There are many
things in life that separate us and make us
unique, however, over the years I have seen one
consistent common denominator; our need to
forgive. Regardless of our upbringing, our
cultural similarities or differences, or any
other circumstances of our lives, we have each
held onto one or more hurt, pain, sadness or
injustice.
On a regular basis
I work with clients from all over the globe who
have used their harbored hurts, pains, sadness,
and memories of injustices as a secret hidden
weapon for sabotaging their own success, their
relationships, or both. These are good people
who would not intentionally hurt anyone, but the
harbored inner pain has a strong hold on them
that they cannot totally control.
A
few years ago I coached a woman, Tammy (not
her real name) who had a very difficult
childhood. Her mother left the family when Tammy
was just 13 years old and because Tammy was the
oldest female child, her father immediately
became dependent upon her to take on all the
duties and responsibilities of the absent
mother. Tammy was a child so she did not know
how, and did not want, to be the adult mother of
the family, but she loved her siblings and knew
they needed her, so she allowed herself to be
pushed into the role of mother of the family.
Tammy’s father
harbored hurt and resentment toward his wife for
leaving the family and for having to work very
long hours to bring in enough money to support
his family as a single parent. Tammy says that
she knew her father loved her and her siblings,
but it was very hurtful that he was always so
angry and critical of her. He seemed to expect
her to already know how to do all the things an
adult mother would do such as cooking, cleaning,
putting the children to bed, laundry, grocery
shopping, etc., along with going to school and
keeping her grades up. When she did things that
did not meet his level of expectation, he would
scold her and accuse her of letting him down.
When Tammy grew up
and went out into the adult world she developed
challenging problems in her personal and her
work relationships so she came to me for help.
When Tammy began my
Break Free Coaching Program
coaching program she had a menagerie of
intertwined ineffective ways for motivating
herself that created much more self-sabotage
than success.
Through our work
together Tammy uncovered three specific problems
with her inner self-motivation system.
First,
she realized that, even though she was a very
nice, very friendly person, she only knew how to
be a controlling parent type personality. This
personality type was effective when she was
actually parenting her younger siblings,
however, in the adult world other adults don’t
want to be controlled, parented and told what to
do.
The second problem
Tammy uncovered was that she only knew how to be
a critical parent to herself. When she made any
type of mistake in her adult life she only knew
how to inwardly punish, scold and berate
herself, and she regularly told herself that she
“let people down.”
And the third
problem Tammy uncovered was that she had a very
deep sense of anger and sadness regarding her
childhood.
Through the
Break Free Coaching Program
coaching program, I worked
diligently with Tammy to help her develop a
healthier, more effective inner self-motivation
system, but the one piece she had to do on her
own was the forgiveness work. There were many
people to forgive; her mother for leaving, her
father for putting her in the parent role and
being so critical of her, and herself for not
knowing any better than to believe her father’s
negative and critical words to her.
More recently I
coached a client, Jim (not his real name), who
had what he describes as a “normal and happy
childhood” and yet Jim also had an inner network
of ineffective ways for managing himself that
constantly left him feeling like a failure.
As
Jim and I delved into the
Break Free Coaching
Program we began to uncover the source
of his self-sabotage behaviors. Jim was born in
the early 1960s and at that time, it was common
practice for the mother of the family to be a
full time mother and not work outside the home.
Also, at that time, it was typical for the
father of the family to work for one company for
20 to 30 years and then retire at age 65. And
this was exactly the picture of Jim’s family. So
as Jim moved into his adulthood he fell in love
with and married a woman who wanted a family,
but also wanted a career outside the home. Jim
wasn’t equipped to deal with sharing the daily
family responsibilities of cooking, cleaning,
taking care of the children, etc., and these
differences of opinion ultimately caused his
marriage to end in divorce.
Jim also shared
with me that he did not like his chosen field of
accounting and was very unhappy in his job. The
thought of working in this job for 20 to 30
years made him feel physically sick, but he
believed that it was his obligation to stay with
the job and career in which he had already
invested so much time and energy.
Jim had based his
entire self-motivation system on an out-of-date
lifestyle that was unrealistic for the
twenty-first century. Jim constantly compared
his actual life to the mental image he had of
his ideal “1960s” life and always came up short.
I worked with Jim
to create a more updated and effective mental
image of his ideal life and helped him create
new and more effective ways of measuring his
success, but there was also forgiveness work to
be done.
For Jim, it was
all about forgiving himself! He had secretly
resented himself for not being able to live up
to his previous internal picture of what a
marriage and family “should” look like and he
berated and scolded himself on a regular basis
and saw himself as a failure.
Forgiveness work
is recognized worldwide as an amazing healing
power!
According
to David Barrett et al, editors of the "World
Christian Encyclopedia: A comparative survey of
churches and religions - AD 30 to 2200," there
are 19 major world religions which are
subdivided into a total of 270 large religious
groups, and many smaller ones. According to this
source, over 75% of the world’s population is a
member of the religions of Christianity, Islam
or Hinduism, with the remaining population being
members of other religions including Judaism and
Buddhism.
While I have not
read the teachings of all 19 major religions of
the world, I am familiar enough with the
teachings of the top 5 to know that one thing
stands out as a major common denominator; each
one teaches about the power of forgiveness!
