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Week Thirty-Four:
Owning All You Are Already
I often do a review when entering a new year, and invite myself to notice
all the ways in which I allowed myself to recognize and express what was
and is best in me in the year just passed. I do this without judgment,
without criticism. Its a time for me to reflect on the gifts that
I bring to the world big or small and to acknowledge them
in myself. I might then create an intention to express even more of these
gifts in the year to come, or to allow aspects of myself Ive kept
under wraps to be more fully visible. This is a variation on the very
useful and empowering theme of catching ourselves doing things right,
rather than the more usual self-blame, self-hate, and self-criticism that
so many of us learned to use with ourselves.
Because its not at all uncommon to spend reflection time berating
ourselves, or noticing where weve come up short, Id like to
invite you to begin 2002 with a different focus. Beginning today, notice
what happens if you allow yourself to focus on what you did right last
year, even if it feels to you that there was very little that you did
right, or that went right in your life. The goal isnt to discover
that youve made the most important contribution, or gave the most
of whatever it is you feel you wanted to give, or expressed yourself to
the maximum extent possible for who you are at this time in your life.
The goal is to discover what you have given, have expressed, have offered
of yourself, no matter how small you may think your contribution or accomplishment
may have been.
The other opportunity offered by this experiment is for you to deepen
your practice of compassion for yourself and others. As you review the
year, notice the places where your heart needs to open to yourself and
others for mistakes made. Also, remember that we humans learn so much
from our mistakes its by falling down when were learning
to walk that we discover how to balance ourselves. Its by teetering
on a bicycle that we discover how to stay upright. Its through having
our mistakes corrected that we learn many new things. As Ive probably
said many times before in these experiments, if we arent making
at least a mistake a day, were depriving ourselves of the benefits
of learning something new.
Most especially, let yourself explore what its like to the end this
very dramatic and trying year by creating the beginning of a time when
you seriously notice what youre doing right, and where you take
on the practice of allowing yourself to be all you can be, all you are
already. The gentle affirmation of this kind of process can heal many
of the wounds received in a childhood where important others may not have
been able to acknowledge what was special about you.
If you bump up against an old, self-critical or self-blaming voice inside,
take a moment to notice and acknowledge its presence and then continue
to focus on what you did right last year. Old habits take time to fade,
and you can support the process of shifting away from this old habit by
continually noticing any form of self-criticism and shifting back to self-affirming
responses to yourself.
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