To Forgive or Not to Forgive

I need to have a little chat with myself today, so I thought I’d invite you in to join me. It’s a little less strange….right? OK, maybe not, but humor me…maybe you’ve had this same struggle.

So most of us out here, regardless of faith or spiritual beliefs, know that forgiveness is a totally necessary part of having a peaceful life. Am I right? Am I assuming too much? Holding a grudge hurts the one who’s holding it way more than the one it’s being held against, I think many would agree.

So what happens when it is SO difficult to forgive someone? There is not a question as to whether or not they hurt you, it’s a done deal. Now what? Whether they are sorry or not, whether they intend to do it again or not….completely independent of the other person and what they are doing or not doing…can you forgive them, inside of you?

I want to give you a bit of a different perspective on this situation, to see if it can help you put your focus on the only person you can change, control, or have any real say-so over in this situation….you. It’s kind of a bummer to always have to focus on your own issues, isn’t it? I hear that!  This is the time, though, when it’s totally appropriate to be “selfish.” See, I know the secret: changing yourself and what you do will actually change the people around you too, (sometimes you have to give it time.)  When people have hurt us, that’s exactly what we want, right?…to change them.  The paradox is that you can’t change them, but the only chance you have to influence them to change is to change yourself and how you handle the situation.  (When it comes down to it, the ultimate goal is to be OK in your own skin, and not try to change anyone. Just live your life in a way that is balanced and peaceful.)

So what about this new perspective I have for you? I’d like to propose this question: You’re having difficulty forgiving, but what if your lack of forgiveness isn’t really about a fear that it will “give them permission to hurt you again” as most people think forgiveness does?  (not true, btw.)  OR, about not wanting to convey the message to them that what they did was “forgivable?” What if it is nothing more than a defense mechanism to avoid something else? What are you avoiding? Do you feel like forgiving the other person is like telling them that what they did wasn’t so bad after all or that they can do it again because you’ll just forgive them again?  This is also a paradox. NOT forgiving them will ensure it will happen again, and not finding your own healthy boundaries with them is really the problem. Grace is the only real chance there is for changing the heart of the other person. Your hatred or unforgiveness will keep their walls intact.

But my point today is, what if it’s something else? Do you use unforgiveness as an excuse to avoid finding a better way to have boundaries with the other person? Forgiveness doesn’t include an invitation to do the same thing again. Forgiveness says “I know you hurt me, and I forgive you. If you intend to treat me this way, we can no longer have a relationship, but if you can treat me with respect, we’re OK.”  That is a healthy boundary.  We are not called to abandon our own feelings or open ourselves up to abuse.  That is a lack of self-control.  But there is a difference between that, and not forgiving.

Do you use unforgiveness as an excuse for not insisting upon yourself that you maintain good boundaries and respectful relationships? Do you hide behind unforgiveness so you don’t have to have difficult conversations? Are you trapped by the fear that forgiveness gives others permission to hurt you more? These are all illusions. It’s up to you to control your boundaries in a respectful, loving way.  Not forgiving is focusing on the other person too much, being enmeshed with them, and it keeps you tied to them in an unhealthy way, even if you’re miles apart. It is also a form of judging them, and looking down on them. Instead, look in the mirror and the unforgiveness will melt away like warm butter.

More than anything, in the deepest recesses, I think being unwilling to forgive allows us to hold on to our pain. You may wonder why anyone would want to hold on to their pain, but most people do to some extent.  Pain serves a purpose, too. It can be a protective wall. It can be an attempt to control another person. It can be a way to avoid dealing with it inside ourselves. It can even be an excuse. Or, have you ever heard of the idea that the opposite of love is not hate, but undifference? I think many who refuse to forgive fear indifference, or having NO connection to that person at all. Letting it go means finding new ways to cope, letting go of control, finding a new relationship with that person or not having a relationship with them at all (maybe even more painful), and leaves us feeling vulnerable and exposed. It happens anytime we allow our walls down. Finding a new, more balanced way to cope is difficult, but isn’t purging the pain of it worth the journey?