Many years ago
when I first began my own journey of breaking
free from self-sabotage behaviors I was open to
trying just about anything that might relieve my
self-induced inner torture. One evening I was
attending a course called Whole Life and the
leader of the course said something that
reminded me of the teachings of Jesus in the
Christian bible.
Having grown up in
a traditional Christian home, I recalled that in
the book of Matthew, there is a parable of an
unforgiving servant who asked Jesus how many
times he should forgive a person for sinning
against him. Jesus’ response was to tell the
servant to forgive seventy times seven. (I am
paraphrasing of course.)
Upon recalling
this teaching, I thought to myself, “Wow, that’s
490 times! I wonder if I can forgive 490
times!” I started by writing a list of
everything I could think of that I felt angry or
hurt about and every person I felt angry or
resentment toward. (I was startled at how long
the list was.) Then I created a forgiveness
journal and I began my journey of writing “I
forgive ___ for ____” for everything and
everyone on the list.
The
forgiveness journey turned out to be one of the
single most significantly healing things I have
ever done in my life!
Over the years I
have shared the awesome power of forgiveness
with many people and I have learned several
important factors regarding the forgiveness
process that I would like to share with you.
First, no one can
tell you HOW to forgive. If you need to cry at
the sadness of the death of a loved one or the
pain of a brutal injustice, let the tears flow.
If you need to curse and swear as you forgive
the a**hole who wrecked your car or the
Son-of-a-*itch who broke your heart – then do it
that way. Just do it YOUR way!
Second, if you are
doing forgiveness work related to something that
feels like an “unforgivable” crime or action
someone forced on you, please KNOW that
forgiveness is NOT about condoning someone
else’s bad behaviors. I once coached a woman who
was sexually abused by her father when she was a
child. She struggled with the idea of forgiving
him because she didn’t want it to mean that it
was OK that he did that to her. Forgiveness work
is for YOU…not THEM. Forgiveness is about
clearing out the negative crap, goop and garbage
the offender left behind when they contaminated
your space. For her, swearing and yelling in
her forgiveness journal was extremely cathartic
and effective. She let it ALL OUT, but always
starting with “I forgive you for….”
And lastly, but
perhaps most importantly…please, please, please
remember that YOU are the KEY character in your
journey of forgiveness. Some of the most
powerful forgiveness work you will do will be
about forgiving yourself! Regardless of the
event, most of us blame ourselves in some way
for the bad things that happen to us or the bad
things others do to us – even when it truly was
not within our control and was not our fault.
For both Tammy and
Jim doing the forgiveness work created a true
magnitude of positive changes in both their
lives.
Tammy
focused on forgiving the people and
circumstances of her childhood. As she let go of
her pent up hurt and anger, she became more and
more comfortable letting other people take
control of their own work and she began to let
go of her need to control her friends and
family. As a result, her coworkers, friends and
family enjoy being around her and she is much
more relaxed and happier!
Jim focused his
forgiveness work on himself. He spent hours
forgiving himself for all the things he felt he
had done to mess up his life and the lives of
those around him. As he let go of his pent up
hurt and anger, he became more and more relaxed
and comfortable just being himself. He let go of
his harsh judgment of himself and developed a
more supportive and motivating way to move
forward when things don't work out as he
planned. Jim also took the leap of faith and
left his accounting job to work in the
manufacturing industry which, for him, is much
more interesting and stimulating.
In case you are
wondering, I never got to 490. I was about
halfway there when all my inner anger,
resentment and sadness just lifted away! I still
use my
Forgiveness Manual and Journal
for “spot
cleaning”, so I keep it in a safe place so I’ll
know where it is when I need it.
No matter what
brought you to your own journey of forgiveness,
one thing I can promise you is this; doing the
forgiveness work will improve your life in
unbelievable and wonderful ways!
Are you ready to
forgive 490 times?
I hope you find
joy and happiness on your journey!
Troyann
LifeWorks Training
& Development
Forgiveness Manual and Journal
(Immediate Download)
for ONLY
$6.28

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The
Forgiveness Manual and Journal
is a 78-page booklet. It includes recommendations for processing your own hurt,
anger, pain, sadness, shame, or resentment into genuine forgiveness, and 70
journal pages with lines for writing "I forgive _____ for _____" in
increments of 7 on each page. The
Forgiveness Manual and Journal
is designed to help you find and resolve inner negative feelings that you
may be harboring and using as weapons for sabotaging your own efforts to be
successful.
To purchase your own
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Troyann Williams is a highly renowned Personal
Development Coach.
She’s been helping people Break Free from Self-Sabotage
Behaviors since 1985. Troyann is a "been-there,
done-that, knows what she's talking about" success
coach! To learn a step-by-step process for Breaking Free
from Self-Sabotage Behaviors, go now to ==>
http://www.breakfreefromselfsabotage.com/.
Copyright 2009. This article is reproducible in full only,
including website address.
Troyann Williams | LifeWorks Training & Development
www.BreakFreeFromSelfSabotage.com
PO Box 10008 | Greensboro, NC 27404
Phone: 336-855-5433
Email:
BreakFree@SelfSabotageBehavior.com
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