Chameleons

Chameleons are probably not a subject you would ever think I would blog about, right?  No, I’m not taking a turn for veterinary science or lizardology.  I mean, what is a therapist wannabe gonna say about chameleons or anything else in the wild kingdom?   Today we are going to discuss a type of personality that has been termed “chameleon.”

Chameleons are lizards that blend in and adapt to their surroundings so as not to be readily seen.  Do you know any people who seem to exhibit this kind of relating to others?  Have you ever met anyone who could adapt to any situation and seemingly thrive in any setting?  Maybe the chameleon is with someone who likes to be the center of attention at a party. They come out of their shell and become more outgoing to match the other person.  Perhaps they are in a setting with a very somber group. They become quiet and subdued.  Maybe in another setting the chameleon will act very religious or chaste, while the next moment becoming vulgar or mean.

Why do chameleons blend into their surroundings in nature?  It is a defense mechanism. It’s no different in the case of the chameleon personality.  An intense fear of abandonment or shame for example can cause people to adapt to whatever situation presents itself in order to preserve perceived connections with others. The chameleon doesn’t have a strong sense of self. They borrow the “self” or personality of others to gain attention and acceptance.

This is actually a lonely and anxiety-filled way of relating to others.  What fears does the chameleon face?  They fear being their authentic selves because they might be abandoned if the others find out who the chameleon believes they are on the inside.  On the inside, the chameleon believes he/she is not lovable.  They fear the aloneness and rejection they will face if someone sees them, really sees them for who they are, and doesn’t like what they see.  Having these scary feelings…it literally feels like it would be worse than death.  Therefore, adapting to situations by giving up “self” to be acceptable becomes necessary for their very survival.

When it comes down to it, they end up giving up who they are, trading peacefully living as the beautiful person they are on the inside, for the anxiety of trying to belong.  The voice in their heads constantly tells them that no one will accept them for who they are.  It is a private hell of their own making.  They refuse to believe how breathtaking they are!  (And not because they’ve earned it, but because they ARE.)  Each person is a unique and beautiful creature, lovable for exactly who they are.  Many of us don’t believe it.  We tell ourselves the lie that all of the painful times we experienced anything that resembled rejection in our childhoods were reflections of how lovable we are.  I would invite you to stop believing this lie.

If we look a little bit deeper…and if you see yourself as a chameleon, this feedback might sting a little bit…chameleon behavior is also actually controlling of others.  Attempting to control others is about making your own environment safe for yourself.  If I can control others, I don’t have to be afraid of them, right?  So as a chameleon, I am going to attempt to control your perception of me, in essense attempting to force you to accept me and pay attention to me.  When it comes down to it, this is an invasive way of relating to others.  It is also ultimately a temporary illusion at best, because we can’t really control how others feel or think…not in the context of a healthy relationship, or with any kind of long-term efficacy.  Eventually someone you are trying to “trick” will catch on, and the chameleon can be seen.

Taking the risk to love yourself for who you are is a dangerous and scary notion, but it is the truth, and it is the growth we must pursue if we are going to have a mind filled with peace and self-acceptance.  We will also no longer need to control or invade others, making us safer for them to choose to connect with us.  When you can accept yourself, you can give acceptance to others most freely too, not codependently or in a controlling way, and not in an unbalanced “I’m-going-to-trade-my-self-for-your-acceptance” way.  Think about accepting yourself more completely, with all of your beautiful, breathtaking, and brilliant colors.  Risk letting the world see who you REALLY are, because that authentic self inside of you is AMAZING!

Thanks for reading!  Have a beautiful day!

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.

©2012, 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.

Fair vs. Unfair

Recently I was in on a very interesting discussion on the topic of “fairness.” Wow, was it good! We were talking about how fair or not life can be, and I asked some questions to see how those around me felt about the topic. See how you would answer some of the questions I asked:

  • Is the world fair?
  • Is what happened to me as a kid, all the emotional wounds I received, fair?
  • Is someone cutting in line fair?
  • Does the reasoning behind their perceived unfair behavior matter, or change anything?
  • What if no one gets hurt?
  • What do you think?

Take a minute to ponder your ideas, or paradigm, about fairness.

My answer to the question “Is Life Fair or Not?” was “YES.” Yes, life is fair. Yes, life is unfair. This is gonna sound kinda weird, but…it depends on who you ask. I don’t mean which person in the world you ask, I mean which part inside of you that you ask. One of my mentors, Kathy Henry, LCSW taught me a way to look at myself on the inside to dis-entangle the myriad of thoughts, feelings, and reactions I could have to any given situation. She said that inside of us, we have an adult, an angry teenager, and a little child. Now, let me assure you, this is not a schizophrenic thing! It is just a way of thinking through things to help make sense of a complex set of thoughts and feelings.