One last thing. A Litmus test. This is how you know you’ve got it; you know you have really forgiven. Can you think of the person who hurt you without disliking them or calling them a derogatory name in your head? What about if that person came to you and wanted to apologize, would you accept it lovingly? (Remember, that doesn’t mean you have to let them back into your life. Take that slow, and only if you want to, trust takes time, and only YOU know if you’re willing to give them another chance.)

There’s my two cents for today.  I hope I listened to myself….I needed to hear it.  Thanks for sitting in on the chat!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2010, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

I Have You Under My Control

I had a client ask me one time, “Where does peace come from?” You see, I have a mug in my office that has a saying on it about peace, and I think it captures the feeling that most everyone that comes to therapy is looking for…it reads: “Peace. It does not mean to be in a place where there is no noise, trouble, or hard work. It means to be in the midst of those things and still be calm in your heart.”

We’re not so naïve as to think that there won’t be trouble or hard work in our lives. We know there will be. We don’t expect to always feel amazing and filled with joy, for our marriages to always be perfect, or to never have problems. Yet when these things happen to us, why do we let our peace be stolen?

If we believe a myth that our peace comes from our circumstances, we are precariously perched for pain and disappointment indeed. We are susceptible to all kinds of misery and joy, that is the nature of the human condition, but we will not be truly peaceful while we are doing either one if we believe that our peace is dependent on what is happening to us. Even when good things are happening in our lives, if we believe our contentment comes from what is going on externally, it will still elude us because we will still be trying to control how long the good stuff lasts, the same as we try to control how long the bad stuff lasts. We try to manage others and our environment instead of ourselves.

When my client asked me where peace comes from, my answer had several facets. I believe peace comes from letting go of the myth that I have more control than I actually do. I think peace comes from relinquishing the expectation that others can make me feel… feel bad or good or angry or sad or jealous or anxious. They can hold up the mirror to attachments or beliefs that I have that aren’t serving me very well, but the truth is that no one can make me feel anything without my cooperation.

I believe that peace cannot live inside me if I am overly focused on things I cannot change or things that may or may not happen. I believe that the acquisition of peace is a by-product of letting go of unhealthy attachments and beliefs. It comes after walking the valley of the shadow of death through my own deepest darkest places to the beautiful light at the other end of the tunnel. As Robert Frost would say, it is the road less traveled, and it truly does make all the difference.

I think of peace as the hallmark, the prize that one receives in their feelings when they are emotionally fit. Like being physically fit, working through emotional issues requires showing up, working out, practice, study, dedication, repetition, focus, motivation, and stamina. By the way, it also takes a truck-load of courage.

This process isn’t for the feint at heart. Many people go to a great deal of time, effort, and expense to AVOID working through this stuff. (That’s what addictions are, for example.) My question to you is, how bad do you want it? Real peace…is it worth the work, the time, the effort, all of it? I’ve taken many people on the walk to peace…well, sometimes it’s more like an army crawl through the mud, but we make it. I continue to walk it out myself every day and will continue to grow in this way for the rest of my life. That’s why I named my practice Peace Counseling Group. Would you like to join me and the others who have gone before you? It’s up to you, the quality of your relationships and how you feel for the rest of your life depends on you.

I hope you will join me, and those who work with me, on this amazing journey. Whomever shows up hungry will leave full of new ways to think about relationships and life. I want the best for all of our clients, life-long changes, not just bandaids. My colleagues and I are ready to go when you are.

Sincerely,

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW

Owner, Peace Counseling Group

If you have any further questions regarding our paradigm or our policies, please feel free to contact us via the contact page or call 317-605-7015. You may also check the FAQ page on this website.

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Defending Boundaries With Finesse

Thanks for stopping by today!  I apologize that I have not been blogging more often lately…grad school is proving demanding of my extra time.  I appreciate you coming again to read my latest post.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about boundaries, and more to the point, how to have good ones without cutting off from others or being overly aggressive.  It struck me the other day when I was talking with a friend, and she was describing the need to “fiercely defend her boundaries”. I wondered how massive the attack must have been to require such a fierce defense. Turns out, the thing that was threatening my friend’s boundaries would have been, for most people (metaphorically), a baby kitten!  There was a bit of an overreaction going on, with my friend feeling like a T-Rex was threatening her gates.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am all for having good boundaries. They are absolutely necessary in a world full of sinners like us. I wonder though, if we can learn something about ourselves from our boundaries….the ones we find it necessary to have.  For example, do you have a boundary with your spouse about leaving their clothes on the floor? What is it about that, that makes you so reactive?

