Guest guest Posted March 4, 2007 Report Share Posted March 4, 2007 The following is a quote from the book, " Sixth Sense, " by Stuart Wilde: It's very fashionable nowadays for everybody to be in some kind of childhood pain or past-life trauma. They've been abused and used, and as soon as you sit down next to them they have to tell you about it. Of course, it's good for them to be releasing their pain, but in our society there aren't enough listeners. It seems that there are more pained people than there are happy listeners. Get rid of the pain, pronto. The emotions wreck your etheric, wobbling it, and that messes up your chances and your perception. It forces you to dive down a black hole within yourself, one that is often a bit self-indulgent. You can't see properly from down a hole. The simplest and easiest way to go behond your pain is by working on and concentrating on your strengths. I know that psychologists will tell you that you have to take your wounds, your inner-child traumas, and the various psychological fractures within you to a therapist, who will help you identify them. Then you have to relive them in your mind's eye and act them out, thereby releasing them. There's nothing wrong with that system, but it has one drwaback. By dredging it all up and talking about it, the ego rises up because it's being noticed, and it focuses on the injustice of it all. The ol' ego hops up on its righteous soapbox, beating its chest, calling for attention and sympathizers: " Look at me, what a horrible life I've had. I need help and care and special treatment. I need attention, and people should commiserate with me and cut me a lot of slack... " blah, blah, yawn, yawn. It's hard to finally get rid of your past experiences when you have to dredge them up twice weekly for the therapist. It takes years and lots of moolah, and it stops you from going forward at any decent speed. As you regress back to the dimension and time frames of childhood, or when things happened to you in the past, you stall, treading water, locked in a time'regressed warp of the memory for as long as it takes. Age regression that comes with inner-child work can make you very dysfunctional when it comes to outer, grown-up stuff like getting on with life and making a living. Time passes, and all you're doing is dis-ease. You can grow old sitting in a puddle of pain. Love affairs, fascinating experiences, and great opportunities go elsewhere, saying, " He's in a smoky fug of his own; we'll come back later - much later - like the next incarnation, or maybe the one after that. Maybe he'll be ready for new opportunities then. Right now he's too busy with all his old stuff; better to leave him alone. " There's a middle road. Yes, hire a therapist, go into your childhood, rediscover and understand what happened, release the trauma, set yourself on the healing curve, and then drop it. If it goes on too long, you'll lose your momentum energywise. If you can't work it out with a good therapist in about six months of regular visits, then something is wrong, and maybe you're using the therapy as a crutch. Or, maybe they're using you as a meal ticket. It's our karma as humans to suffer setbacks; we seem to be innocent victims of life, yet we can't know in the infinity of things why certain events happened. Maybe there's a certain justice in it all that we just don't comprehend as yet. .....From weakness comes strength....Understand your karma and your pain, then file it. Come to serenity, detach, and work on your strengths. Bit by bit, the pain of your life goes away. We didn't come here for a perfect life. I wish we did, but we didn't. we came to learn. Each one of us was given something we had to go behond. That is the nature of the journey - working on oneself to go past weakness to reach the Holy Grail within. You'll get there. Bill PS: There are helps for emotional pain. I have used such things as nutrition, homeopathy including Bach remedies, Neuro Emotional Technique, and just getting on with life and the exciting things one can do, to lift myself and others out of their despair. Don't waddle in pain. Rise above it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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