The Wounded Healer

May 7th, 2010

I didn’t coin this phrase and don’t know who did, but a friend of mine, who is a Reiki Master, uses it. I have met many wounded healers in my lifetime and I have been a wounded healer myself for numerous years.

Wounded healers are those who always appear to have the answers. We know how to heal others, we give the greatest advice, we inspire and help, but we don’t do it for ourselves. We have endless compassion, patience and love for broken souls, but we do not extend the same love, compassion and kindness to ourselves. We forgive the ones who have used and hurt us, but we don’t forgive ourselves. We have an uncanny eye for another’s downfall and do nothing to stop our own. We coach, we love, we inspire, we instruct and find ourselves stuck in the wrong situations with the wrong people time and time again. Such as is the path of the wounded healer.

The greatest ability  goes only so far and actually becomes ineffective, if you cannot learn to love and help yourself. If you cannot love and honor yourself, your “gifts” will lose their power. And before long, you’ll appear like a hypocrite. Wandering about being the relationship fixer for others seemed ridiculous after a while, when I was dating an abuser, or cheater, or selfish guy, taking it to the chin and looking the other way. Telling someone about the importance of balance between mind, body, heart and spirit, while I was smoking a cigarette and letting my body go to hell, didn’t really fall on open ears either. Trying to raise self-awareness in individuals, as I found myself unable to follow my own advice, didn’t inspire a soul, at least not for long.

I had to heal my wounds before I could be of any use to anyone else. As I learned to focus and set out on the path to take care of myself, as I learned to let go of my attachment to others around me, an interesting thing started happening. Suddenly, as I withdrew and started sharing instead of preaching, I started to inspire people. I was heard differently, because I was leading by example and simply sharing my findings, versus trying to change another. My tone was calmer, less combative and accusing. I didn’t need to rant anymore. Before, when I would go off on a topic, I would usually piss people off, because how were they supposed to know that I was really spewing self-loathing? My disgust that I openly voiced about others, was often disgust about myself. I kept trying to set the wrong things right and didn’t realize that this quest would have to start with me.

This path I started on a mere year and a half ago finally brought me the peace of mind I so desperately wanted. I have more tolerance and love these days, because I am not constantly angry anymore at my inability to live the life I want. I am more understanding and accepting, I don’t need to change anyone’s mind, because I have everything and everyone I need right here by my side. I have more love in my life than I ever had. I have abundance and health, beauty, laughter and joy and when I “engage in battle” I do so out of conviction, not because I want to change the individual. I get involved much less these days and I choose my battles wisely. More so than ever, it truly is all about quality and not about quantity. Quite a few people dropped out of my life and yet, I am not lonely or bored. Some of them I miss, but not for the people they are or were to me, but for the people I saw in them or wanted them to be.

Not all my pieces are whole just yet, but I am no longer a wounded healer either. I am finally learning boundaries and I am learning that it is ok to walk away from situations or people who are not aiding my growth or well-being. Saying “no” is still a bit difficult, and there are times when I still get so angry or feel sad over past events. But then I take a deep breath, tell myself that I have a choice in how I feel, or I work out. And by the time my work out is over, I am so high on endorphins, I usually can’t even remember what I was so angry or sad about.

Psychics

May 3rd, 2010

I don’t know too many words that cause as much of a stir than the word “psychic.” Thanks to tons of scammers, trying to sell you “spell remover candles” for hundreds of dollars and the likes of Madame Cleo, even those who are genuinely gifted are immediately sneered upon and hated.

We could have tons of debates here, arguing back and forth about the scientific evidence of psychic abilities and those who claim that all the research was false. We could talk about the army trying to hone these abilities for their own good and we would find someone who would claim that the whole remote viewing experiment was made up. It isn’t my intent to persuade people one way or the other, because I have learned that those who insist on a point are hardly ever changing their mind, regardless what one says.

But what if psychic ability is just another skill our brain can pick up? What if I gave, what I think, is a scientific explanation for psychic ability? Would it shed light, or would people just tell me I am crazy? I guess, it doesn’t matter. But given that I work for a psychic hotline (no, not as a psychic!), I would like to share what I think attributed to my very own ability to “foresee” events  and to sense true cores of individuals. I would also like to offer my own interpretation for why these abilities are not foolproof and why they did not provide me with a carefree life.

I grew up in an abusive home. This is about as much detail as I am going to give. I will say that a therapist of mine once stated that it is a miracle that I didn’t end up in a psych ward, rocking back and forth, while staring at the walls. I attribute this to my psychic ability. Most children grow up honing their five senses. I learned, before I was even 4 years old, that the five senses are the most easily deceived ones. I learned to hone my “sixth sense.” I learned to read every nuance of a voice, body language, the way someone walked, the way their eyes would look at me and I learned how to predict what would happen next. I learned this with so much accuracy that I survived, ensuring I was never in the wrong place at the wrong time. I needed to know the future, there was no other way for survival and for me doing these things was just as “normal” as it is to practice reading for any other child. I learned how to sit still and leave my body. I learned how to astral travel and I did it so well that other people would notice me at times, telling me that they saw me in their room at night, even though I was hundreds of miles away.

