
Weekly Blog
Tips, Tricks, Skills, Spirituality and Wisdom
Damage Control…
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
From yesterday: If we can answer questions like this then, hopefully, we gain some insight into what kinds of things are likely to send us spiraling out of control.
If we gain some insight into what kinds of things are likely to send us spiraling out of control then we can begin to mentally prepare ourselves for our own reactions. If we can prepare, then we can begin to create space to choose (within reason) a response to our reactions (as opposed to simply reacting to our reactions).
I know, I know- this sounds too easy. In many ways, it is too easy. We’re not always going to be able to choose a response. Some triggers are so powerful and so deeply ingrained that the only way to come to grips at all is to do meaningful work with a therapist of a long period of time. The point is not that we can learn how to gain control of ourselves when we’re powerless. The point is that gaining awareness may make some of our roughest edges a little bit smoother.
We may learn to “limit the damage.”
2021 Scott chiming in:
Being able to choose a response requires a few things- some practice being mindful about when we’re “triggered,” some safety in the relationship where we’re triggered, some sense of safety in general, and some techniques for calming ourselves down, including some helpful distractions we can engage in to get out of the triggered moment.
Again, this is a big topic- and we’ll find ways to explore it more in the future.
Planning for Triggers
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
From yesterday: In order to learn something from our outbursts, we need to be willing to rigorously examine ourselves in the aftermath.
This includes: making a mental note of the things that trigger us. What kinds of things create unnecessarily large emotional reactions within us? Is there a pattern? When have I reacted this way to this kind of situation before? Have my reactions to this kind of situation always been this strong? Why or why not? If not, what has changed?
Perhaps today you can reflect on a situation you have some emotional distance from and try asking yourself these questions.
If we can answer questions like this then, hopefully, we gain some insight into what kinds of things are likely to send us spiraling out of control.
Scott’s thoughts in 2021:
Being able to identify triggers and recognize patterns is crucially important. We may need help with this- we may need to ask the people “in our hut” to help us recognize patterns of acting “too big” for what the situation requires.
Once we’re aware of triggers, we can start to plan out what to do about them- and this will depend on the circumstances. It is important to process the things that create the triggers, it’s also important to learn new actions in response to triggers…perhaps this is a good topic for a future Saturday night class?
Own It
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
...continued from yesterday...
In order to learn something from our outbursts, we need to be willing to rigorously examine ourselves in the aftermath. If we assume we were in the right and the other person was in the wrong, there is nothing to be gained. In (almost) any fight, both parties are wrong, though to varying degrees. One party may have more stuff to own than the other, but this does not mean the person with less has permission to avoid self-examination.
We ask ourselves, “Where did I go wrong?” “In what ways did I contribute to the mess?” In other words, we start with the assumption that we did contribute and then work our way backwards towards the truth.
If we begin with the assumption that we weren’t wrong and did not contribute to the mess, we will struggle to find evidence to the contrary.
New Scott vs. Old Scott:
I totally agree with myself! It is crucially important in the aftermath of a conflict to seek out things you can take ownership of to the person you had conflict with. It is a huge trust and relationship builder if we can get ahead of these things. Owning mistakes before they’re brought to your attention is a relationship game-changer.
Now, this is hard to do. We have blind spots. So- if you can’t figure out where you “went wrong” and the other person points something out- then that’s also great. Work on being mindful of your defensiveness and choosing to set it to the side in order own your mistakes.
Stop and Smell the Roses
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
From yesterday, on the importance of avoiding complacency: Over time, we actively pursue new areas and skill sets, but we don't stop the pursuit [of recovery]. Remaining alert means that we can acknowledge progress as long as we acknowledge that we must also continue the work.
Ultimately, this is the gift of recovery. As sobriety from the area of our unmanageability requires less focus, then our capacity to focus on other areas increases. We are free, in other words, to address smaller problems with how we are living our lives.
There is no issue too small to address. Whatever issues we have at a moment in time are the issues worth addressing. At the end of the day, we are the lives we lead. Our lives are the compilation of the choices we’ve made, the character we’ve developed, etc.
If we simply relax and take our hands off the wheel, well, I wonder…are we living?
2021 Scott’s thoughts:
I think this last question is a good one. For the most part, it is important, at least to me, to live actively. To always try to create the kind of life I want within the confines life throws at me (which are sometimes very harsh and difficult to deal with).
However, I would also suggest it’s okay, at times, to relax. To enjoy the moment’s where we have found peace. And, conversely, in moments where life is tremendously difficult it may also be important to relax for a few minutes, and not make big decisions, and not try to change everything at once just because the present moment is such a challenge.
So- let’s be diligent about becoming the kind of people we want to be. Let’s also give ourselves permission to stop and smell the roses.
It’s Your Journey
For a month’s worth of posts, I (Scott) am critiquing my own past blog posts. I’m viewing this as an experiment in being willing to admit when I’m wrong, change my mind, and to do so publicly.
How do we stop trying to regain control in such destructive ways?
The past few days we've talked about attentiveness and the ways in which this helps us trace our reactions to their source. This is the beginning of the process of learning to respond to triggers as opposed to reacting to them.
A similar-sounding, though quite distinct, skill involves remaining alert. What do I mean by this?
What I've been describing this month, so far, is a "deep track" of recovery work. It's not an area we address early on. It's something that comes later in the process as we gain some stability. Stability, for all its merits, creates problems. It affords us the opportunity to relax, to settle in, and to breathe. We need this. But if we stretch this too far we become disengaged and complacent.
Remaining alert means refusing to believe that, "we have arrived," that "we have gotten somewhere," or that "we have progressed." At the very least, we refuse to believe that we have progressed to the point where we no longer need to actively pursue our recovery.
Over time, we actively pursue new areas and skill sets, but we don't stop the pursuit. Remaining alert means that we can acknowledge progress as long as we acknowledge that we must continue the work.
Future Scott on Past Scott:
We will likely, over the course of time, have periods of high stress and periods of lower stress. And I do agree that it’s important to take advantage of the times in life when our stress is lower. This is a good time to do some brainstorming about the life we want to live because we are not backed into a corner and we feel we have more options and more opportunities for being creative in terms of how we continue to create our lives.
I think I like thinking of life in this way: It’s always something we’re creating. We’re never done creating it. We’re always moving, always journeying, always heading somewhere, and rarely in the same direction.
What direction do you want to travel in, today, right now?