14 Mar 2008 02:21:23 | Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
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Title: What You Judge Won’t Budge Author: Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
E-mail: mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com Copyright: © 2003 by
Margaret Paul Web Address: http://www.innerbonding.com Word
Count: 800 Category: Personal Growth, Emotional Healing
WHAT YOU JUDGE WON’T BUDGE By Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Sheila was stuck. Even though she was trying to hard to change
some things in her behavior - especially her anger and her
clutter, she found herself doing these things over and over.
Then she would get upset with herself, telling herself she was
stupid and incompetent.
How often do you tell yourself that you are wrong, bad,
inadequate, unworthy, a jerk, stupid, and so on? I’ve found, in
the many years I’ve been counseling, that most people are
frequently inwardly judgmental. Many of us believe that if we
judge ourselves, we can get ourselves to do things differently -
to do them "right." And if we do them right, then others will
like us. Underlying this is the false belief that doing things
right is a way to control how others feel about us and treat us.
Most of us are taught, from the time we are very little, that we
CAUSE other people to feel and behave the way they do. We are
taught by our parents, teachers and other caregivers that we
cause others to feel angry, scared, hurt, rejected, or loving
and accepting. In the case of Sheila, she was taught that if she
did poorly in school, she caused her parents to be angry. Their
anger was her fault. In other words, she was IN CONTROL of her
parents feelings and reactions because her behavior caused their
feelings and reactions. Her behavior caused them to be angry and
reject her.
Now, as an adult, Sheila believes that she causes others to
accept or reject her, or to feel happy or unhappy with her. She
believes that if she can just do things "right" enough, she can
be in control of others being happy with her and accepting her.
We explored this in one of our sessions.
"Sheila," I asked, "Do you think others are in control of how
you feel about them?"
Sheila thought a moment. "No, I don’t think so. Some days, when
I’m in a good mood, I seem to like everyone, and other days,
when I’m really tired or upset about something, people can
really bug me."
"So how you feel about and treat others has more to do with you
than with them, is that right?"
"Yeah, I think that’s right! I never thought about that before!"
"What if someone was trying really hard to get you to like them
- like giving you a lot of compliments - would that make you
like them?"
"Actually, I don’t like it when people butter up to me. I just
feel manipulated by it."
"So the things they do to try to control how you feel about them
don’t necessarily work, is that right?"
"Right."
"So what makes you think that doing things right will have
control over others liking you? Don’t you think everyone is like
you - that they decide for themselves to be accepting or
rejecting and that it’s often based on how they’re feeling
rather than on anything to do with you?"
"Oh my God! So why am I trying so hard to do everything right?
It’s a waste of time and energy, isn’t it?"
"Yes, it is. It’s not that we can’t influence people, but
ultimately we have no control over them. Each of us decides, in
any given moment, to be loving or unloving, accepting or
rejecting, open or closed. No one decides for us who we are
going to be, and we don’t decide that for others. When you
really accept that, you will stop trying so hard and just be
yourself. And if you’re not trying to do everything "right" you
might be more accepting of yourself as well."
"So what does all this have to do with my anger and clutter?"
"How it relates to that is that you are trying to change
yourself in order to do things right, and one way you think you
can change yourself is to judge yourself. You are trying to
control yourself just as you try to control others. And what
happens when you judge yourself? How do you feel?"
"Awful. I feel just awful, with a big black hole inside."
"And is judging yourself working to get you to stop being angry
and to clean up the clutter?"
"It’s not working at all."
"Right. When you judge yourself, you create an inner resistance.
The way through this resistance is to move out of judgment and
into compassion for yourself. Compassion open the door to
awareness and choice. It gives you the safe inner arena to see
what you are doing - such as getting angry or creating clutter -
and to decide what you really want to do differently. Compassion
for yourself is essential to moving out of a stuck place. What
you judge won’t budge!
About Author :
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of
eight books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By
You?", "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By My Kids?",
"Healing Your Aloneness","Inner Bonding", and "Do I Have To Give
Up Me To Be Loved By God?" Visit her web site for a FREE Inner
Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com or
mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com