I did not share this ability with anyone. I was ashamed and felt already different as it was. I kept pushing it away and when I reached my teenage years, I just used my “great intuition” to predict outcomes of relationships for my friends. They’d even ask me to ”use my seventh sense” (den siebten Sinn) in German. When I was 19 I met a psychic who told me that my memory would come back within the next few years. It did. I predicted the Northridge quake, I had constant dreams of things that were about to happen, I would “see” where people were at when I would concentrate on them and I started to freak people out. Plus, I started running into absolute and total resentment with a few friends who were furious about my predictions coming true.

No, I did NOT see this as a great way to make myself look awesome. I tried to hide it, I never called it “being psychic” and I learned reading tarot, just so I could put people’s minds at ease. I could say “the cards say so.” This made people feel better. They don’t react too kindly to someone who goes into a kind of trance and then first starts reciting their past (especially the things not even their best friends know) and then goes into detail about their future.

What I have learned is that people don’t want to be told the things they don’t want to hear. People will ask for advice but really mean someone who keeps supporting their delusions. I also learned that no one can predict the future 100%, because there is always free will. I therefore added a clause to my readings “this is the most likely outcome, based on the current path you are on.” There is no carved in stone message, although most really good psychics will be fairly accurate, because most humans are not people who change a whole lot, or alter their paths a lot.

Reading for oneself is extremely difficult! So is reading for those we love. We have a harder time being neutral. No, I don’t want to tell my best friend that the guy she just met is an abusive douche bag who will cheat on her. No, I don’t want to see that the friend I hired into my company will put my reputation on the line and then turn on me. No, I don’t want to take a look at the fact that the guy I am dating is incapable of love, even though I know it from the first time we go out. I want to give the benefit of the doubt and I really do want to be wrong when my “psychic donuts” show me something I really could have done without.

It is my mind and my heart that would screw things up for me. My “sixth sense” was never wrong, but my head and my heart were wrong a lot. By the time I would talk myself out of the first instinctive message I’d get, I’d find myself already with the wrong people, in the wrong relationship and ending up enduring a whole bunch of pain and hurt. Some of which, I never did recover from all that well.

People may believe whatever they want, but my life did not transform into the gem it is right now, UNTIL I cut out the head and heart and followed my instincts 100%. I have never been happier. I made a “deal” with the universe many years ago and asked them to turn “the psychic billboard off.” I no longer see the things that do not serve my higher purpose, or the higher purpose of the one who asks me to read for them. I also no longer read for everyone who asks. I am very selective and I never do smoking mirror tricks. I have nothing to prove to anyone. I am not trying to appear glamorous and no, I don’t know the lotto numbers any more than the next. But what I do have is an uncanny ability to sense danger, to sense a “good path,” or how to help another who might be in a bad place. I have learned that I have a gift that helps others and I use it for only that; and so do the real psychics.

We are not a bunch of circus freaks who try to scam anyone. We are just a bunch of people who have learned to use a certain part of our “brain” to help others and ourselves from entering into paths that don’t serve us. I still feel isolated and “ashamed” of being different, but I am happy to proclaim that I have helped quite a few to find their path, achieve a goal, or lined them up with their higher purpose.

When I look at those who shun abilities that are not explainable, I always tell them to consider the source. For how could I claim that all religious people are a bunch of sheep and idiots, when I look at the Dalai Lama? And how could I ridicule some psychics I know who are out there every day, trying to make a difference and doing it under the radar. I will also state that there is “something” else that is there when I read. Because honing my senses as a child still doesn’t explain how I would at times know details of a person’s past, amongst other things. But what I wanted to do is show, that even when we keep spirituality out of it, we humans can do amazing things.

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire

April 26th, 2010

And again I find myself puzzled and confused about the bizarre human race. *shakes head* I also thank the heavens for not being single and for not having to date, sorry to my single friends for stating the obvious.

One of my friends has now caught numerous guys in lying about their age on their dating profile! We are talking anywhere from 5 to 10 years they are conveniently subtracting. Way to go in being honest and open when out there, trying to supposedly meet your life mate! Apparently, none of them are smart enough to really keep up with the BS they are stating on their sites and somehow their real age just ends up “slipping” in conversation.

Somehow being dishonest on dating and social profiles is now being passed as “small, white lies.” As usual, I am going to state the obvious here. Lying in one’s profile is NOT a small, white lie. As a matter of fact, lying in any shape or form will usually get you permanently deleted from the social calendar of any self-respecting, honest person with a sense of integrity, period!

I have heard stories about online profiles that make my hair stand up. We have people who add profile pictures of actresses, those who post pictures of themselves a “few” years ago, before they had gained those additional 100 lbs. We are talking people who lie about their age, looks, professions and pretty much anything else one could possibly use to make oneself look better. Apparently, the notion seems to be that once somebody gets to know who they “really” are, they will look past the fact that their pictures are fake , the age is wrong and the supposed “successful business owner and entrepreneur” turns into the couch surfing loser, who hadn’t had a job in eons. Those poor suckers who are interested are supposed to see their inside beauty, not superficial distractions, such as an additional 10 years of age, or 100 lbs extra weight or other “meaningless” facts most grown-ups pay attention to.

