Posts Tagged ‘arguing’

What to do with “wrong-doers.”

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

The benefit of living what I call an “examined” life (i.e. turning over the stones you’re standing on and looking closely at what’s underneath) is that you discover a whole lot about yourself. Sometimes you discover helpful insight or a limiting pattern of behavior.  Sometimes you discover something not so pretty about yourself. But the beauty of each discovery is that you get the chance to change.

While facing one of the most difficult situations of my life, a situation I believe we all find ourselves in at one time or another, I discovered a real gem. It was during a time of being “wronged” by another. What I mean by “wronged” is being mistreated, blamed, judged, lied about or lied to.  What I discovered flies in the face of our natural reactions to such unpleasantness. However, the discovery was the only response that enabled me to shed all kinds of yucky feelings and free myself from a very unpleasant person.

When we are being wronged we want justice, we want honor. We want the wrong-doer to own their wrong-doing. This wanting, as I discovered, will devour you more so than the wrong-doing itself.  It holds the power to consume you, making you miserable. It will seek out the fighter in you and ask you to betray your wisdom.

The wanting motivates us to move into the boxing ring to fight for justice, to seek our revenge, to retaliate until surrender. However, the reality is every time we step into the ring we lose.  By virtue of participating in the game, we lose the very power we wish to claim. 

The ultimate revenge, if you want to look at it this way, is to live as if your truth never needs defending. How do you do this? Stay above the fighting mentality. Refuse to enter the ring. Refuse to allow this person’s wrong-doing to cross the circle enclosing your life. 

In the moment will this choice satisfy your urge to fight back? Maybe not. In the moment, will it calm the anger you feel about the injustice? Maybe not. In the moment, will it satisfy your urge to defeat? Maybe not. What we need to hold onto during the moment of choice is this: the wrong-doer is playing a game. She feeds off the energy of the game. She finds the purpose of her life inside the game.

Take off your boxing gloves and turn your back on the ring and there is no game.

And if there is no game, what is there? An empty ring. A lone fighter standing in the dark. In your silent absence, the fighter is left alone to face the cold shadows of herself. And somewhere off in the distance, you will be standing in the light of your highest power.

When I envision the fighter alone in a dark ring, stripped of her cause, my anger subsides and I feel compassion and sadness for her.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

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“Don’t judge a man until you’ve walked two moons in his moccasins.” Sharon Creech

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Whether we take a glimpse or a long and lingering look into someone else’s life, at best all that is ever available to us is what poet Rumi described as “idle speculation.”

Because we are severely limited to “idle speculation” I think advice giving or diagnosing is perilous. Not only dangerous, I think advising snuffs out all the possible creations that take on life when two people listen outside of their judgments.

What I’ve treasured about one of my closest friendships is that no matter what we never told one another what do to. No matter how treacherous the landscape became, we showed up for the moment free of judgment, full of camaraderie. “I will walk or run this mile with you because I believe in you” was the unexpressed philosophy of our friendship.

Advising is easy, judgments are a dime a dozen. But taking time to truly understand is priceless. I think we all need someone to take the time to understand life in our shoes.  We aren’t aching for another “you really should do this and that.”  We don’t need someone who hasn’t walked a minute in our day to tell us how it is. I think we benefit each other in the most meaningful ways when we forbid the delivery of our own limited speculation and venture beyond.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

 

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If you must fight, fight fair.

Monday, September 21st, 2009

We search the planet for that very special person to love and create a life with. We are often hard pressed, at times in excruciating ways, to find the calibre of connection we seek.  Yet despite the universe answering our call with the delivery of such love, how often do we manage to fight on behalf of our relationships? 

Without warning a storm rolls in and there you are hollering in the face of the very love you swore you would die for.  Against all odds you found each other, yet you allow unfounded accusations and hurtful verbal assailants to become the forces that divide you.

Of course we are going to disagree and be upset with one another. At times your ego will be bruised or your hurt will want to retaliate, but find the strength within yourself to leave out all the reacting that is divisive: incriminating each other, accusing, or simply being unfair or unkind.

Stand up for your love rather than for righteousness.  Only you can protect the purity of your relationship when forces threaten to weaken your bond. If love isn’t handled with extreme care how will it survive?

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

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Stuck somewhere?

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

You know that “no man’s land” where you are both upset, angry, feeling misunderstood, can’t communicate clearly, and feel so incredibly stuck in the moment but haven’t a clue how to get unstuck?

When I’ve arrived in “no man’s land” something that works for me is to first sort myself out.  Sometimes this happens on the fly other times I need some time to get clear. The key is to first identify what’s up for you in the situation.  How are you feeling? What’s happening for you?

In my experience, a lack of understanding on what’s going on for you will only send you further into “no man’s land” -  circling the issue, continuing to argue, continuing to blame as you flail without clarity to anchor you.

 Once you’ve identified what’s happening for you, spot your need or wanting. Something such as “I’m angry because I would like some recognition of my efforts” “I’m nervous and would like more information” “I’m hurt because I would like to talk about this rather than be insulted” “I’m frustrated because I would like for us to figure out what to do rather than fight about what happened.”

You don’t have to say any of this out loud, simply knowing what’s happening for you and what you are wanting, needing, or valuing, will ground you, giving you some footing. Your clearly identified desired outcome or need will serve as your guide to navigate through the stucknesss. In other words, taking action and attitude that are loyal to your needs, values or desires will lead you out of “no man’s land.”

The challenge is that we are often so disconnected from our ourselves (needs, values and desires) that we default to blaming, or to expecting the other person to sort it all out. Getting clarity on what’s going on for you and speaking to it is something that comes with practice. Start by doing it in the less heated moments.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie 

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