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Terri LorzParticipant
I notice that you are experiencing a pattern of working with people who seem to be hurtful and you find yourself attacked and hurt. Perhaps detachment might be a tool that can help you.
Years ago I had an employee that would come to me on a regular basis about the disrespectful ways she had been treated. I started to realize that she was very sensitive and was unable to let things go. People are human. And they are often unskilled in their communications and interactions. But that is not a comment on how worthy you are or how worthy my employee was.
As I watched her struggle I realized that I too would take things too personally and committed to not focus on how others behaved but rather on how I was behaving. Was I respectful? Was I willing to let things go and just move on? Was I being clear in my communications?
Shifting my focus and energy from “them” to me made me feel empowered and I liked the way I interacted. I would at times when I picked up the body language that there was a problem – would ask, “is everything OK?” But a lot of the time I just let people go through what they were going through.
When you asked him if he was still angry – I wondered why you did that? Things had cooled down. What did you hope to accomplish? Sometimes we need to let things go.
Also – the fact that you feel you must defend yourself sounds a lot like you want validation from your manager or others – you want acknowledgment – that you were right. Needing acknowledgement and validation – even when you are right will tend to cause conflict in relationships. I try hard to be self-validating and then I don’t have to have others think I am OK to be OK. Good luck.
Terri LorzParticipantOf, course I can’t know what is going on – but I do know that whenever we have expectations that others “should” or “should not” we set up conflict – either between ,ourselves and others – or internally. I try to make it simple and ask: What do I need? The answer for you seems to be help with laundry and dishes. Next. ask for help. If your daughter says no or is unwilling to really help – then figure out another way to solve it. It would be wonderful if she were more helpful – and there may come a time when she will be – but if she isn’t helpful – then that is what is – and you accept that and move on.
If you are angry about the cats and rabbits – remember you let that happen – and if you don’t want to do that – then be firm and say – I need you to get the cats and rabbit and don’t feel bad and don’t do a guilt trip.
Relationships truly are the place where spiritual growth is tested and tried. It is easy to be kind when the people around us are kind and meeting our expectations – the growth and insight come when others don’t do as we think they should and we turn inward to find personal insight and growth instead of focusing outward and placing our anger and frustration at the feet of others.
Terri LorzParticipantOver-thinking can feel like one is on a mental tread mill. I know my busy brain can exhaust me. I do somethings that help me. One is “stream of consciousness” writing. I noticed you said you felt better writing it out. When I am in the midst of my manic brain tread mill extravaganza – I write. I sit down with my computer and either set a time limit or a page limit and then I write whatever pops into my head. I just write out my stream of consciousness – even if it makes no sense, even if it is off topic.
As my manic thinking gets put on paper (metaphorical paper) I feel better. I am not sure why but I do. I have made stream of consciousness writing part of my personal emotional health practice and do it most days for either 15 minutes or one page (typed).
The other I do is to write out a root cause analysis that I created combining the quality improvement tool “5 whys” with David Burns work on cognitive behavioral therapy. Basically I pick anything that is bothering me or I am obsessing over and ask “Why is this bothering me?” I write the answer and then ask the same question about what I just wrote. I do it five times and this gives me plenty of material to see how I am thinking. I then identify my thinking errors – like personalizing, black or white thinking, generalizing, http://psychcentral.com/lib/15-common-cognitive-distortions/0002153 – this site lists them -and then I write out a more healthy way to interpret what I am thinking.
All of this helps me to develop better thinking habits and calm down. For me, I have to do this on a regular basis or I start to revert back to my manic thinking.
Good luck. tj
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