News flash! The fact that you are starting out with a lie is not going to get you sympathy, no matter what reasons you had for lying. Plus, most of us would not only be angry about being deceived, no, we would also be insulted. First of all, let’s face it, chemistry and physical attraction ARE important, especially when first meeting a person. But, you also stole another’s time and decided for them! How shallow of YOU to make the decision that another would not like you, wanting to get to know you and maybe even loving you for exactly who you are! That screams insecure and/or psycho from 100 miles away and is a definite deal breaker for the normal population!

People will find out the truth! You will not find the one person who will be kind and forgiving, once they realized that you deliberately deceived them! I can safely speak for about 99% of the population, when saying that NO ONE likes to be lied to. We generally don’t care how “small” you think your lie was! Lying is always wrong. This is just how it works in the real world.  Lying does not pay off, so if you are really interested in finding “the one,” you better keep it real and honest.

Book Smart vs. Street Smart

April 21st, 2010

My mom-in-law suggested this topic, so here we go :-)   *waves at Rosel*

Don’t you just love the type that can talk your ear off about fascinating topics like physics and mathematics, but can absolutely not relate to emotions, what makes people tick,  how to successfully interact with others and how life may be anywhere else, but planet USA? You know, the kind who talks about science for hours and cannot hold a single conversation about how a person is feeling, what is going on with another, or themselves, for that matter! If you make the fatal error of just mentioning actual things that are going in your life, they’ll just shut down and stare at your blankly, obviously uncomfortable and definitely not able to contribute anything that will make you feel better or even different.

I personally prefer people who are both, street smart and book smart. Knowing how the scientific universe functions just won’t get you accepted in the world, it won’t find you love and it sure as hell won’t make you happy. We are social creatures and being incredibly smart by itself  tends to keep you pretty isolated.

I often wondered if intelligence had anything to do with self-awareness. Having spent years of wondering, I can safely proclaim it does not. I know some pretty smart people who don’t have the slightest clue of who they are and where they are going. Lacking self-awareness usually also means they are lacking the power of creation, namely creating the life they want for themselves; unless we are talking “stuff,” as in inanimate objects. Hence, a lot of the incredibly intelligent people are pretty miserable. To a degree I have to agree with those who say that ignorance is bliss. If I have no idea about what it is I am missing, how would I miss it?

I guess any fairly intelligent person can learn facts from a book. That doesn’t necessarily mean they will be successful. To me, street smart comes in handy AFTER I have learned a certain thing from a book. Knowing how basic life works, I can then go and put the learned knowledge into good use. I can go to a therapist and actually learn something, as well as alter my behavioral patterns. Having been forced to draw from the most unusual places for survival has given me the ability to take pretty much anything on with an open mind and put it to fairly good use. I can not just understand in theory how something works, I get it.  And a lot of the book smart types never get it.

What do I mean by that? Well, if I want to learn how to ride a bicycle, I can read a book about riding a bike and understand in theory how it works and what one has to do to make the bicycle go forward. But getting it is the perfect moment of balance, when you are suddenly riding the bike. From this moment on, you will always be able to ride a bike. You can get on one 20 years letter and you will still know how to ride. That is the difference between getting it and knowing something. The vast majority of people I have met know a whole lot about many things, but only very few actually get it ;-)

Hence, one prefers to be with the street smart, book smart and well rounded types. I like to have conversations about our government for example, or how shitty it was to experience certain heart-aches and how I liked traveling to certain countries and why, amongst other things. And I like having these conversations with people who can contribute, vs. the ones who “once read somewhere about something,” and otherwise just shift uncomfortablyin their chairs.  The  books in school can teach you many things, but they won’t make you necessarily more successful and they don’t teach you about life. Thank god I know this and can actually use it in management, when I hire people who can do the job because they get it, versus the ones who can do it in theory, because they have the mental capacity, maybe even the knowledge, and still are not cut out for it.

The Kool Aid Goes Both Ways!

April 16th, 2010

 

I know numerous people who react almost violently when anyone talks about religion or spirituality. As soon as a person states that they subscribe to a certain belief or church, up come the judgmental sneers and commentary from some who claim they know better.

I recently watched Bill Maher’s “Religulous.” I thought the whole thing was rather funny and in some areas quite brilliant. I happen to agree with him on numerous points, but that doesn’t mean I ridicule any of my friends who are Christians, Buddhists, Wiccans or Hindus!

Why do most people have an issue with religion, especially Christianity and Islam? Isn’t it the fact that there are numerous fanatics out there who feel a need to force their world views on another, preach, condemn and judge? So why do the same rules not apply across the board? Personally, I have an issue with anyone who ridicules and belittles those who believe or think differently. I don’t care how much research you have done and what you know, there is simply no reason to insult and belittle those who did drink the Kool Aid. If you are one of the overly educated atheists who claim you have “absolute proof that no higher power exists,” well, good for you! It still doesn’t give you the right to be mean spirited and a fanatic on the other end of the spectrum. If you belittle people for drinking the spiritual Kool Aid, you can’t be an ass hat, just because you drank the atheist Kool Aid!

I, too, have done my research and have reached my own conclusions. I am not a sheep, nor am I a mindless zombie. I am not a Christian, but I can safely say that my Christian friends are not idiots. They are not uneducated hicks who follow blindly, nor are they people who discriminate or insist on having the answers. The friends I am referring to are actually highly educated, intelligent and especially KIND people! They have an honorable code of ethics, which allows them to accept people, regardless of beliefs.