Boundaries are for guarding places that are painful to us, even the simple ones like needing someone to pick up after themselves. So when someone causes you to be “fierce” (or even reactive) can you see the pain underneath that is causing your ferocity, and the need for that boundary?  Heal the pain underneath and your walls won’t have to be nearly as strong, nor your reactions nearly as fierce.  Your walls will be more permeable, and love and intimacy can flow through them more easily.

We can learn to have good boundaries without being fierce about it. Strong, but not aggressive. Immovable without reactivity. Stand up for how we feel without needing to squish the other person like a bug. It takes finesse. It can be learned in your head pretty quickly, but being able to put it into practice regularly takes time, practice, and healing… mastering it in your heart. It’s learning to see others not as T-rexes, but as hurting kids in adult bodies. I love this thing my co-worker Jerry says, “You can say almost anything to anyone, if you’re moving toward them when you say it”. That doesn’t mean you should lean in to someone’s grill while you’re telling them to back off, I’m not talking about physical proximity; but instead to see them lovingly, as a “+”, as though inviting them toward your acceptance…into your understanding of their needs and pains.  Give them a safe place to exist while explaining what’s going on.

Aggressiveness, reactivity, and the need to be fierce are all things that push others away. It may seem like that’s the goal when someone is invading our boundaries.  ”Get the heck away from me!”  Right?  Get the other person to back out of your space and never want to come in again, lest they meet your sturdy defenses!  I think a better, (paradoxical) and more effective overall approach is to move toward them by keeping my own reactivity in check, and seeing them as someone who is hurting, too. A kitten, not a t-Rex.

Look deeper than your boundaries to the underlying pain.  See others as little kids who are in just as much pain as you are. Nurture them instead of snapping at them.  That’s what will eventually stop them from continuing to infringe on your boundaries more in the future.  After all, meeting someone’s strong defenses most of the time just tells the other person that your boundaries call for heavier artillery.  Less need for defenses invites peace and cooperation.  Knowing yourself, where you end and everyone/everything else begins, is the key.  Not easy, but you can do it!

See you again soon.

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2010, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Making Sure The Next One is Mr./Mrs. Right Pt. 1

This is going to be a two- or three-part blog, because I am feeling verbose on this subject!  I’ve been inspired!  One post just isn’t going to cut it.

I’ve mentioned before that I’m a fan of Family Systems Theory.  Thankfully for me, I work with a group of pretty salty family systems therapists!  They are all kind enough to mentor me, and keep me on course with the development of my craft.  One of the therapists on staff has dedicated years of study to deepening his understanding and practice of this particular paradigm; I’ve spoken of him before, Jerry Wise.  He has a blog too, and we were discussing a post of his about abandonment and a question he was asked about it, in the waiting room the other day.  Something he said is totally turning my mind to gooey gray matter this week, as he’s been known to do before!

