Who's Driving This Thing?

The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn and change.
— Carl Rogers

I’ve noticed in my work with clients that many people are much harder on themselves than they would be on anyone else, especially people they love and care about.  Something for which one would easily forgive a friend becomes unforgiveable in oneself for reasons that are hard to fathom.  Sometimes the client will even say that it seems irrational for him to feel so guilty about something relatively minor, and yet he does.  What gives?  And why is this such a common experience?

I think the answer is that we have learned this behavior, usually from people who had no idea what was being passed down, in two different ways.  First, the conscious part of the equation:  When we’re children, we hear from all the adults around us, as well as from friends and peers, about what constitutes being a “good” person.  We may have trouble unifying everything we’re told into a cohesive theory about how to behave, but we do know that we’re supposed to try to be “good.”  We doubtless remember times when we were accused of behaving badly and intentionally embarrassed by someone, whether publicly or privately.  We may learn that life tends to go more smoothly when we behave in a pleasing way toward others; we then take on the job of policing our own behavior, taking on the voices of people we respected or feared and obeying them even in their absence.  This is relatively easy to recognize if you think about it—by which I mean that it may take some work to notice when you’re trying to please someone who’s not there, but if you pay attention to how you make decisions, you’ll probably start to see some of these habits before too long. 

And now for the second part that is not conscious.  Figuring out how this piece is affecting you can be quite a bit trickier.  In The Biology of Belief, Bruce Lipton writes about how recent scientific study has revealed that children under the age of six spend most of their time in different brain wave states than adults.  Until the age of two, children exhibit mostly delta brain waves, which in adults are associated with sleep states, and from ages two to six they spend most of their time in theta brain wave activity, which in adults is associated with the kind of “suggestible, programmable” state that hypnotherapists lead people into in order to help them accomplish change.  In other words, young children are generally not in a fully conscious state that adults would recognize.  They do not have access to conscious decision-making and analytical abilities.   Therefore, whatever a small child hears is downloaded into her subconscious directly.  Did you get that?  Young children have no filter; what they hear is recorded directly into their subconscious minds as truth.  When you were young, you learned a great deal that you are not aware of now, and it’s still affecting you today unless you’ve taken concrete steps to update that information. 

That explains a lot about why it can be so hard to change old habits and beliefs even if we want to.  The reasons why we feel a certain way may well be rooted in events and verbal commands we can’t even remember!  We have years’ worth of programming that we’ve never had the opportunity to examine.  We may remember plenty from childhood, and still be unaware of some pivotal beliefs that were instilled in us very early.  The people who taught them to you have changed or may not be alive anymore, but the messages have not.  Part of your mind is being run by ghosts.

We all know that parenting is a tough, demanding, and often exhausting job.  Parents do what they can to keep us safe and healthy and stay sane at the same time.  One of the methods most use is the application of shame to keep us in line—a sharp tone of voice telling us to stop it and a withering look, questions about what we were thinking when we did something that seemed really dumb or dangerous from an adult perspective, maybe a slap upside the head to let us know just how unacceptable our choice was.  (Some of this is non-verbal, or even learned from things we just overheard rather than experiencing them personally.)  If they can make us feel bad about certain choices, it’s less likely that we’ll make them again.  While this can be effective, its continued use can also leave us with a general feeling of not being good enough/as good as others, or the feeling that we need to talk to ourselves harshly in order to avoid bad decisions and consequences.  Once it’s installed, this habit of self-talk can run for decades or a lifetime without your awareness of what it’s really about, or that there are other alternatives.  The only thing that really makes this second half of the equation different from the first is that it occurs before we can be fully aware of what’s happening, and we may not be able to recall it later.

Some of this may not seem very empowering.  After all, what can we do about things we don’t even remember in the first place?  In fact, there are ways to clean up even the mysterious things that may be holding you back.  Making positive change happen in your life often requires the use of tools that can open a dialogue between your conscious and your unconscious mind.  My favorite of these is EFT/Tapping because it’s highly effective, and it’s a self-help tool that almost anyone can learn and use safely.  Once you’ve spent some time getting the hang of it, it’s astonishing what you can learn about yourself and what might be keeping you stuck in a particular area of your life.  It takes practice to become confident in this dialogue, but it’s well worth the effort if you’re someone who would like to feel better physically, emotionally, or spiritually, or to work toward more positive mental habits.  Despite what we may have been taught, it is possible to learn to treat yourself more kindly, and think and problem-solve more constructively.  Quieting habitual negativity can free up a lot of energy for better physical health and greater creativity.  And now that you know more about how children function, you might want to spend some time thinking about how you talk to the little ones in your life.  What you say to them will shape their habits more directly than you might think.  Choose your messages carefully to support their long-term health and happiness just as you learn to be more careful with how you speak to yourself.  

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