To explain further, “Little Kid” is the part of your heart that is easily offended and hurt; is raw and sad from wounds; is voraciously needy for attention, affection, and acceptance; and pretty much thinks the world revolves around his/her perception. It’s the core of your heart, the vulnerable part of you…the part that is hurting…and the part that is so amazingly BEAUTIFUL! There is no pride living in this part of your heart; it is innocent and faith-filled, while also immature and having a limited view of the world.

“Angry Teenager” is your psychological walls…your Little Kid’s protector. It is your reactivity personified. When someone hurts you, or even if you perceive someone threatening to hurt you, Angry Teenager comes out in force and kicks some backside! He/she/it is a prickly porcupine, a green ogre, a 7-foot monster with a bazooka and a foul mouth. Whenever you need to back anyone off who you perceive as threatening to hurt any wound Little Kid might have, and adult is not around to have strong boundaries, Angry Teenager jumps to front and center and takes over the show. When you recognize this one coming out to play, it is an indicator that someone has hurt you or infringed upon your boundaries.

The Adult is your inner parent. This is the one who everyone thinks should be running the show, because that’s who looks like the adult body we see walking around. Unfortunately, that is rarely the case. Unless you’ve had quite a bit of recovery work under your belt, this is actually pretty unusual. Many folks have little kid and angry teenager running the show almost exclusively. Those who have Adult running the show some of the time usually come across as overly responsible and critical. They generally have a voice in their head that sounds something like “Good grief (insert your name here), you really messed that up, you are stupid, incompetent, a screw-up, or otherwise not good enough unless you perform perfectly, which you can’t…” The inner parent says to the inner child exactly what your parents said to you, verbally or non-verbally, while you were growing up…only on a bullhorn and repeating it over and over!

So how does that help organize all these thoughts, feelings, and reactions that I was talking about? If we can stop parenting ourselves in our own heads the way our parents wounded us when we were kids, we can start to love, accept, and care for the hurting little kid inside us. Instead of having angry teenager come out to our friends and loved ones…you know, the ones we hurt the most…we can redirect that scary monster away from them and toward the mean, critical, or passive inner parent! We can begin to take responsibility for our own feelings and actions instead of blaming others for them. The Adult becomes nicer, more nurturing, and more accountable inside for the only person it can control…itself. The little kid begins to heal while not only being heard, but also receiving the kind of parenting he/she has always longed for and never gotten.

Now, back to Fair vs. Unfair. What if we ask the little kid inside of you whether or not he/she thinks life is fair? Is it fair for a child to be hurt, abused, abandoned, or otherwise unloved? No, of course not. Each one of us is worthy of being loved and cared for perfectly. The problem is, NONE of us get it. No one. We are all wounded when we are little, and build psychological walls to protect ourselves from the wounding. Thank goodness we do, because without those walls as a kid, we would not be able to survive. Therapy and recovery is about figuring out the walls we built, tearing them down to heal the wounds behind them, and then learning new, mature and responsible (differentiated) ways of responding to painful stimuli. We can begin to see with new eyes, and hear with new ears.

What if we ask Angry Teenager if life is fair? I think he/she would say “Heck no! All of these bad ole people running around in the world hurting me? I’ll kick their backsides! Nothing is fair and I won’t ever think different!” Angry Teenager pouts and throws temper tantrums.  Angry Teenager is the one who plays the part of victim, and keeps you STUCK.  Do you know anyone who sounds like this? Do YOU sound like this? You may have an actual angry teenager living in your house that sounds like this!  Older people who still sound like this have a hurting little kid inside, and an Adult who is not doing their job (boundaries, nurturing, non-reactive voice, etc.)

What if we ask Adult? Mostly, I think Adults, truly in their “adult/inner parent” space, would say that yes, life is fair. It’s fair that all of us didn’t get what we needed. It’s a dog-eat-dog world…and all that. We come to a place of acceptance, at least to a degree.  Continuing to think about it in terms of fair vs. unfair is dangerous though.  I don’t want you to hear that you deserved the pain you got; and, the world does have evil in it.  You and I just needed our pain, to grow.  It is what it is.  Who grows and changes when they are happy and content?

Here’s where we become ready to take the big step, then. When we move toward a more differentiated, responsible, truly mature adult position…(are you ready?)…we stop feeling the need to ask the question. We become de-enmeshed with the rest of the world and what it’s doing. We realize that the things that happen to us and around us are what we need to grow and learn. We accept them more fully and peacefully.  We realize everyone is walking around in an adult body with a hurting kid and angry teenager inside, and most are unaware of it. We exude calm and grace, love and accept others, have good boundaries and healing so angry teenager becomes obsolete….we are able to truly connect with others and we are finally peaceful.