I have met quite a few atheists in my life. Most are actually agnostics, not atheists, but the few true ones I have met are equally annoying as Born Again Christians or Jehovah’s Witnesses are to me. Their adamant insisting on “knowing the truth,” always turns me off. The “evidence” they quote is no different on either side of the fanatic fence! And the truth is, there are a few things I have observed about true atheists I have met.

 Most of them shined with arrogance, cynicism and sarcasm. None of them struck me as particularly happy, seemed to have meaningful or close relationships and generally lead pretty lonely lives. Being void of any type of spirituality usually also meant that they couldn’t grasp the concept of love either. The few I have met did fairly well for themselves financially, and had no one to share it with. I remember one of them, a friend I had for many years in Germany. He was an absolute genius and holds patterns on things I can’t even pronounce. I also remember him telling me that there is no use in even hoping for a relationship, because most women weren’t even closely as intelligent as he is. He therefore chose porn stars, strippers, or significantly younger girls he could impress with his fancy Mercedes or penthouse. When I lost contact with him, we had known each other for well over 10 years. He didn’t have a single lasting or meaningful relationship in that entire time. I can guarantee that he remained unmarried and miserable to this day. Because that is exactly what he also told me, that he was miserable!

When I look at a man like the Dalai Lama, when I listen to his interviews or just observe how he carries himself, I am humbled. There is no doubt in my mind that this man is definitely an “enlightened soul.” When I remember back on some horrible childhood memories, I remember how my “faith” carried me through all of it. I never gave up, I didn’t get broken, because I believed in something outside of me. I didn’t blindly believe, I believed based on my own evidence, which I choose to not share with people, unless I actually know and trust them. I am a person who likes science and numbers, I do my research and I am not arrogant enough to claim that I truly know what is “up” there, or isn’t for that matter. I don’t force my beliefs on another and I don’t wander about claiming that I have the answers.

If some form of faith or spiritual belief gives a person a sense of peace, well-being and happiness, why tell them they are being stupid? If a belief carried a person through their darkest hours and saved their life, what is it to another and why would anyone feel a need to belittle or ridicule them? How can a person get angry because they don’t want to be preached to  by some religious nut, while they wander around doing the same, preaching about  their lack of belief? Isn’t that hypocritical?

I hate to break it to the non-believers and I get that you will never understand it; quite frankly, I don’t need you to get it. But if I have the choice to believe that there is truly something extraordinary out there, a light that gives people hope and comfort, versus my brain chemistry producing certain images when being presented with certain stimuli, I believe that there is something great. And if science has the answers to all of it, then I wonder why they cannot explain certain phenomena just yet and why they cannot reproduce the same results consistently, i.e. near-death experiences. And next time you sit on your high horse, ridiculing people, I invite you to tell a child who is fighting cancer or is being severely abused at home that there is no higher power. For me, faith of some kind gives me hope and happiness. It keeps me in check when I want to be a Muppet and reminds me that “what goes around comes around.” It does no harm to me, and isn’t that what we wish for the ones we love or like?

I simply wished that all the fanatics would finally shut the hell up. I don’t care if you worship Allah, Jesus, Jehovah, little green men or nothing at all. I just wished there was more tolerance and less fighting and harming each other. I drank the Kool Aid alright! But it’s the one for compassion, kindness, tolerance and the pursuit of my happiness without forcing it on another!

The Body IS Important!

April 15th, 2010

I just wasted over ten years of my life being out of shape. I think the last time I worked out was in my mid to late 20s and I always had a really good reason to not go back to it. I felt that the stories about your metabolism slowing down were probably just scare tactics from the “health nuts with an agenda.” Then I turned 30 and yes, my metabolism slowed down. But there still wasn’t a whole lot of reason to be worried. I gained weight fast, but I lost it equally as fast, most of the time. Plus, I worked out  my brain! I read tons of books, learned about different philosophies, sciences and studies, I started having an actual career vs. just a job and soon, I no longer paid any attention to my body at all. On top of it, I started smoking when I was about 30.

TEN years went by! I turned 40 and noticed that I had gained more weight than I cared to acknowledge. My metabolism had slowed down to a crawl! There was no denying anymore, once I noticed that I needed to buy clothes in a size 14. I always had my personal “maximum density” rule, and I was horrified when I saw my wedding pictures. My face, the one thing I had always liked, looked bloated and fat. So did my arms. I didn’t feel all that  great, I had no energy, I was often annoyed for no apparent reason, my shoulders and neck started bugging me again, so did my back and hips and I felt definitely not attractive anymore.

My entire life I had decided that the body was just a stupid vessel I hated, and therefore deserved the least amount of attention. When I hit 40 and finally found my happiness I was done with these idiotic thoughts. I made it a decision to be healthy and to look good. I started hypnosis for weight loss. This gave me this crazy compulsion to sign up with a personal trainer. I started working out with him and I followed his instructions to the t. Whatever he said, I did. I didn’t fight him, I didn’t argue, bitch, whine and complain, I just did it. This was incredibly hard. After 3 1/2 months of hard training I had lost about 15 lbs. and two sizes. I had also lost tons of inches on different  body parts, but what made the biggest difference for me was how I  felt in the head!

