Weekly Blog
Tips, Tricks, Skills, Spirituality and Wisdom
Choosing the Right Connections
Stressed out people often have an unmet hunger for connection, and may go looking for connection in inappropriate places. Sometimes, it's all about availability. Other times, we are not making wise choices. Who knows all the reasons we settle for relationships that do not satisfy our need for trust and authenticity?
Here are some signs to look out for:
1. If you keep asking yourself, "Am I crazy or is this inappropriate/wrong, etc.?" Find trusted advisors for a reality check, but chances are, if you are feeling crazy, someone may be gaslighting you. (Gaslighting - when someone persistently puts forth a false narrative so that you will doubt your own perceptions.)
2. If you feel "not enough." None of us are enough; we are not supposed to be enough. We are fully human. If other people keep sending you the message that you are not enough, you need new peeps! Who are our people? People who see our flaws, weaknesses and insecurities and love us because of them! Our people are the ones who do not expect us to "meet expectations." Our people are not in denial, they are just not demanding. Find your people!!
3. If you are sad. Sadness is the canary in the tunnel we watch out for. Sadness is the signal that we need to reach out and grab a hand for support.
4. If you are filled with rage. Rage is telling us to pay attention. Instead of using it for evil, find people who can help you use it for fuel to create safety and security for yourself or others.
Your Circle of Trust…
One of the hardest things for me to accept while I was trying to repair my broken self was the idea that people I love are not always trustworthy. I am the kind of person who takes a little time to decide if I can trust someone, but once I make that call, I am ALL IN. I never re-evaluate. This has caused me great distress.
To avoid having to re-evaluate relationships, I had this bad habit of making excuses for people and requiring more of myself in some relationships. By all outward appearances, it seemed that in some relationships, I would do all the "giving" and someone else was allowed to do all the "being." I rationalized this as being kind. It is not kind. It is unhealthy.
To find my way back to joy, I had to step over some dead bodies and just let them lay there. I had to do an appraisal. I had to think back and remember - is this relationship both authentic and trustworthy...or is it not. In order to thrive, we all have to make some tough calls. Some people we just have to let go of - even if we really like them, even if we understand why they are behaving as they are, even if we love them.
We must keep walking. Once we have assessed and determined this is our course, we do not ruminate over the past, we use the past to propel us forward with new tools for building and nurturing relationships.
Here's why: relationships, trusting and authentic ones, are crucial for mental health. We cannot live without them. But we need to be selective. Some people need to be let go, others need to be moved to the outside of our circle of trust. This is not judgmental, this is using discernment. This is not saying someone else is bad and we are better, it is acknowledging that, for whatever reason, we are not a good fit for one another.
Do you find it as hard as I do to admit that not everyone is our friend?
Own It
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
...continued from yesterday...
In order to learn something from our outbursts, we need to be willing to rigorously examine ourselves in the aftermath. If we assume we were in the right and the other person was in the wrong, there is nothing to be gained. In (almost) any fight, both parties are wrong, though to varying degrees. One party may have more stuff to own than the other, but this does not mean the person with less has permission to avoid self-examination.
We ask ourselves, “Where did I go wrong?” “In what ways did I contribute to the mess?” In other words, we start with the assumption that we did contribute and then work our way backwards towards the truth.
If we begin with the assumption that we weren’t wrong and did not contribute to the mess, we will struggle to find evidence to the contrary.
New Scott vs. Old Scott:
I totally agree with myself! It is crucially important in the aftermath of a conflict to seek out things you can take ownership of to the person you had conflict with. It is a huge trust and relationship builder if we can get ahead of these things. Owning mistakes before they’re brought to your attention is a relationship game-changer.
Now, this is hard to do. We have blind spots. So- if you can’t figure out where you “went wrong” and the other person points something out- then that’s also great. Work on being mindful of your defensiveness and choosing to set it to the side in order own your mistakes.
Doing Things Differently
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
Our subconscious is powerful and cunning. I do not consciously choose to start fights with Brittany in order to release tension from my suppressed grief. I do this naturally. The body instinctively takes what it needs in order to maintain something akin to homeostasis (as close as it can get in difficult circumstances anyway).
I do not consciously choose to go after her over cleaning either. Only in retrospect am I able to discern why that area of our life is such an easy target for my practice rounds.
I also do not consciously view this argument as an attempt to regain control in the face of powerlessness. Yet, this is exactly what it is. I know this because I know this: this particular area is one in which it is easy for me to feel superior. In reality, I am not superior in any way. I have my own chores that I ignore for long periods of time or, when I'm not ignoring them, cut corners on, or address them half-heartedly, etc. In this particular fight I am convinced that, regardless of what Brittany says, I will end up on the moral high ground.
You see what I'm describing?
Control.
Scott’s 2021 thoughts on this post:
You should be sensing a theme. I no longer put much stock in the subconscious. Things happen beneath the surface we’re not consciously aware of, of course, but I don’t know that we gain that much by trying to figure them out…because…how do we know if we’re right?
Instead- I suggest paying attention to things you want to do differently. I wanted to stop blaming my wife for things she didn’t do. In order to do that, I needed to de-stress, in order to do that, I needed some more alone time, and I needed some more hobbies. I could have accomplished all of that without raking myself over the coals for things my mind was doing that I wasn’t aware of.
So- what would you like to do differently?