Deepak Chopra - December 30, 2008
From an early age we are told forgiveness is an important virtue we should practice, but we are only told to forgive, we are not shown how to forgive and mean it. In the Lord’s Prayer we ask God to “forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us,” But I don’t think forgiveness should be regarded as prescriptive morality. Prescriptive morality never works and is frequently a form a self- righteousness in disguise--a mask for the ego.
The best way to understand forgiveness is to realize that to forgive and to ask for forgiveness is the best use of one’s energy and also one of the most important paths to self-healing. The absence of forgiveness is holding a grievance or resentment and also a subtle desire to seek vengeance. In short it is hostility. Many studies have shown that although anger can be a healthy release of pent up energy, hostility is not healthy, and it is the number one emotional risk factor for premature death from cardiovascular accident (stroke and heat attack).
Hostility is an inflammatory emotion and causes physical inflammations as well, which can result in inflammatory cardiovascular episodes and is also linked to autoimmune disorders. It is more than remembered pain; it is also rumination over a past hurt. If you kick a dog and hurt it, it will remember that and if you encounter the dog many years later it may attack you in the interest of self-preservation. However, unlike a human being, the dog will not plan for years on how to get even. Because human beings ruminate over past hurts and have the ability to imagine and plan the future they are capable of enormous violence against themselves and their fellow beings. This is one good reason to learn to forgive.
Learning how to let go of toxic emotions such as hostility is the essence of learning how to forgive, because forgiveness is basically releasing your attachment or identification with the conditioned response. There are a few well-developed psychological techniques for releasing a toxic emotions that are based on the premise of gaining objectivity and clarity on the emotion before one can release and forgive.
Here is a 7-step process that is known to work:
1 Taking responsibility for your emotion
2 Witnessing the emotion
3 Defining or labeling the emotion
4 Expressing the emotion
5 Sharing the emotion
6 Releasing the emotion through ritual
7 Celebrating the release and moving on
If you are holding on to a grievance or resentment and feel hostility toward someone, here’s what you can do.
Close your eyes and recall the episodes that caused you to feel this way. Recall the experience in full sensory mode, noting the voices , gestures and setting. As you visualize it, feel the sensations accompanying the experience. You will usually feel a tightness or discomfort in the area of your stomach or your heart. At this point remind yourself that these are your emotions but they are not you. You are responsible for creating them and you have the power to heal them.
Once you have located the discomfort in your body, feel it for several minutes. Ask yourself, Who is most damaged by holding on to this toxic energy?
The answer of course is obvious--you are hurting yourself more than you are hurting another. Nelson Mandela once said, “ Holding a resentment is like drinking poison and hoping it will kill your enemy.” Having located and experienced the discomfort for several minutes, and having realized its damaging effect on you, give it a label. Define it. Is it hostility, anger, sadness, guilt, fear or a combination of all of the above?
These are the first 3 steps, taking responsibility, physically feeling it and then defining it. The fourth step is to express what you are feeling in writing. It is suggested that you do this from three different perspectives. First, as you recall the experience, express in writing what you are feeling in the first person. Having done that, express it in the second person, pretending you are the other person in the conflict. And finally, express it in the third person as a neutral observer. When you express the conflict or emotion accompanying the conflict from three different perspectives you will find the toxic energy accompanying the emotion will begin to dissipate. In fact there are studies that show that when you express your emotions in writing in this way, your immune system gets an immediate boost. Immunoglobulins or IgE levels in the saliva show an immediate rise. The fifth step is to share this experience with a loved one. It could even be the person with whom you had the conflict. During the sharing you could also say that you feel ready to forgive and be forgiven. The sixth step is to release the emotion through a ritual. You could burn the paper on which you have written these feelings and offer the ashes to the winds, to the Virgin Mary or to any deity. Ritual action is a way of trapping energy and releasing it effectively and bringing things to closure.
Having released the emotion, celebrate and do something fun, Go out exercise, see a movie, go dancing, whatever makes you happy. Although this seems like an elaborate procedure once you get in the habit of feeling your body, identifying what’s going on, seeing it from different perspectives and releasing it, it becomes quite a natural process. It doesn‘t mean you will never feel resentful or angry, but over time, you will start to feel energy flowing freely through your body as the time period of your holding on to resentments will decrease. The lingering effects of the emotions will be no more than a line drawn in water, instead of a line etched into stone as before. As you become adept at releasing toxic emotions in the moment, some people find they can locate their silent witness within and easily go through the release and forgiveness process with a few conscious breaths.
If you look at what’s happing in the world right now, we see it is our inability to forgive and ask for forgiveness that is the cause of all conflicts, personal, social and even international.
Ultimately forgiving another is forgiving oneself. In forgiving we release the false sense of identity with which we have attached to a story about an event. When we release an attachment to a toxic emotion, we are freeing ourself from that false sense of self. As we free ourself from the illusion, we are really forgiving ourself in the deepest sense. What we think we are forgiving in another is an act of freedom for our own soul. Every situation that calls for forgiveness is a step in our own evolution to higher consciousness.
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Posted by Deepak Chopra at December 30, 2008 07:21 PM
Woops! advice, not advise, dinglebrain!