All the “bad” thoughts go away when I work out. I still hate it, and after not working out for the past month and a half, after moving back to Azusa, I just started again with a new trainer in Hollywood. He worked me so hard that I felt like puking. My muscles were sore for two days but it doesn’t deter me. My mind is what keeps driving me. When I get to the gym and start training, the stories of “I can’t” are wiped out. Suddenly, the philosophies and training I had when it comes to meditation are paying of. I can will my body to keep going, even when my muscles feel weak and shaky. The mind is definitely much more powerful than the body.

I have learned that in order to be the best I can be, my body needs to be in shape. I have learned that physical health also equals mental and emotional health. I have learned that my mind shapes my body, and that whatever I conjure up in my mind somehow gets matched by reality. I have an active image that I hold in my mind while training and find that my body works hard to match this image. I never believed that a great body is required to be successful. I was wrong! It requires physical health and well-being to achieve balance for the full package. When I am done with my work out, I feel euphoric, happy, content and bubbly. Working out and slowly crawling towards a healthy body has added so much to my general well-being that I finally understand, there is no way in hell I can be truly powerful, if I keep saying “I can’t.”

It is still a struggle. I don’t like gyms, I still dislike cardio, but the results are what keep me inspired. The truth is, when I dont’ work out anymore, I feel crappy. I am proud of myself, because I am finally taking care of business. I am doing the work and there is a lot of power in knowing that. I regret that I wasted my 30s sitting on my butt and making excuses, but on the other hand, I started doing something about it now and that is what counts. I cannot go back and change the past, but I sure as hell can change and will my future.

Bullies

April 10th, 2010

The story of this poor girl Phoebe just stuck with me. I am angered and outraged about parents who raise little monsters like that. And I remember these little jerks and bitches very well from my own school experiences.

Most people I know have actually been bullied. I don’t know if that means that I predominantly hang with the weak geek/nerd crowd, or if it simply means that I don’t know too many ass hats who treat other people like crap. Coming to think of it, I believe it’s latter. But what might contribute to knowing so many people who have been bullied in school, is the plain and simple fact that pretty much everyone who was bullied, turned out successful. My friends are all successful, and I don’t mean in terms of money or career alone. My friends are successful because they are amazingly smart and kind human beings. When I go back home to Germany and hear about the bullies I knew in school, every single one of them turned out to be a loser. The little princesses who sat on their high horse for being popular, have almost all turned into fat and ugly, or simply just ugly slobs, living not so happy lives.

I have often wondered about what turns people into bullies and here is what I remember, when I look back at the kids who bullied me in school. I keep finding the same common denominators for my bullies. Every single one of them was spoiled. They didn’t necessarily come from a broken home, like I did, but usually had both set of parents, who’d coddle them and gave in to every wish and whim. Whatever the newest toy or clothing fad was, these guys had it and showed it off. They were surrounded by groups of admirers who then were privileged enough to get to play with the newest toys, or borrow the newest clothes from King or Queen Ass Hat.

Not a single one of them was appreciative, had learned basic manners or how to be humble. They were spoiled rotten little jerks, who got whatever they wanted, were often only children (although one of my worst nightmares did have siblings) and felt a huge sense of entitlement. The poorer kids, those who were maybe a bit slower, or those who were super smart served as a constant source of amusement and means to feel powerful.

I remember one of my worst nightmares, when I was in 4th and 5th grade. His name was Oliver and he was the popular kid everyone had a crush on. I was raggedy Ann, coming from a super poor background, wearing hand-me-downs from my mother’s 40-year old co-workers, or whatever “fashion” she could find at K-Mart. I was quiet, I was a good student and class best in German and I was a mouse. I didn’t really have friends and spent most of my time in the library reading. All I was missing was thick, horn-rimmed glasses to complete the image.

This guy Oliver teased me relentlessly. He called me names, pushed and shoved me, and so did the other pretty girls in class. PE had turned into a total nightmare and I avoided it as much as I could, which wasn’t a whole lot.
I remember one day, it was right before German class and Oliver kept at it as usual. The more I tried to defend myself, the sadder or angrier I got, the more he laughed, until I snapped. I grabbed his expensive little bag with all his pens and pencils and threw it at him as hard as I could. He ducked, it hit the wall and the expensive $20 fountain pen he had broke into pieces. His face turned ugly and he hissed “your mother is going to pay for this, stupid cow.” This is when it hit me. There was no way my mom could afford paying for the pen, which meant I would get in huge trouble. I turned white and sunk onto my chair, hung my head and started crying. This is when our teacher walked in and asked what had happened. Oliver pointed his finger at me and yelled “She broke my expensive pen!” My teacher looked at me and gently asked why I had thrown his bag at him and I just sobbed that he had been teasing me again. This was the end of it. She looked at him calmly and told him that I would not pay for anything that may have broken and that she would like to talk to his parents about what happened.

A year later, when I switched schools I had another group of girl bullies teasing me, until I no longer wanted to go to school. I was never a girl who skipped school, so I still went, but started getting sick and completely withdrew. My teacher asked me what was wrong and reluctantly I told him that they hated me for being poor, for having a cleaning woman as a mom and no dad. He sent me home that day and apparently talked to them. He asked them if they weren’t ashamed of themselves to make fun of someone just because they were less privileged. After that, no one ever messed with me. They started accepting me, I started speaking up and the rest is history.