Remember how we were discussing the map, and seeing the whole map of our issues all at once, and how sometimes thinking counter-intuitively can help pinpoint the problem, which may be far away from what is causing the symptoms in our relationships?  (See post “Family Systems, A Tiny Morsel”)  That is family systems stuff through and through.  Today’s topic is no different.  Jerry and I were talking about abandonment, like I said, and specifically the symptom of loneliness.  Fair enough, I thought.  If you’re abandoned, you’re probably lonely, right?  And loneliness itself isn’t the problem, it’s a symptom of a deeper issue.  OK, I’m trackin…so far so good.
Then he said that if you have the symptom of loneliness, the core issue you really have, the root problem causing it on the other side of your issue map, is really an “allergy to intimacy.”  Hold the phone there, Bub.  If someone’s lonely, isn’t what they really want some good intimacy?  How could someone who’s lonely really be allergic to intimacy?  You lost me with that one.  Stick with me though, I’m going to try to explain what he said as simply as possible…how I understand it.  Let’s talk about it in example form, for ease in understanding’s sake.  Let’s call our lonely, abandoned girl Kim.
Kim has had some relationships that have ended painfully, and more than anything she doesn’t want to have another failed pairing; but she also knows that she feels lonely for a romantic relationship.  Understandable, right?  It’s normal and natural to want a close personal relationship, emotionally, physically, etc.  And I would interject here that simply wanting a relationship is not a problem in itself.  But our girl Kim really wants a relationship because she’s experiencing the symptom of loneliness, and she needs to soothe her feeling of loneliness with another person.
Would you think that what Kim really has going on is an allergy to intimacy?  Probably not.  I sure as heck didn’t see that one coming, and I gave Jerry a really confused look when he said it.  Huh?  Here’s how he explained it to me.  If Kim has the symptom of loneliness, and she is longing for another (hopefully healthy, balanced this time) person to fill the loneliness, somewhere on her map of issues she is underfunctioning in, or has an allergy to, intimacy.  Is your face twisted and contorted like mine was yet?  Eyes squinting?  Little head scratching, perhaps?  Stay with me…
Kim, out of her own issues, is still looking to someone else to fill her up. In this way she is overly-needy.  In some way she is unable to find fulfillment in herself, and/or she may have an intimacy or under-closeness/over-closeness problem with her parents or siblings.  If you’re tracking that train of thought, the next question that naturally comes is, “How does someone have an allergy to intimacy inside themselves?  Does an intimacy problem in my family of origin, (people that I hardly ever see anymore even perhaps,) still affect me? (YES!) And what does an allergy to intimacy look like, and how does one fix it?” I admit, it’s kind of a tough sell to someone who says they crave intimacy, and especially if they may be over-functional in their level of ability to have intimacy with other people.  The point is, if there is loneliness for intimacy, somewhere on the map we’ll find an intimacy allergy…a place where Kim is under-functional, intimately.  Let’s take a swing at answering those questions:
Let me ask you this way, and see if it helps shed some light on it…where do you think Kim is abandoning herself?  A closer look at someone like Kim will probably show that she is too other-centered.  Maybe she doesn’t have good self care.  Perhaps she has a hard time forgiving herself for imperfections or mistakes, and she shames herself and feels she isn’t good enough.  Maybe she makes caring for everyone else more important than making sure she’s taken care of, too.  When her hurting little girl on the inside cries out in pain, she in effect ”shushes” her.  In any or all of these ways, she abandons herself.  She’s not in-tune to her own needs, and ignores them.
So how does Kim fix this imbalance?  Like 12-steppers would say…the first step is admitting you have a problem, right?  True that!  She needs to recognize she has an allergy somewhere.  She needs to see her own unbalance, instead of concerning herself with over-scrutinizing potential mates!  She needs to learn to have better boundaries.  She needs to learn to give herself grace, listen to herself and take care of her own needs, and address her shame issues.  These are all things that work to resolve and heal your childhood pain and make your psychological walls more permeable.  Kim also needs to see where her expectations fo
r relationships are unhealthy. This is all stuff that happens in therapy!
Now then…how does all of this play into who she will choose as a future (hopefully) Mr. Right?  Will she be attracted to another Mr. Wrong no matter what?  Is there real hope to be had for a future, healthy relationship?  Tune in next time for the answers to these most intriguing questions!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2010, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

Self-Care Is Imperative

I thought today I would give you a quick update on what’s going on with me, but I promise to make a good therapeutic point, too, since you went to the trouble to stop by!

I am taking my first grad school class.  It’s called Immersion.  (Seems an accurate description because there are moments when I feel like I’m drowning!  Not because it is difficult, but because I have a very busy life outside of school!)  It meets every Saturday from 8:45a.m. to 4:15p.m.  Yep.  That’s a long time to sit and learn every week, although it moves pretty quickly.  It lasts 6 weeks and I’m already half done.  There are major assignments due every week, so juggling my time has become a bit of a challenge.  Being a single mom and working almost full time too, time is a commodity I have to use wisely.

