The Language of Letting Go, Part 1

Thread Tools
 
Old 01-01-2016, 09:07 AM
  # 1 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
The Language of Letting Go, Part 1

January 1

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

The New Year

Make New Year's goals. Dig within, and discover what you would like to have happen in your life this year. This helps you do your part. It is an affirmation that you're interested in fully living life in the year to come.

Goals give us direction. They put a powerful force into play on a universal, conscious, and subconscious level.

Goals give our life direction.

What would you like to have happen in your life this year? What would you like to do, to accomplish? What good would you like to attract into your life? What particular areas of growth would you like to have happen to you? What blocks, or character defects, would you like to have removed?

What would you like to attain? Little things and big things? Where would you like to go? What would you like to have happen in friendship and love? What would you like to have happen in your family life?

Remember, we aren't controlling others with our goals - we are trying to give direction to our life.

What problems would you like to see solved? What decisions would you like to make? What would you like to happen in your career?

What would you like to see happen inside and around you?

Write it down. Take a piece of paper, a few hours of your time, and write it all down - as an affirmation of you, your life, and your ability to choose. Then let it go.

Certainly things happen that are out of our control. Sometimes these events are pleasant surprises; sometimes they are of another nature. But they are all part of the chapter that will be this year in our life and will lead us forward in the story.

The New Year stands before us like a chapter in a book waiting to be written. We can help write that story by setting goals.

Today I will remember that there is a powerful force motivated by writing down goals. I will do that now, for the year to come, and regularly as needed. I will do it not to control but to do my part in living my life.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.

honeypig is offline  
Old 01-01-2016, 09:16 AM
  # 2 (permalink)  
Member
 
Lilro's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2015
Posts: 715
Thank you honey. Happy New Year! Let's go....
Lilro is offline  
Old 01-01-2016, 09:19 AM
  # 3 (permalink)  
Member
 
Jecrois2016's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Posts: 64
Thank you for the inspiration!
Jecrois2016 is offline  
Old 01-02-2016, 04:29 AM
  # 4 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
JANUARY 2

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Healthy Limits

Boundaries are vital to recovery. Having and setting healthy limits is connected to all phases of recovery: growing in self esteem, dealing with feelings, and learning to really love and value ourselves.

Boundaries emerge from deep within. They are connected to letting go of guilt and shame and to changing our beliefs about what we deserve. As our thinking about this becomes clearer, so will our boundaries.

Boundaries are also connected to a Higher Timing than our own. We'll set a limit when we're ready and not a moment before. So will others.

There's something magical about reaching that point of becoming ready to set a limit. We know we mean what we say; others take us seriously too. Things change, not because we're controlling others, but because we've changed.

Today I will trust that I will learn, grow, and set the limits I need in my life at my own pace. This timing need only be right for me.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-02-2016, 05:28 AM
  # 5 (permalink)  
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Posts: 222
Thanks for the post. I am starting a new journal today and am going to attempt to set goals and answer some of those questions as best I can. This is going to be my year. Thanks for the inspiration.
FindingAmy is offline  
Old 01-02-2016, 07:04 AM
  # 6 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
^^That sounds like a really good idea, FindingAmy. I've only ever been a very part-time journaler, but even having that much to look back on has been helpful in seeing recurring patterns. Best wishes on your journey!
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-02-2016, 09:57 AM
  # 7 (permalink)  
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 316
Thank you for posting this! Because of your post I bought the book "Letting Go" and others. I have started a journal where I am asking myself some of those questions posted on January 1. Eeeeee. Some of them are taking longer than others to answer and require some deep soul searching. Happy New Year, everyone!
Branches is offline  
Old 01-03-2016, 05:44 AM
  # 8 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
January 3

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Nurturing Self Care

.. .there isn't a guidebook for setting boundaries. Each of us has our own guide inside ourselves. If we continue to work at recovery, our boundaries will develop. They will get healthy and sensitive. Our selves will tell us what we need to know,' and we'll love ourselves enough to listen.
--Beyond Codependency

What do we need to do to take care of ourselves?

Listen to that voice inside. What makes you angry? What have you had enough of? What don't you trust? What doesn't feel right? What can't you stand? What makes you uncomfortable? What do you want? Need? What don't you want and need? What do you like? What would feel good?

In recovery, we learn that self-care leads us on the path to Higher Power's will and plan for our life. Self-care never leads away from our highest good; it leads toward it.

Learn to nurture that voice inside. We can trust ourselves. We can take care of ourselves. We are wiser than we think. Our guide is within, ever present. Listen to, trust, and nurture that guide.

Today I will affirm that l am a gift to the Universe and myself. I will remember that nurturing self-care delivers that gift in its highest form.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-04-2016, 06:26 AM
  # 9 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
January 4

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Separating from Family Issues

We can draw a healthy line, a healthy boundary, between our nuclear family and ourselves. We can separate ourselves from their issues.

Some of us may have family members who are addicted to alcohol and other drugs and who are not in recovery from their addiction.

Some of us may have family members who have unresolved codependency issues. Family members may be addicted to misery, pain, suffering, martyrdom, and victimization. We may have family members who have unresolved abuse issues or unresolved family of origin issues.