What I never understood is how parents would not know what little jerks they actually had raised. How they would look at their kids and think that they could do no wrong and that it was ok to mistreat and abuse others. I never got how lame commentary such as “kids will be kids,” or “I am sure it’s not as bad as she/he says it is,” keep going for decades. Do people really believe that buying their kids whatever they want, not teaching them rules, discipline or basic morals will serve them in life?

My mother was poor as hell but she taught me and my brother how to say “thank you” and “please.” We were taught to give up our chairs for an elderly person or a pregnant woman in a waiting room, or when riding the bus or tram. But above all, we were taught to not back-talk to an adult, to be respectful and courteous towards adults and figures of authority, such as cops, teachers and superiors. I remember how my mom would tell us, when walking down the street and trying to throw a tantrum, how the police man will come and arrest us and how such a basic thing worked. I also remember spankings. In other words, when my brother and I misbehaved, there were consequences!

I have been to homes with little children (no, not any of my friends) and see their little kid already turning into a jerk. Hitting people, back-talking, hurting the cat or dog, screaming whenever they don’t get what they want, while mom and dad look the other way and think it’s kind of cute. Good times when these kids grow up.

When I read the story of poor Phoebe my heart sinks. I know how unbearable and lonely the life of a child who is being bullied truly is. I know how it feels as if the only solution to all of it is dying. I get angry at the parents who raised these bullies, wondering if they were bullies themselves in school. I remember the little cliques I would encounter in clubs and the arrogance these girls would sport. I would watch how elitism is passed on within groups, the catty bad-mouthing others, the inauthentic hanging with whomever looks cool or seems popular and then I get scared. This is when I realize “Oh no! These people will probably reproduce. No wonder our society is screwed!” I watch these girls being bullies as adults, even though some of them were bullied themselves in school and wonder “have they not learned a damn thing?”

I tend to be an idealist. I tend to believe that everything will work out. Our planet Earth will be healed, we’ll grow a conscience, learn to be accountable, spread love and tolerance. Then I read Phoebe’s story and hang my head again. Maybe one day I will have children or a child. I swear, I will not raise an ass hat!

Where Does “Bad” Come From?

April 9th, 2010

 

I am, by design, a very open-minded person. I believe in a higher power, simply because it keeps me in check, makes me a better person and gives me a sense of comfort. This does not mean though, that I throw away all rhyme and reason, any scientific evidence and just blindly follow. When I DO choose to argue a point vehemently, it is usually due to having had experiences or really having done my homework. I don’t blindly babble out of my butt! 

 I always wondered, is there such a thing as an evil force? Is evil a learned behavior, or is it something one is born with? Most importantly, is evil a “force” from an outside source like a god? What I found really baffled me, because I tend to think about things in absolutes or black or white. This, however, is still a gray area! 

 Studies have been done on evil. The results were actually pretty astounding. It seems that the human brain is hard-wired to know the difference between “good” and “bad” or right and wrong. When MRIs were conducted on people, facing basic moral dilemmas such as “you are in a war zone. You are hiding out in the basement with other survivors. The opposing army is searching the house for survivors. You are holding your infant, who starts crying. Will you smother your child to death for the greater good of the group, or will you keep your child alive, putting everyone at risk?” When presented with this question, the vast majority chose that they would NOT kill their child, no matter what the cost. Each time a question was answered, the same area in the brain would fire, suggestion that almost all humans are, in fact, hard-wired to know the difference between right and wrong. 

 Of course, there was the Stanford prison experiment that inspired the book “The Lucifer Effect – How Good People Turn Evil,” which showed that “perfectly good” people would turn not only bad, but absolutely evil, when being put in the right environment. Suddenly, these “good” guys would turn sadistic, cruel and desensitized. Or think about children. How many kids are dealing with bullies every day? Just think about that poor girl Phoebe Prince who hung herself. She literally was bullied to death. It sometimes almost appears as if “bad” is much more contagious in groups than “good.” It seems to be much harder for some to do the right thing, instead of following the rest with doing a bad thing, or simply looking the other way. Hence, it can be sad that “bad” can be taught or conditioned! 

 On the flip side of the coin we have sociopaths. These individuals stand out because they quite often come from perfectly normal environments. They did not necessarily endure abuse, bullying, or may have had it bad. Quite on the contrary, most sociopaths tend to be incredibly charming, witty and very charismatic. It seems as if they were ”born” with a certain defect, an evil gene if you will, and engage in behaviors or thought patterns that almost remove them from being human. Totally void of any form of sympathy/empathy, concern and love for others, they only engage in “friendships” that afford them whatever serves their agenda. They are unable to have friendships or relationships and are highly manipulative.  Oddly enough, this affects predominantly men. Two thirds of sociopaths are men and one third are women. There are numerous reasons given for becoming a sociopath. Some say it is a learned/taught condition, others say brain chemistry within the prefrontal cortex is to blame and the third kind is attributed to children who were diagnosed with conduct disorder prior to the age of 10. But then, how does a child end up with conduct disorder? And if brain chemistry is to blame, then why does it not account for all of them? So far, the studies have been inconclusive. 