I wanted to use myself as a bit of an example for how busy we can make ourselves and our lives.  I’m allowing my life to be a lot crazy for a few years, more than I normally would, for a more lofty ultimate goal.  Someday I will be able to make choices about my work schedule that those in more traditional 9-5 jobs cannot make.  I like that a lot!  A master’s degree is also absolutely mandatory for the kind of work I’d like to do, so I really don’t have much choice about schooling.  But I do need to vigilantly remind myself to take time for self-care, so that I don’t burn out or otherwise die!  I thought I’d share my favorites with you.

  • I love to play poker any chance I get.  You like that one?  It stimulates my mind without the pressures of work or school or home issues.  I still have to think, but it’s about something completely different!  It’s restful.
  • I love to get my hair cut.  It is one of my most favorite self-care tasks.  Sometimes I wish my hair would grow faster!  I also get regular massages.
  • I take between 15 and 30 minutes every morning, right after I wake up, for quiet time.  I use the time to pray or do Bible study usually.
  • I take time to connect with friends every week, usually over a meal, although it doesn’t have to be.  I absolutely cherish this time to relax, and maintain or deepen relationships with those I care for.
  • I make sure I take time each day to talk with both of my kids, usually one on one.  I read them bedtime stories and sing to them before they go to sleep.
Those are the most basic self-care things I do.  If I get those in at a bare minimum, I’m good.  To be completely forth-coming, I’m really not getting a lot of sleep about now, but I just keep going one day at a time, and do my best.  I regularly look at my life now, out of necessity, and determine what activities I can cut out so I can maintain my self-care.  These few things I will not give up.  I know if I don’t make them a priority, everything I do end up accomplishing will be that much harder, and probably that much sloppier, and I will eventually become so overwhelmed that I’ll burn out.

I was thinking about this very thing while watching a video in school this week.  One of the interviewees for this video was talking about how if he didn’t learn how to balance and say no to certain things in his work that eventually he would not only lose his job, but he would also lose funding for the programs he was running and then where would everyone be who depended on those programs?  It is the same with individuals.  If you give out more than you replenish with self-care, what good will you be then? It’s seemingly a paradox, or counter-intuitive thinking….taking time for yourself is, after all, not using that time to care of others, right?  But it really is.  Think of it this way: “I have to take care of myself so I have the strength to help others.”

Think about your life and what really recharges your batteries the most.  If you can’t think of anything that you do regularly for you, sit down right now and make a list of things!  Then pull out your calendar and write them in.  If someone asks you to do something that interferes with those things, you need to say no!

I’ll also throw this out there as food for thought:  If your life is too cluttered with tasks, ask yourself not only what can go, but why you have allowed it to become that way.  Are you keeping yourself over-busy so you don’t have to think about life’s problems as much?  Do you have an “activity addiction”?  An addiction is simply letting something get out of control, using it as an anesthetic to numb pain, to the degree that it causes harm to another area in your life.  Perhaps it is some codependency and you need some better boundaries.  Look at it objectively and see what you think.

That’s it for today.  Go get yourself some self-care and we’ll see you again next time.  I’ll do the same.  Thanks for stopping by!

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2010, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.

That Dangerous “E” Word

I have had the same word coming up over and over in my mind, crossing my path in several different situations and contexts, for the past few months. For whatever reason, it’s just been a glaring theme that keeps popping into my head. To me, that says it’s time for a blog! Read on with caution, though, because I’m about to share with you a sort of new potential “swear word.” Have you ever heard of the potentially dastardly and dangerous “E” word? (And no, I’m not talking about an electronic word!)

What word is that? It’s a happiness and contentment killer. It’s a mindset that encourages us to be judgemental. It’s a relationship trap. It describes a potentially damaging state of mind called “Expectation.” We can have directionally positive or negative expectations, and both can be bad news. An example of a negative expectation would be a prejudice. A prejudice really is an expectation of someone to act or behave a certain way based on how they look, etc. An example of what could be called an (overly) positive expectation would be thinking, “I should have gotten 3 times this much from you for my birthday!”