We may have family members who are addicted to work, eating, or sex. Our family may be completely enmeshed, or we may have a disconnected family in which the members have little contact.

We may be like our family. We may love our family. But we are separate human beings with individual rights and issues. One of our primary rights is to begin feeling better and recovering, whether or not others in the family choose to do the same.

We do not have to feel guilty about finding happiness and a life that works. And we do not have to take on our family's issues as our own to be loyal and to show we love them.

Often when we begin taking care of ourselves, family members will reverberate with overt and covert attempts to pull us back into the old system and roles. We do not have to go. Their attempts to pull us back are their issues. Taking care of ourselves and becoming healthy and happy does not mean we do not love them. It means we're addressing our issues.

We do not have to judge them because they have issues; nor do we have to allow them to do anything they would like to us just because they are family.

We are free now, free to take care of ourselves with family members. Our freedom starts when we stop denying then issues, and politely, but assertively, hand their stuff back to them - where it belongs - and deal with our own issues.

Today I will separate myself from family members. I am a separate human being, even though I belong to a unit called a family. I have a right to my own issues and growth; my family members have a right to their issues and a right to choose where and when they will deal with these issues. I can learn to detach in love from my family members and their issues. I am willing to work through all necessary feelings in order to accomplish this.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-04-2016, 06:27 AM
  # 10 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
There is so much here I won't even begin to address it until I have more time to post...I bet many of you are in the same boat!
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-04-2016, 08:11 AM
  # 11 (permalink)  
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 262
Yes, the topic of separating from family issues really struck a nerve in me! Unfortunately for my own sanity I've had to go no contact with my family of origin last year. It's the most painful thing I've had to do, esp through the holidays. I know in my gut this is what I need to do in order to become healthy myself; to break this dysfunctional cycle with my own children & to model for them what healthy relationships look like.
Faith001 is offline  
Old 01-05-2016, 07:29 AM
  # 12 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
JANUARY 5

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Accepting Help

Some of us have felt so alienated that we've forgotten we're not alone. We've come to believe that we have to do it ourselves. Some of us have been abandoned. Some have gone without love. Some of us have gotten used to people never being there for us. Some of us have struggled, had hard lessons to learn.

Higher Power's there, always ready to help. There is an ample supply of people to care about us too. We will, if we want it, receive love and support, comfort and nurturing. If we take the risk to ask for it, help is there. We can draw on the strength of our recovery group and allow ourselves to be helped and supported by our Higher Power. Friends will come, good friends.

We aren't alone. And we don't have to do it ourselves. We're not doing it ourselves. There is no shortage of love. Not anymore.

Today, Higher Power, help me let go of my need to do it alone and my belief that I am alone. Help me tap into Your Divine Power and Presence, and your resources for love, support, and friendship. Open my eyes and heart so I can see the love, help, and support that's there for me. Help me know I am loved.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-06-2016, 09:43 AM
  # 13 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
January 6

You are reading from the book The Language of Letting Go."

Relationships

If we are unhappy without a relationship, we'll probably be unhappy with one as well. A relationship doesn't begin our life; a relationship doesn't become our life. A relationship is a continuation of life.
-- Beyond Codependency

Relationships are the blessing and bane of recovery. Relationships are where we take our recovery show on the road.

Each day, we are faced with the prospect of functioning in several different relationships. Sometimes, we choose these relationships; sometimes, we don't. The one choice we usually have in our relationships concerns our own behavior. In recovery from codependency, our goal is to behave in ways that demonstrate responsibility for us.

We're learning to acknowledge our power to take care of ourselves in our relationships. We're learning to be intimate with people when possible.

Do we need to detach from someone who we've been trying to control? Is there someone we need to talk to, even though what we have to say may be uncomfortable? Is there someone we've been avoiding because we're afraid to take care of ourselves with that person? Do we need to make an amend? Is there someone we need to reach out to, or show love?

Recovery is not done apart from our relationships. Recovery is done by learning to own our power and to take care of ourselves in relationships.

Today I will participate in my relationships to the best of my ability. I will make myself available for closeness and sharing with people I trust. I will ask for what I need and give what feels right.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.


(I love nuthatches; they can land facing any direction, horizontal, vertical, head up, head down--they can hop from the flat top of a feeder right down the side and clear around to the underneath w/o losing their grip. I hope someday I have those abilities in my life too!)
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-06-2016, 09:23 PM
  # 14 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
JANUARY 7

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Dealing with Painful Feelings

Feelings of hurt or anger can be some of the most difficult to face. We can feel so vulnerable, frightened, and powerless when these feelings appear. And these feelings may trigger memories of other, similar times when we felt powerless.

Sometimes, to gain a sense of control, we may punish the people around us, whether they are people we blame for these feelings or innocent bystanders. We may try to "get even" or we may manipulate behind people's backs to gain a sense of power over the situation.

These actions may give us a temporary feeling of satisfaction, but they only postpone facing our pain.

Feeling hurt does not have to be so frightening. We do not have to work so hard to avoid it. While hurt feelings aren't as much fun as feeling happy, they are, still, just feelings.

