Fade by the rock group Stained
    What are the things you can control that would make a difference?
    Living in the present moment and not wishing things to be different, because that causes stress. Having a lot of gratitude for each and every day. Being thankful that I don’t have to live in powerlessness, hopelessness, frustration and anger because it really is a choice to live in a dark place with Estrangement if you choose that path…………… Been there done that ain’t going back!
    There is a huge amount of freedom that comes to me when I don’t take Estrangement Personally.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Fiona says:

      Hi Serenity,

      Thanks for sharing the Staind song – love the lyrics! You’re absolutely right, there is a tremendous sense of liberation or freedom when we learn to return our attention to places that serve us; and yes, it is a choice!

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