All of us have expectations. At times, they can keep us safe. We expect that if we jump in a lake full of hungry alligators that we just might be killed and eaten by an alligator! It’s how we learn and how we can anticipate what might happen next in any given situation. We go to school with the expectation that someone will be there to teach us something. Our expectations are based on our experiences, both in childhood and with people we are in relationships with for any length of time throughout our lives. We develop expectations for people in general, (civilizations, groups, and random individuals) and for specific people with whom we are in a closer relationship.

Expectations can be so very dangerous, however, if they are not vigilantly monitored, tended to, and kept at a reasonable level. They can so quickly, and sometimes stealthily, become unreasonable and cause us to become manipulative, controlling, or even hateful. They can become joy-thieves. I’ll give you just a few examples of where the pitfalls can be:

  1. Be especially careful on what I call “Days of Love”. These would include Valentine’s Day, Mother’s and Father’s Day, birthdays, CHRISTmas, etc. On days where the world or customs tell us it is time to show our loved ones how much we care, we can fall into a trap of expectation. Consider the pain inflicted on the giver when a gift or gesture is deemed “not good enough.” It is shaming, critical, and it is an attempt to control, or I like to say “yank” love out of someone; perhaps more than they are willing or inclined to give. (When a child deems a gift to be not good enough, they may be called a “spoiled brat.” I know many-a spoiled brat adult, and their continued inflated expectations, although sometimes more subtle, do NOT get easier to stomach with age!) Try to accept and remember this: You will never get true, heartfelt love by trying to yank it out of your sweet one, or by having the attitude that what they have done is not good enough. Instead, love without expectation of what you will get in return. Receive even small gifts as what they are…acts of genuine love.
  2. Watch for e-word dangers at work. There can be too high expectations placed on bosses, coworkers, or employees that can cause all sorts of problems ranging from burnout to back-biting, making for a very unpleasant and unproductive work environment.
  3. Be careful what you expect from your kids. Remember to consider their age and emotional maturity before confronting them on unmet expectations. This can be SO damaging to them, causing shame issues, insecurities, abandonment, and more.
When it comes down to it, expectations can be relationship killers. When too high OR too low, they can be straight-up toxic to ourselves and others! Remember that our expectations are an indicator of our own filters and stem from our own experiences (and ultimately woundedness), not necessarily someone else’s beliefs. We just THINK that they ought to think and act the way we want them to! That is not the reality of the situation, though. It’s controlling and yanking! I’m not saying that we shouldn’t have any expectations of people, because our needs would continually go unmet and we would be too codependent. We have to have good boundaries or we will be drained dry.  Just pay attention and keep it real. Invite people to give what you need, and then stand back and let them give it of their own free will. If they choose not to, you have to let them choose it! Eventually you may have to choose someone else who is willing to meet your needs. When you find those that will meet your reasonable needs without you expecting them to, you will have found a true friend/love. The best way to find it is to be it!

Now, no more swearing! Keep expectations on a tight leash. Give the love you want instead of yanking or criticizing what you get. That’s how to prepare the feast that you really yearn to dine on…genuine abundant love and joy!

That’s it for today! Thanks for stopping by.

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LSW is an individual, marital, and family therapist. She specializes in couples and marriage counseling, individual counseling, group and family counseling. Nancy serves the surrounding areas of Carmel, Westfield, Zionsville, Fishers, and Noblesville. E-Counseling available for residents of Indiana.

©2010, Nancy Eisenman

Nancy Eisenman, MSW, LCSW is a therapist at Peace Counseling Group, serving the greater Indianapolis area. Surrounding communities include Carmel, Westfield, Fishers, Geist, Noblesville, Brownsburg, and Avon. For more information, please use the contact form or call Nancy directly at 317.605.7015.

Address: 9640 Commerce Drive
Suite 413 Carmel, IN 46032

Phone:  317.605.7015

Peace Counseling Group

Contact Me

©  2017 Peace Counseling Group. All rights reserved.