We can surrender to them, feel them, and go on. That does not mean we have to seek out hurt feelings or dwell unnecessarily on them. Emotional pain does not have to devastate us. We can sit still, feel the pain, figure out if there's something we need to do to take care of ourselves, and then go on with our life.

We do not have to act in haste; we do not have to punish others to get control over our feelings. We can begin sharing our hurt feelings with others. That brings relief and often healing to them and to us.

Eventually we learn the lesson that real power comes from allowing ourselves to be vulnerable enough to feel hurt. Real power comes from knowing we can take care of ourselves, even when we feel emotional pain. Real power comes when we stop holding others responsible for our pain and we take responsibility for all our feelings.

Today I will surrender to my feelings, even the emotionally painful ones. Instead of acting in haste or attempting to punish someone, I will be vulnerable enough to feel my feelings.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-07-2016, 07:58 AM
  # 15 (permalink)  
Member
 
ladyscribbler's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Iowa
Posts: 3,050
Just catching up with these. I missed a few days there. I know that for me learning to just sit with negative or uncomfortable feelings and not needing to "do something" about them has been a huge part of my recovery. It's also one of the main tools in my kit for dealing with PTSD symptoms. Funny how that stuff sometimes overlaps.
Thanks Hp, this was what I needed to read this morning.
ladyscribbler is offline  
Old 01-07-2016, 08:59 AM
  # 16 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
LS, learning to just feel and not necessarily fix or distract has been huge for me too. I am only at the very beginning of learning this, but it makes such a difference, even when I'm not all that good at it yet.

It's valuable for me to remember that "feeling" doesn't necessarily mean wallowing or lingering or making things worse than they are; it just means looking fully and honestly at what I'm feeling w/no judgment about whether it's good or bad, or what I "should" be feeling.

I'm working on a Jon Kabat-Zinn CD about meditation and chronic pain. While I don't have chronic pain (at least in a physical sense), a lot of what is being said is very pertinent to daily life, at least for me.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-07-2016, 09:12 AM
  # 17 (permalink)  
Member
 
Kboys's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 982
Great one for me today too. Thanks!
Kboys is offline  
Old 01-07-2016, 10:15 AM
  # 18 (permalink)  
Member
 
firebolt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 3,699
This is so helpful and supportive to me today! Our family pain is coming in waves with my dad's health. I am watching my mom lash out in anger, and my brother shut down at times. I never used to be able to talk much about pain, or cry in front of others. Now - I'm letting those feelings come and flow, and talking about it as needed - it's helping my hug my brother, and deal with my mom calmly and logically. It is keeping me level and with an underlying sense of peace in a difficult time. So thankful.
firebolt is offline  
Old 01-08-2016, 08:05 AM
  # 19 (permalink)  
Member
Thread Starter
 
honeypig's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Midwest
Posts: 11,481
January 8

You are reading from the book "The Language of Letting Go."

Vulnerability

Some of us may have made a decision that no one was ever going to hurt us again. We may automatically go on "feelings freeze mode" when faced with emotional pain. Or, we may terminate a relationship the first time we feel hurt. Hurt feelings are a part of life, relationships, and recovery. It is understandable that we don't want to feel any more pain. Many of us have had more than our share. In fact, at some time in our life, we may have been overwhelmed, crushed, or stopped in our tracks by the amount of pain we felt. We may not have had the resources to cope with our pain or take care of ourselves.

That was yesterday. Today we don't have to be so frightened of pain. It does not have to overwhelm us. We are becoming strong enough to deal with hurt feelings. And we don't have to become martyrs, claiming that hurt feelings and suffering are all there is to life.

We need only allow ourselves to feel vulnerable enough to feel hurt, when that's appropriate, and take responsibility for our feelings, behaviors, and what we need to do to take care of ourselves. We don't have to analyze or justify our feelings. We need to feel them, and try not to let them control our behavior.

Maybe our pain is showing us we need to set a boundary; maybe it's showing us we're going in a wrong direction; maybe it's triggering a deep healing process.

It's okay to feel hurt; it's okay to cry; it's okay to heal; it's okay to move on to the next feeling when it's time. Our willingness and capacity to feel joy will eventually match our willingness and capacity to feel hurt.

Being in recovery does not mean immunity from pain; it means learning to take loving care of ourselves when we are in pain.

Today I will not strike out at those who cause me pain. I will feel my emotions and take responsibility for them. I will accept hurt feelings as part of being in relationships. l am willing to surrender to the pain as well as the joy in life.

©1990, Hazelden Foundation. All rights reserved.
honeypig is offline  
Old 01-08-2016, 08:22 AM
  # 20 (permalink)  
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 1,572
Boy howdy, HP, this one really hit home for me today. I'm feeling kind of disgruntled in one of my friendships lately. It's nothing huge, but it's also not trivial. My feelings are just a little hurt, and that has been taking up a lot of space in my brain this week. I appreciate the reminder that it's OK to feel that way, but that it doesn't have to define me, or define the friendship.
Wisconsin is offline  

Currently Active Users Viewing this Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off





All times are GMT -7. The time now is 12:50 AM.