What do you think about fairness now?  I hope you enjoyed reading! I would love to hear any comments you have on this topic. 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.

©2012, 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.

What’s So Amazing About Grace?

What’s So Amazing About Grace? is actually the name of a book authored by Philip Yancey.  Back when I was going through my divorce a few years ago, it was extremely important to me to be able to leave it without any leftover resentment or anger.  I didn’t want any residual bitterness or unforgiveness to continue hurting my heart.  To that end, I did an intensive study on grace and forgiveness, including reading Yancey’s book, among several others.  I think that grace and forgiveness are important concepts to understand when working on presenting concerns in therapy practices such as anger management, codependency, and anxiety.  One of the things I liked best in Yancey’s book was this list of qualities of forgiveness.  He states that forgiveness:
  1. Halts the cycle of blame and pain.
  2. Loosens the stronghold of guilt in the perpetrator.
  3. Allows the possibility of transformation in the guilty party.
  4. Is not the same as pardon…you may forgive the one that wronged you and still insist on a just punishment for that wrong.  If you can bring yourself to the point of forgiveness, though, you will release its healing power both in you and in the person who wronged you.
  5. Has it’s own extraordinary power which reaches beyond law and beyond justice.
  6. Places the forgiver on the same side as the party who did the wrong.   p. 103

The simplest way I can think of to define grace is ”forgiving someone who doesn’t deserve it.”  Forgiving someone who deserves it is easy; they are sorry, repentent, their heart has turned, and you can sincerely believe them when they say that they will not do it again.  Forgiving someone who doesn’t deserve it is extremely difficult.  They are not asking for forgiveness, they may not care that they hurt you or may be straight-up oblivious, or they may be justifying their hurtful actions.  You may even know quite well that, given the chance, they would make the same decision to hurt you again.

The difficulty in forgiving someone who doesn’t deserve it comes with the message we think we’re sending to the other person if we forgive them.  We think we’re saying “it’s OK what you did” and even further, “go ahead and do it again.”  Um, NO!  What they did was absolutely NOT OK, and it is absolutely NOT OK for them to do it again!  Continuing in this mindset that forgiveness equals saying it’s OK will keep anyone from forgiving.  The truth is: Grace is a paradox.  It requires that I get on the side of my enemy, not by defending their actions, but by defending their humanity.  The attitude we have sometimes is “Forgive and the atrocities will repeat themselves.”  But the opposite is true.  Don’t forgive, and they will repeat themselves.

Other things that may keep us from forgiving is the notion that we are giving up our right to “get even.”  If we forgive, we don’t get to pass judgment or inflict retribution.  This is a black and white over-reaction where we see the other person as “all bad.”  That’s cut-off (a.k.a. negative enmeshment).  We may think that if we seek just consequences for someone who has hurt us that we haven’t truly forgiven.

As Yancey says though, this is a myth.  Forgiveness does not equal pardon.  We can still have rock solid boundaries with someone who has hurt us.  That may even include a “geographical boundary” as Cloud and Townsend would say in their book Boundaries, because that person who hurt you is unsafe. We can say “what you have done is not OK, I will have a different relationship with you from now on with good boundaries, but I can forgive you in my heart so that I do not keep the negative connection with you alive in me.”  Can I respond to this event by not accepting the painful behavior, perhaps even requiring just consequences; but also by not denying the humanity of the other person?

In any relationship…in a couple, between friends, with co-workers, in families…anywhere, hurts are inevitable. We are imperfect folks, and we will hurt others and they will hurt us.  What we do with those hurts is what counts.  When you hurt someone, can you humble yourself and apologize, or do you need to justify what you did?  Deep shame feelings may cause people to be unable to admit they’ve hurt someone.  Do you care for others’ feelings, or trample them to your own end?  When someone hurts you, can you forgive them?  Do you need to have a good boundary with them…meaning, can you protect and insulate yourself from them without attacking their worth has a human being?  If you can’t bring yourself to forgive, ask yourself what the payoff is.  What do I think I have to give up in order to forgive?

Check out Phillip Yancey’s book, What’s So Amazing About Grace?.  It really helped me let go of resentment and bitterness years ago, and is still doing so today.  The world has recently given me several huge opportunities to forgive people who’ve hurt me badly and not asked for forgiveness.  I will be having strong boundaries with them, but I’ve also chosen to see them through the eyes of grace, because I want to be forgiven when I screw up too…and oh, honey…I do, holy cow.  I try very hard to give what I want to receive, and treat others the way I want to be treated.  The peace in my heart that comes from letting the negative connection go (lack of anger and anxiety) and developing good boundaries (no more codependency) is always worth the effort.