Forgiveness is that blissful state when you realise there is nothing to forgive. Gratitude for a platitude and a piece of tough meet.
Dr Chopra writes: “There are a few well-developed psychological techniques for releasing a toxic emotions that are based on the premise of gaining objectivity and clarity on the emotion before one can release and forgive”.
With the above in mind wouldn’t we have to admit that in order to gain access to tools of personal transformation and forgiveness we may have to alter our believe system? Wouldn’t forgiveness be easier if more of us realised the core reason for hate?
"We kill each other, or threaten to kill each other...because we are afraid we might not ourselves know the truth, that someone else with a different doctrine might have a closer approximation to the truth. Our history is in part a battle to the death of inadequate myths. If I can't convince you, I must kill you. That will change your mind.
You are a threat to my version of the truth, especially the truth about who I am and what my nature is. The thought that I may have dedicated my life to a lie, that I might have accepted a conventional wisdom that no longer, if it ever did, corresponds to external reality, that is a very painful realization. I will tend to resist it to the last. I will go to almost any lengths to prevent myself from seeing that the worldview that I have dedicated my life to is inadequate.
I'm putting this in personal terms so that I don't say ‘you’, so that I'm not accusing anyone of an attitude, but you understand that this is not a mea culpa; I am trying to describe a psychological dynamic that I think exists and it is important and worrisome"
The above is partly paraphrased from “The Varieties of Scientific Experience” (A Personal View of the Search for God)
;))
#4
The Spinning Jesus
When the Solar Logos came back from five days at the sun and five at the moon, the Returned Jesus energy came with it. Jesus was seen as a luminous being on the cross; it was spinning, rotating slowly as if coming from outer space. It eventually landed on the water at a little bridge with many, many white swans in England. Jesus got off the cross and showed us his hands and there were no more stigmata wounds. I felt his crucifixion was over, "Finally at last, enough already!"
Just like the LambOf God-pain, anyone can rock up for the Returned Jesus gig. All you need is the luminosity, the forgiveness and the compassion. In the olden days, everything was very exclusive, and systems were put in place to keep people ignorant and powerless. But we wrote a new way that includes anyone, anyone that is that has the goodness and the desire to serve. What made JC different was he was the first to say "forgive everyone for everything." Try it.
So what I'm saying is that the Returned Jesus is going to be a number of different people, NOT just one person, and then the Christ Consciousness will flow out from its initial start in those early JC people and go to many thousands of people all over the world, and they will acquire extraordinary abilities.
Killing stuff, NV!
Deepak is right in stating that forgiveness is the end product of an integration experience.
There are many tools, but the core of the integrative experience is, and always has been, the meditative process.
When an object (physical or object of consciousness such as a memory or emotional state) is meditated deeply upon, the meditator will be able to feel it in its totality, see it's aspects, derive the meanings and understandings from it, and see it as it really is. When the meditator is satisfied that he fully understands the object, any emotional repulsion or attraction (charge) will dissipate. This may or may not be accompanied by an experience of the object falling apart, disappearing, melting away, etc, in the meditator's consciousness.
Any good emotional processing technique will lead you through these steps of encountering, experiencing, understanding, completion, and letting go.
Doesn't matter if it's a shamanistic technology, a western psychological technique, a lucid dreaming or visualization technique, a writing process, a tantric technique, or just plain good old-fashioned sit-and-meditate-till-it's-done.
Forgiveness is a product of emotional integration, it represents the completion of the integrative process. It is not the first step.
The first step is a courageous encounter with a feeling, memory, or impression in consciousness that, in all honesty, you'd most likely rather avoid.
If you are still avoiding it, you haven't reached forgiveness yet.
I've always considered my self to be a forgiving person. But when it relates to an incident in my childhood where a major violation happened by one of my parents...I seem to be stuck. I have the ability to forgive anyone that has made a mistakes. Mistakes are part of the human condition. But it seems that when it comes to this particular issue or person, I just seem to have a hard time letting go. I've been through therapy and I have shared my experience with others. But it seems that when it came time to forgive this person I seem to shut down or can't seem to find a way of getting throug with it. Most people who know me regard me as a compassionate and open person. I've worked on self discovery and emotional growth for most of my adult life. I have loved the path and journey that I have discovered along the way. If anyone has any suggestions to get past this it would be greatly appreciated. The article above and steps that Depak has suggested is a start...But just worndering if anyone has had any success getting through the emotional barriers and has suceeded?
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(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)I've always considered my self to be a forgivin
Deepak is right in stating that forgiveness is
#4
The Spinning Jesus
When the So
;))
Dr Chopra writes: “There are a few well-devel
Happy New Year, Deepak!
All is forgiven, of course!
All being "You-Know-Who" generally.
Thanks for All the information you present
To: All Forgivable IntentBloggers Everywhere!
.
All inclusive can only mean one thing, so I must forgive you, too. (Look North!)
Now...
please explain the difference between a prescriptive morality
that sinners have been told to obey, and
advise being given by an non-chosen adviser to people with vices.
.
Thank you! Uncle Tree