The Tao of Fully Feeling: Harvesting Forgiveness out of Blame
Rate it:
Open Preview
3%
Flag icon
The term inner child refers to the part of the self that is developmentally arrested because important kinds of nurturing were missing in childhood.
4%
Flag icon
(We) have all developed the art of not experiencing feelings, for a child can only experience his feelings when there is somebody there who accepts him fully, understands and supports him.
5%
Flag icon
We cannot be healthy human beings without accepting and experiencing the full range of human feelings.
5%
Flag icon
The willingness to fully feel bestows a liberating emotional flexibility on us.
6%
Flag icon
When we do not attend to our feelings, they accumulate inside us and create a mounting anxiety that we commonly dismiss as stress.
7%
Flag icon
Some of the most beautiful things of life – sex, food, exercise, conversation, learning, and work – lose their quality because our frenzied pace makes it impossible to savor them. Rarely do we slow down long enough to digest the full pleasure of these activities.
7%
Flag icon
We can be transformed from “human doings,” a term coined by John Bradshaw, back into human beings.
7%
Flag icon
We do not have to let other people’s irresponsible emotional expression alienate us from our feelings.
7%
Flag icon
Without our darker emotions, there is little depth and dimensionality in our connection with others.
8%
Flag icon
When we surrender and soften to our feelings, we reconnect with the invaluable instincts and intuition they naturally carry.
8%
Flag icon
When we grieve them now, we discover our phoenix-like ability to be fully reborn out of these losses.
9%
Flag icon
Unremembered and ungrieved traumas block the tender feelings that are the matrix for feeling forgiveness.
10%
Flag icon
Pain without memory is replaced by memory without pain. – Anne Hart
11%
Flag icon
Denial protects abused children from the overwhelming, undigestible reality that their parents are not their allies.
12%
Flag icon
Premature forgiveness is false forgiveness because it is unsubstantiated by the recovery work that must take place for forgiveness to be emotionally genuine.
13%
Flag icon
Many of us still suffer unnecessarily from abdicating such basic rights as the right to say no, the right to be treated with respect, and the right to have our own feelings, opinions, and preferences. Our health and future growth depends on us claiming and exercising these rights.
13%
Flag icon
Many dysfunctional families are like mini-cults. The parents inculcate the children with their beliefs and values when they are completely impressionable. Thereafter they harshly punish any deviation in thinking or behaving.
14%
Flag icon
Children of dysfunctional families are commonly born into terrible loneliness.
14%
Flag icon
The intimacy born out of honest sharing makes us feel good about ourselves and in turn encourages us to be increasingly forthright.
15%
Flag icon
Until we learn to love ourselves during the less-than-perfect times, our love for others is superficial and over-conditional. States of being that we hate in ourselves are hard to accept in others.
15%
Flag icon
How tragic that so many of us are convinced we only deserve to be loved when we are happy or excelling.
15%
Flag icon
False love, based on mirages of perfection, often dissolves suddenly and dramatically.
16%
Flag icon
As expeditiously as I could, I jettisoned my unrewarding song-and-dance and set my intention to become more authentic. As I feared, many of my old friends slipped away; but beyond my greatest hope, a few friends remained and enthusiastically welcomed my new authenticity. Before long, I felt cared for for the first time in my life.
17%
Flag icon
Water says, “Live here. Don’t carry me around in buckets and pans.” False duties! Rest and be quiet.
18%
Flag icon
The cart of the psyche cannot be filled with pleasant emotions while the unpleasant ones are left on the shelf.
19%
Flag icon
In fact, it is virtually impossible to maintain a long-term intimate relationship without occasionally experiencing disconcerting combinations of affection and estrangement.
20%
Flag icon
We are so ruled by black-and-white thinking that we judge ambivalence as evidence of stupidity or defectiveness.
20%
Flag icon
Splitting occurs when feelings of disappointment are repressed (split off) via the tacit agreement that partners will only express appreciative feelings.
21%
Flag icon
When their disparate feelings are not experienced directly, they leak into consciousness as unfocused worry and confusion, paralyzing them from making choices and taking actions that would benefit them. This is not healthy ambivalating.
21%
Flag icon
The most common disruption of self-esteem that I witness occurs when disowned feelings suddenly erupt into consciousness splitting the individual off into overwhelming toxic shame. The more fully feeling we become, the less likely we are to split off completely from our feelings of self-worth.
21%
Flag icon
Feelings that are banished as unholy manifest unconsciously in infernal ways.
21%
Flag icon
Experiences of pure ambivalence sometimes open our awareness to the transcendental “Oneness” that unites all polarities.
21%
Flag icon
I have been graced several times with glimpses of a deeper, all-pervading Unity in settings of great natural beauty.
21%
Flag icon
What joy when I saw there was no break in the chain – not a link left out – everything in its place and time. Worlds, systems, all blended into one harmonious whole.
22%
Flag icon
When an emotional experience has shifted, we best support ourselves by accepting its loss as shamelessly as possible and by making a commitment to love and accept ourselves no matter what we feel – no matter what storms come with our emotional weather.
22%
Flag icon
I have never seen anyone who did not feel better after becoming willing to feel something they had been holding back. – Gay Hendricks, Learning To Love Yourself
23%
Flag icon
Sometimes the weight of our old unprocessed pain feels like the weight of the earth caving in on us. Fortunately, the processes of grieving can sluice away this heavy residue of pain.
23%
Flag icon
Every toddler eagerly seeks the development of new abilities, no matter how painstaking they are to acquire, until his spirited inquisitiveness is dampened by shaming or excessive punishment.
23%
Flag icon
To reach out for another is – to risk involvement. To expose feelings is – to risk exposing your true self. To place your ideas, your dreams before the crowd is – to risk their loss. To love is – to risk not being loved in return.
24%
Flag icon
Many codependents still believe they don’t deserve a fair share of life’s normal blessings. But, just as every human being deserves a fair share of the basic good experiences of life, so do you.
24%
Flag icon
want my relationships to be based on love, respect, fairness, and mutual support.
24%
Flag icon
I want to expand into full, uninhibited self-expression.
24%
Flag icon
If we fully acknowledge our pain, it would be difficult not to be swept with a care and compassion for our own well-being. – Stephen Levine
27%
Flag icon
When the accumulation of repressed emotion gets too great for containment, the pain may begin to erupt as emotional flashbacks.
27%
Flag icon
Somatization is a process of the psyche that transforms accumulated emotional pain into physical symptoms and disease.
27%
Flag icon
Muscular contraction against feeling is a physiological form of self-hatred. It is a vicious way of saying no to healthy aspects of the self.
28%
Flag icon
And the golden bees were making white combs of sweet honey from all my old failures . . . – Antonio Machado
28%
Flag icon
Inner peace enhances our ability to enjoy solitude, leisure, and the company of others. Our sleeping improves and dreaming becomes a time of fun and enrichment, rather than a restless and disturbed thrashing-about in symbolic reenactments of childhood trauma.
28%
Flag icon
Vulnerability and authenticity are two of the golden pathways to intimacy. When two people are deeply and mutually self-disclosive, profound channels of emotionally substantive love open between them.
28%
Flag icon
In fact, many of us remain in unhealthy relationships – relationships based on an illusion of love – because we don’t know what it feels like to be loved.
« Prev 1 3 4