
Self-betrayal is an art, perfected over a number of decades of living. It is rooted in our early years, when our identity was branded by a well-trained team of branding specialists: beginning with our parents and extended family and expanding out to include teachers, neighbors, parents of friends, and sometimes even the occasional stranger. Add to that our exposure to books, movies, television, music, advertising, etc., by the time we reach adulthood, we are pretty much saturated with a dense package of pre-digested, socially approved, morally acceptable behavioral codes. Our thoughts and emotions and actions have been molded and formed to fit into the society and culture we live in – conformity being the norm, individuality essentially being snuffed out.
So is it any wonder that when we get to be adults, particularly in mid-life–when most of us discover we’ve been sold a bills of goods–we conclude that life doesn’t really make sense? For many of us, it’s as if we’re awakening from a long Rip Van Winkle nap, stirred by agitating feelings of restless discontent, in which we finally admit our disillusion with the course our lives have taken.
How did we get here? More importantly, how do we get ourselves out of the mess we’ve made? And why is it so difficult to change?
Habits. Of thinking. Of feeling. Of behaving. Deeply rooted, heavily ingrained, full blown habits keep us in a perpetual cycle from which we feel little hope of escape. Endless numbers of personal growth teachers and self-help books and seminars promise us relief from our misery, but ask anyone who has tried this form of transformation and they will more than likely tell you, that they are still, many years and thousands of dollars later, a victim of their own unhappiness. In spite of their best efforts, the emptiness persists, as do the longing and frustration with life.
Why? Because most of us still believe that our restlessness and unhappiness can be addressed from the outside. We think buying the right book, taking the right workshop, or spending time with the right teacher will fix our problem.
But we’ve got it all wrong. The answer isn’t outside of us. It’s inside of us. That’s where the whole thing began, and we will spin our wheels forever unless we shift our attention to where the problem lies.
Which brings me back to the subject of self-betrayal. In the midst of our very best intentions to improve or change or fix ourselves, we continually fail, and we do immeasurable harm to mind, body and spirit.
We are fine just the way we are. We don’t need to be improved or changed or fixed. That will only makes things worse. What we need is to stop the madness. We need to stop lying to ourselves. We need to step off the merry-go-round and take a good hard look at how things work. Think of your being as a toxic waste dump that needs to be cleaned up. All the people in your life that you have given permission to access your life and your thoughts and feelings and beliefs have dumped their stuff there, and now the only way to find out where you are in all that mess is to get rid of it. Piece by piece. It’s not yours. It’s not you. There is a genuine whole person in there somewhere, and the only way to get to it is to extract the lies and untruths until you hit something that feels real.
If this feels like too big a jump then test out what I’m saying by observing your thoughts and feelings for a few days. Notice how much your feelings are influenced heavily by other people’s opinions and behaviors….in fact, notice how you actually pin your well being onto whether or not you get approval or attention from others or not.
Another approach is to notice any thoughts that come up that make you feel bad about yourself. Watch them and then ask yourself where they came from. Are these opinions you imagine other people would think about you? If so, you will do yourself a tremendous favor by asking them to leave.
Consider your negative thoughts as you would unwanted house guests. Don’t ask them to move in. Acknowledge them and then tell them to be on their way. You have no room for them any longer.
Our minds have been contaminated by the thoughts, opinions, and beliefs of others. We let other people vote on our lives all the time. We ask them what they think we should say, do and even think. This gives them permission to enter into our heads and take up residence there. As soon as we invite voting in, we are no longer listening and following our own path. We are at the mercy of the contingency outside of us.
No wonder we feel so lost and confused and cut off from ourselves.
The way back is to reconnect with ourselves by getting quiet and learning to discern between the noise of the crowd and the voice of our soul. Intuition is our internal guidance system. It is the light that guides us through the darkness. Without it we are doomed to a life of random chaos. With it, we can begin to find our footing in an authentic world devoid of lies and betrayal.
Shakespeare said it well when he wrote, “To thine own self be true.” Christ, too, reminded us by telling us that the kingdom of God is within.
It’s up to you which path you want to take. The next time you feel depressed or without hope, take a good hard look at what thoughts are running through your mind at the time. Chances are they will be something that you picked up from someone else.
Negative thoughts are contagious and they spread. Treat them like juvenile delinquents that repeatedly jump into the driver’s seat of your car. Tell them in no uncertain terms, that you’re in charge. Then wait for them to get out, get behind the wheel and drive!