| Week
159: |
Looking for Silver Linings |
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A colleague recently told me a story about
an article she read about a woman who had been through a terrible
divorce. The woman talked
about how difficult her divorce was but, also, how grateful she was
to have had the good times in the relationship. She said something
like, “Just because it ended badly doesn’t mean there wasn’t
love and delight in the earlier years and I don’t want to throw
out the baby with the bathwater.” I was struck by this woman’s
ability to embrace the fact that she had, indeed, encountered pain
and grief, but that there had also been happiness and satisfaction within
the whole scope of her experience with her ex-husband.
This conversation with my colleague got me
to thinking about how loss and grief sometimes lead us to erase all
that came before and focus our attention only on endings. The divorced woman’s
comments speak to the resource we can have when, after we have moved
through the immediacy of grief and loss about whatever has moved out
of our lives, we can then remember and reclaim a sense of the gifts
that were with us earlier in the relationship, job, situation, or
whatever it is we have lost.
When we imagine moving through a loss with
all the feelings and thoughts that come with it, and then moving into
recalling the good things that preceded the loss, we get a glimpse
into a natural process of resilience. We’re
hard-wired to “bounce back”, to grieve and then rediscover
our enthusiasm for life. We can also support this natural process
by allowing ourselves to fully embrace grief and pain, and then to be
curious about the gifts that were part of the experience, person, or
situation we have lost. This is particularly important when things
have ended badly, as we tend to focus on the negatives when we’ve
had a difficult time with a person or situation.
For this week’s experiment, I invite you to be curious about
what you might experience if you were to focus your awareness on the
positive things you had *before* a loss that ended badly. The
emotions, states of mind, and physical experience you had of yourself
when things were good are still part of your history and repertoire,
and are there to draw and savor on in your imagination. They are
also present as part of the “color and texture” of your
being – aspects of yourself that you may draw on without realizing
it consciously.
The purpose of this experiment isn’t to invite you back into
a painful situation, or to force yourself to feel good about something
bad. Instead, it’s an invitation to be curious about what
you experience when you reflect on the good things that were real about
the whole journey you took with that person or situation. As the
woman in the article mentioned, it’s an opportunity to avoid throwing
out the baby with the bathwater.
If you find yourself becoming mired in struggle
or pain about what happened, then let the experiment go and notice
that you may well still be in the process of grieving or anger about
what happened. Or,
you may discover that you have tended to focus on the negatives only,
and have overlooked the gifts the experience brought you at the time
it was good. As with all the experiments, the purpose here is
simply to bring greater conscious awareness to how you move through
experience. There is no right or wrong answer or way to do it. There’s
just a chance to know yourself better.
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