Another option: When survival meets reality

My morning list about giving another option:

  • Another way of thinking.
  • A different perspective.
  • An alternate reality.
  • A different truth.
  • Another belief.
  • New ideas.
  • Different ways to solve problems.
  • Another way of understanding.
  • Conflicting emotions.
  • Survival meets reality.
  • Looking back and thinking forward.
  • Gathering up the pieces.
  • Exploring what we know against what we have learned.
  • Breaking down walls.
  • Rolling aside boulders.
  • Chipping away at old paradigms.
  • Changing the emotional script.
  • Developing a new self-image.
  • Opening my eyes.
  • Taking off the sunglasses.
  • Clearing away the clutter.
  • Independent thought
  • New ways for self expression
  • Cognitive dissonance
  • Clearing the view
  • My survival affects how I hear you

The hardest part of self alteration is when my survival meets reality. For, as a young child, I learned to survive by repressing feelings, needs, and being ashamed or felt undeserving for having them – even to doubt that I had them at all! Now, as an adult, I am faced with a different reality. That is, I am deserving, and my feelings and needs are valid. And yet, shame and doubt still flies up in the face of my fear for survival. 

More and more I am able to face my shame and doubt with less and less fear. For years I felt as if I was up against an impenetrable wall. Lately, I realize I have been chipping away at that metaphorical wall, and, somehow, have turned it into a mere boulder in the middle of the road. I have been able to climb over, or maneuver myself around the boulder, and still it stands there – like a large, heavy lump, in my path. 

These past couple of months, I have moments – almost like a revelation – when I feel as if the boulder has been rolled aside, and the way forward is clear and free. I sense feelings of peace, and freedom, almost as if I could fly away

For me, education (and therapy) is about giving or receiving another option – cognitive and/or emotional. This morning, I am grateful for both: education and therapy.