Could it be that there is an “evil” force out there? Years ago I was briefly dating a sociopath. Prior to meeting him I did NOT believe in the concept of pure good or evil and felt that human beings were conditioned or chose to be either. Even when I remember back to this person I am getting chills. I had never met anyone without a conscience. To watch him in action was bone chilling. Seeing him manipulate people and situations, listen to crazy stories of him being a “warrior of light” while he was deliberately harming people was baffling. There is one part here that made me wonder about the possibility of evil. It was also the part that literally made me run for my life. There was a physical transformation when he would “go to the dark side.” And as stupid as I feel saying it, this was exactly how it seemed. As if he had stepped away and something else took over. His voice would change and his eyes would turn pitch black. I don’t do drugs or drink and I swear, there were numerous times when his eyes turned black. Not to mention the “energy” that would surround him. It literally felt as if the temperature had dropped and I would fear for my life. Very much like a gazelle staring into the eyes of a lion. Explain that to me using brain chemistry. 

I believe we can explain a lot of phenomena with science and sometimes attribute supernatural explanations where there shouldn’t be. But I have seen and experienced too many things in my life that I then researched, studied and tried to explain unsuccessfully. I do not believe in Satan, but I do believe that there are things out there that my brain simply cannot explain, fathom or even grasp, and I do believe that there is both, medical/conditional evil and “the other kind.” I think I am going to leave it at that.

Forgiveness vs. Door Mat

April 8th, 2010

I grew up the daughter of an alcoholic and a highly unstable mother. This turned me into someone who is a master in becoming invisible, tends to put everyone else’s needs and wants ahead of her own and has an almost unlimited tolerance for bullshit. It has also turned me into a “broken soul-collector.”  Anyone and everyone is welcome. The only requirement used to be showing up. It didn’t matter if I knew you five minutes or five years, I’d give you the same amount of energy and attention. Anyone who had ever invited me to their home or done anything nice for me was “adopted” and made me feel eternally indebted to keep providing friendship, love, financial aid, shelter or whatever else a person needed.

If or when I would start feeling resentful, it would make me feel like a hypocrite, because in my head I was supposed to keep giving unconditionally and not expect anything back in return. Having been raised in a severely dysfunctional environment had not only robbed me of the ability to set boundaries, but also the ability to really understand the difference between a friend in need and a user, a person who was going through a temporary slump and a permanent victim, someone who was enduring a tough time and someone who kept creating them. I had it all lumped into one box and created a cycle of being absolutely unable to say “no” and follow my gut, and then resenting the very choices I made and price I’d have to pay for it.

There were times when I’d lose my temper and tell a person off, but usually only when it was too late. These fights never turned out well. The already established dynamic that I would then attempt to change years later, earned me nothing but resentment, attacks, name calling and getting bad mouthed. Of course, I concluded that I deserved to be called a bitch. There were two things in my life that I could not handle, being abandoned/losing someone and being interpreted as mean-spirited, “bad,” etc. Where most would shrug their shoulders, I felt like dying. So I would desperately try to keep my mouth shut, even when some of my ”friends” or ex boyfriends’ choices caused me a lot of pain, hurt my reputation at work, cost me thousands of dollars or made me physically ill. When I would finally confront them, they’d lash out and turn others against me, if they could. I didn’t ”safe” any of them, reasoning wouldn’t work and none of them came back and apologized, no instead they felt that I owed them an apology and in a great many cases I’d give them one, returning with my tail between my legs, begging for forgiveness. When I confronted my father almost 20 years ago, he not only denied everything, but called me a lying whore who would “get punished by god.” Guess who called him five years later to tell him that I had forgiven him and loved him?

I don’t understand when it is ok to walk. I don’t understand when it is ok to not want someone in my life. I don’t understand when I am “allowed” to voice my feelings, or state any disappointment, hurt or anger, and when it is ok to stand up for myself. When I was in 2nd grade I decided to be an angel, literally! When I got older I held myself to unreasonable standards of being perfect. After all, the decision I had made as a child was “if I would have only been perfect, none of this would have happened.”

I always thought I am a tolerant and forgiving person, but then find myself in situations where it seems inauthentic and “wrong” for me to be either. I often wonder what ever happened to accountability, integrity and honesty, and at times find myself angry when I look around. Kids who used to go nuts in school used to get an earful from their parents, maybe a spanking, these days we call it ADD and give them Ritalin. Depression used to be something we’d treat with meds for a temporary period, now we are calling it a permanent disease and doctors keep writing prescriptions for psych meds, without as much as a second thought. Addicts who’d made it to rehab would learn that they can get over their addictions, but were also confronted with the consequences of their choices. Now it’s all lumped into a horrible disease and while we are allowed to be angry at the actions of an addict, we should never be angry at the addict, because he/she is suffering from a disease that makes them do things. It’s the disease talking and we need to be tolerant, forgiving and kind, even if they keep choosing to drink/eat/use and even if it keeps costing you dearly. Ever watched “Sober House” or “Celebrity Rehab?” If so, you’re familiar with Kari Ann Peniche, the poster child for abuse survivor. Granted, she is abusive, rude, mean-spirited, spoiled rotten and a meth addict, but that didn’t stop her from being resubmitted at least three times, because “it’s not Kari Ann speaking, but the disease.” The victims of the world are surrounded by thralls of “forgiving and tolerant” friends who keep patting them on the head, telling them “there, there,” or keep looking the other way, because none of it is anyone’s fault when they had it bad. I watch crazy fanatics who crash the funeral of a kid who was killed in the war and claim they are entitled to exercise their “freedom of speech.”
The vast majority of people is dangerously unaware, oblivious, indifferent and keeps rinsing and repeating. Being totally selfish and self-serving is now being confused with being self sufficient. Having no common decency is being translated into being wonderfully rebellious and an individual, when in fact you are just part of the herd we call society, the society you claim you want no part of.