Thanks for stopping by.  I’ll close up with a quote from What’s So Amazing About Grace

“The world thirsts for grace.  When grace descends, the world falls silent before it.”  ~Philip Yancey

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.

©2012, 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.

Two Sides Of The Same Coin

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.

The Way You Make Me Feel

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.

Not How, But When

This week I want to post on an idea that I was discussing with Kathy Henry, LCSW in the waiting room.  Well, actually we were eating lunch at my favorite nearby restaurant, but when the name of your blog is The Waiting Room, it just sounds better!  Besides, my choice of this name for my blog was intended to mean things that are discussed about therapy that are outside the confines of the confidentiality of the therapy office, so this qualifies.  Onward…

One of the most common questions asked in the therapy office is “How?”  How do I let go of the shaming I was subjected to throughout my childhood?  How do I work through my childhood sexual abuse wounds?  How do I forgive my cheating spouse?  How do I have good boundaries?  How, how, how.

I have blogged before about ”dropping the pen.”  This is a phrase coined by another mentor of mine who I quote often, Jerry Wise.  To sum it up, it means that folks come in asking the therapist a question like (metaphorically) ”I’m holding this pen, and I want to drop it, can you tell me how?” and the answer is, “you already know or can understand how, it’s a matter of being ready to deal with what happens when you drop it.”  So the question is not how, it’s “when will you be ready?”

Kathy and I were talking about a related subject over a casual business lunch.  (You want to have lunch with a couple of therapists now, don’t you?  Perhaps not, but I assure you, it was pretty interesting.  Kathy rules.)  She brought up a very good point…blog-worthy even.  She talked about helping clients get away from the “hows” by encouraging them to stop intellectualizing their therapy.  Wow, what a great point!  She drove it home by asking me, “Did anyone tell you how to feel your way through your pain when you were working through your recovery?  No, you felt your own way through it, and found the way that worked for you.”

Yep.  She’s absolutely right.  No one told me to go lay on my bed and cry from my toes when I needed to grieve my pain, no one told me to do an in-depth study on grace while I went through my divorce so I could leave without bitterness in my heart, no one told me what to bring to my therapy appointments to work on, and no one told me to do multiple Bible studies to work on learning to love myself and see myself like God does: worthy of love and boundaries; beautiful.  Those were all KEY aspects of my recovery, and no therapist told me how, or what, to do. They only showed me the pain that I had closed-off from, and then told me to sit in it, (how annoying is that!) and work my way through it.  As hard as that struggle was, and it was hard, it was exactly what I needed to do, and hear.  I found my own “how.”

I think many times clients think that the therapist has some magic answer or list of things to do to make it all better, and they are purposefully keeping it from the client.  I don’t think that’s what a therapist’s job is at all.  Tools and to-do lists, I assure you, only prolong the agony…I know first hand what I’m talking about here.  They have their place only after a very large chunk of heart work.

Further, those things that may have worked for me may not work for you.  I think the therapist’s job is to hold up an unclouded, objective mirror, not the one you hold up for yourself, so you can see yourself more clearly.  All of the things behind you that affect you and you don’t even know it…things that you have long-since hidden away, are used to, or deny…are still there.  The point is you finding who you are, not finding who the therapist thinks you are; finding your own way, instead of the therapist’s way.  The therapist is trained to shine the light, look objectively, and then hold up that clear mirror.  They induce vomiting, and then hold your hair back while you puke your pain.  A graphic analogy, I know, but that’s kinda what it feels like.  (See another blog I wrote called ”Dude, Just Puke It“).  Seems harsh, but it is actually a very loving act!

To put it another way, the key thing that I want to drive home here, was how important it was to realize that it wasn’t that I couldn’t find the way to drop my pen…it was realizing why I wouldn’t.  Then it was a matter of fighting the battle of overcoming the obstacles of “won’t”.  Why won’t I drop this pen?  Why won’t I let myself heal from my childhood pain?  What role does hanging on to the pain play inside me that keeps me feeling safe behind my walls, yet utterly miserable and alone?  Woo.  That’s a big one, Goose.

When you find yourself intellectuallizing your therapy and repeatedly asking that “how” question, work instead toward cultivating the connection between your head and your heart.  Even when your head understands all of the insights you receive on the couch, if your heart can’t get the memo, it really doesn’t count for much.  The real work is in that deep, beautiful, wounded, precious heart inside of you.  It’s behind the doors you won’t open because it hurts too much to revisit them.  This work takes courage.  Locate the roadblocks between your intellect and your feelings.  Smart is great, but you will eventually have to face the fear of feeling it.

There’s my schpeel for today.  Thank you so much for your continued support!

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.

©2012, 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

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