Time for a New Story
Jeff, a man in his late 30s battling recurrent drug abuse
and serial seductions, woke up in a stranger’s bed and decided – once again – he
needed to face his demons. He knew he must turn his life around or it was going
to end, and in a very bad way. Jeff sought out a new therapist, another in a
long trail of counselors and interventionists. He arrived in this man’s office
with his horrific story coursing through his veins, ready to once again let
loose the familiar diatribe wound like a noose around his heart. It was a sad
and terrible story. Raised in an environment of deep negativity and verbal
abuse by parents who were out of touch and unavailable, Jeff was a therapist’s
dream. Except, not this therapist’s.
After listening for about 20 minutes to Jeff’s well-versed
story of being raised by two narcissistic individuals who had no business ever
having had children in the first place, the therapist stopped him.
Jeff?
Yes?
Where are you going with this?
What do you mean? This is my story!
Yeah, I know. And it’s tragic! It’s God-awful! But what do
you want from me? ‘Cause if you want my sympathy, man, you got it! That is one
fucked up family!
Jeff was silent.
But what is your life now,
who are you now?
In that moment, Jeff’s story changed forever.
It is easy to stay stuck in our story. That fuzzy familiar blanket
woven from well-worn memories envelopes us in a seductive cloud of all-knowing
experience. Retelling and reliving the pain of being abandoned or forgotten or
lost reminds us of who we are and how we got here and that we matter. But there
comes a time when that same blanket can suffocate us and keep us from moving
forward. At some point, the soft blanket
becomes a rough canvas scratching at old scabs and reopening wounds that no
longer serve the new person we have become despite
our story! It is time for a shift. It is time to re-story.
But I can’t re-write my story! you scream. These things
really happened!
Yes, they did. And now, they don’t. Remember the monkey in
“The Lion King”? He hits Simba on the head with his walking stick, screeching,
“The past is in the past!”
Re-story.
There comes a time when you must let go of the chapters in
your life that re-injure you or cause you angst. Those voices are no longer part of your Once
Upon a Time. They are part of The End.
Think about opening the toy box you treasured as a child and
acknowledging each item you chose to keep and deciding as a grown-up it is time
to either re-gift it or throw it away. Experiences are the same. You are not
the same person you were last year or even last week, so how can a 20-year-old
negative experience serve the person you are now in this moment? Choose to keep
the moments that truly honor the person you are now, that serve you today on your
journey to the next level. Re-gift to the Universe those memories that no
longer apply.
Perhaps a ceremony of letting go is in order – writing
memories down and throwing them in a fire or dropping them in the ocean or burying
them in the sand. Forgive parents, siblings, teachers, past friends. You are
not denying the experience by letting it go, but rather honoring yourself in
the moment and moving on in the here and now. Celebrate!
To think about:
What is your new
story? Is there someone or something you need to forgive so you can live a
story that better serves you? What experience do you choose to re-gift to the
Universe?
Thanks, coach
ReplyDeleteThere are a couple of stories I carry around that could use a goodbye ritual.