There are times when I wanted to scream at those who dumped me after I would speak my truth, or questioned their behavior for not having the same forgiveness and tolerance they always accused me of not having. Alas, I find myself living in a world that seems to have removed all and any sense of accountability, but keeps telling people how justified they are in being a victim, a martyr, self-destructive, or a total jerk. I watch the same crazy or abusive cycles go around and see very few stopping it or doing a thing about it. Instead I see a lot of silent bystanders and shit talkers, of course, behind the person’s back. I see very few these days who point the finger at themselves and a whole bunch who keeps blaming and justifying. We call that tolerance and emphasize it with phrases like “live and let live.”

I still don’t know, am I forgiving or a door mat, a judgmental bitch on my high horse, or holding another accountable? I just don’t know. So all I can do is keep looking in the mirror, keep reenacting past scenes and conversations in my mind and hope that in the future I can make better and hopefully right decisions.

How to Create and Maintain Valuable Friendships

April 7th, 2010

Before I start posting this, I should say that this was sent to me by my chosen sister, Lena. This was a radio broadcast, and I merely took the liberty to write it up. I have changed some of the words, but overall, I am quoting this broadcast literally. I have chosen to neither comment on any of the points, nor add my own experiences or thoughts. This pretty much says it all.

True friends are the most valuable asset in our life. But there are times when we find ourselves in a position where we have to part ways with a friend. When this happens, it is usually heart breaking for us. Friendships can fail for numerous reasons.

There are times when we choose friends we shouldn’t choose, because friends have an impact on our life.When you voluntarily relate to another’s life, you inadvertently become a little like them. So it’s very important to choose friends wisely. If you are not careful they will drag you down, instead of you lifting them up. How definite and clear are my convictions, and how far am I willing to go to trust that another is not going to drag me down.

These are the types of friends we shouldn’t choose/should avoid:

1. Gossips – those who reveal secrets of others and slander others. The fact is, if someone talks bad about others all the time, they are going to talk bad about you when you are not there. Gossips never talk bad about only one person, but they do it across the  board, and they do not discriminate.

2. Quick tempered people – Do not associate with those who are quick to anger, or you’ll quickly learn that it will always be their way or the highway. Eventually, an angry person will, sooner or later, express their venom and anger and turn on you; and you will end up becoming just like them, if you choose to stick around!

3.  Disloyal and discontent – do not associate with those who are unstable and give in to any and every way or persuasion. Those who are unstable generally also tend to be defensive and angry. There is no reasoning with an out of control person. The fact that they tend to be out of control also means that they will give in to whim; they react to things, even though they may appear cautious. Those who are out of control also tend to lack discipline.

4.  Lacks common values – surround yourself with those who seek wisdom and don’t waste their knowledge. Try to choose those who make right decisions and have common values. Wrong ones will waste your time and waste your life and they’ll always drag you down.

5.  Foolish people – if you surround yourself with wise people, you will end up wise. The ones who walk with fools with suffer horrors. A fool is not interested in spiritual things, wisdom, knowledge or anything else, because they tend to  be arrogant, careless and indifferent. Do not associate with those who are foolish in their thinking. Why avoid them? Because of the influence they have on our lives.

True, genuine friendships develop over time and are able to discern the motivation of the other. Now that I have told you what people to avoid, I want to share the building blocks for lasting friendships:

1.  Time – friendships take time and one has to be willing to spend time with one’s friends. If you are too busy or do not want to give time to another, you probably won’t make a good friend to that person.

2.  Talk – the more a person talks, the more you get to see into their mind, heart and soul. The more they talk, the more you’ll learn. Sometimes we learn that the more a person talks, the less we want to have to do with them. This is because words show you the true core of a person. Friends are those we like to talk and listen to.

3. Tears and Laughter – there are times when you will have to cry and there are times when you will laugh. But if you cannot talk together, if you cannot cry or laugh together, you are not true friends. Friends are those who will ease the pain. Those who do not have real friends to share their pain with, but instead shove it, cram it and keep it inside, will find that it will start to affect their health. Friends are those you share your losses and triumphs with.

4.  Tolerance – with friends you tolerate. Sometimes you will have to tolerate attitudes or things they will say. To a degree we’ll always have to put up with each other. No friend is perfect, you are not perfect. Avoiding the friends listed above in the “friends to avoid list” will generally make the tolerance part not too hard.

5.  Transparency – this is where a lot of friendships stop! It means that I am willing to open my heart, tell you when I am angry, tell you what I am feeling, when I feel rejected, happy, sad, what motivates me, what crushes me. We share who we are! Transparency gives true validity to genuine friendship. You cannot have a friendship with those who are not honest with themselves and others. Friendship requires absolute and total honesty. Those who deny who they are, who are neither truthful with themselves or others, cannot be true friends.

6. Love – The final one. Those who are willing to forget themselves at times and give it all they’ve got will find themselves in true, valuable and lasting friendships.