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Letting Go, Moving On

We’ve lost many of the rituals and rites of passage that marked important transitions. One we’ve thankfully retained is celebrating the change from one year to the next. It can be easy to forget, though, as we party and toast the New Year that to move forward we have to let go of some of what has gone before or we risk getting tied down by the threads of our past.

Life is like a circus trapeze act. Imagine the acrobat, the bar gripped firmly in her hands. Ahead is the bar she needs to grab onto. That bar ahead is the future and the graceful, effortless flight from one bar to the next is the acrobat’s purpose, her reason for being.

One crucial thing has to happen before flying through the air and safely arriving on the next bar.

She has to let go of the bar she currently holds.

So in life.

We have to let go before we can move forward.

Letting Go Is Not Always Easy

I’ve not yet flown on a trapeze but I imagine one thing the acrobat needs to deal with is fear of letting go.

That fear is understandable.

What is in my grasp is familiar and safe and, no matter how attractive the way ahead, I fear a fall. No matter how painful it is where I am, letting go comes with uncertainty. Will the change be better or worse? Will I manage to hold on? Will I cope?

I believe understanding and releasing what holds me back is crucial to live a full and successful life – and there’s no time like the present for doing it.

We hold on to … PEOPLE

Not one of us is entirely alone. Some have huge circles of family, friends and acquaintances, while others have very few people around. Some of those relationships have been with us for many years and some are new. Each one of them serves some purpose in our lives – to give us love, belonging, learning, friendship, partnership or just fun.

Mourning is widely recognised as an important process when someone dies, when a relationship breaks down or when someone moves away. Even though it can be very hard when they leave, we somehow recognise the importance of letting go when the relationship end is outside our control.

But what about those people who are still in our lives and hold us back in some way?

Those who criticise our choices and are always looking for fault (some ‘friends’ or members of the family, perhaps?). Those we’ve known for ever and the only thing holding us together are memories of a distant past (old friends?). Those with whom we are ‘unnaturally’ dependent (grown up children? parents?). Or perhaps just those we don’t enjoy any more and somehow still keep meeting them.

Who is holding you back in some way? Who are you holding onto?

It’s probably time to update the relationship with an honest heart to heart and either change something or leave them – with gratitude for what they brought to you.

We hold on to … MEMORIES

Great things happen to all of us. Terrible things do too.

That’s life.

Often we hold onto the past long after the events have finished. We get nostalgic for our memories of better days and we get triggered into pain or anger by memories of things we’d prefer to forget.

The past is dead – but not buried for as long as we keep it alive in our memory. And as with all things that are dead, memories decompose and fester.

The good memories take on a sweet, rose coloured decay and, while they may be comforting in difficult moments, they are dead and gone. They stop us living our lives here and now. They make it harder to deal with the challenges of today because our energy is sucked into regret for the lost times that have been.

And the bad memories get relived over and over in our minds, bring us down and rot our hearts. They also stop us living our lives here and now. They keep us stuck in anger at the things that, in a just and loving world, should not have occurred. The reality is that they did happen – just we haven’t buried them yet.

What memories are you holding onto? What unburied things do you keep alive in your memory?

Perhaps it’s time to let them go and move on? Release them by talking to someone or maybe writing them down and burning the paper. It may not happen overnight but take a first step.

We hold on to … THINGS

Unless you’re a naked hermit living in a cave and off the land you’ve probably accumulated a few material possessions. Perhaps even a lot of them.

Of course we need some physical things to support our lives, for convenience or because they look good. I’m certainly not advocating removing everything. I am advocating being honest with ourselves about what things hold us back from making the next move in our lives.

Maybe it’s our home and the mortgage attached to it? Investments where we’re often checking the share prices? Furniture that we inherited? Or perhaps small things, such as gifts or paintings by the kids, that represent old memories?

Each thing we possess needs a certain amount of maintenance – repairs, cleaning, painting, servicing, etc..

But there’s also emotional maintenance we invest in these objects. The resignation (or delight?) that we’re stuck in this house for the next 24 years of mortgage payments. The pride as we show off our child’s prize drawing from 18 years ago. The worry that grandma’s antique table will get scratched every time someone visits.

I sometimes imagine everything I own is attached to me by an invisible thread. Some threads are thick and strong, while others are thin and easily broken. Individually, each thread is manageable and doesn’t hold me back in any significant way. Collectively, if I allow it, they tangle me up and tie me down.

What things hold you back?

Now’s a good time to let go of some of the things that weigh you down and hold you back. Sell them, give them away or discard them. Put them into storage if you really can’t face letting them go – but make that first move.

We hold on to … DREAMS

Personally I believe it’s our hopes and dreams that give us fuel to create great things in our world. Our dreams of how things could be, shape our actions to improve our lives and those of the people around us. I don’t know for sure, but I suspect only human beings possess the capacity to dream and to lose that entirely would be a terrible thing.

I also believe if we hold onto dreams when they no longer serve us they get in the way of moving forward. Letting go and mourning unfulfilled dreams is crucial to give space to new, more compelling dreams.

Maybe our life turned out differently compared to the dreams we had when we were younger. A project we dreamed of winning that went to someone else. A person we dreamed of being with who chose another. Any disappointment, regret or anger we feel in relation to our dreams is possibly a sign we haven’t moved on and are still hanging on.

What dreams have passed their shelf life and need to be discarded?

Now’s the time to mourn those dreams and let them go. Find new, better dreams that could flourish in the space you give them to grow.

A book I can recommend is ‘Transitions: Making Sense of Life’s Changes’ by William Bridges. I found this incredibly helpful at several stages of my life where I was struggling to deal with change and letting go of the past.

Good luck! Enjoy the flight from the past to the present.

You cannot do anything wrong

In life I make many mistakes and get a lot of stuff ‘wrong’ every day. I’ve lived many years with an idea that getting something ‘wrong’ deserves punishment – physical, emotional or psychological and I decided to change how I think about this concept of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ I grew up with.

I’m usually my own harshest critic and punish my ‘wrongdoing’ with guilt or embarrassment. Either that or I deny responsibility and point the finger somewhere else, trying to pass blame and shame off my own shoulders and onto someone else’s.

How did I learn this concept of ‘wrong’?

Here some examples:

  • At school when I got something wrong in class I was punished with a low grade (or a couple of times publicly ridiculed)
  • At home when I got something wrong I was slapped (not very hard, I admit), made to feel guilty or educated about my mistake
  • In church (I went until the age of 14) I was taught that if I get it wrong big time (sin) then I’ll head for eternal damnation in the fiery pit
  • When I broke the law then, depending on the seriousness of my ‘wrongdoing’, I got fined (a couple of speeding tickets) or imprisoned (not me – a distant second cousin). In some places they murder ‘wrongdoers’ and call it execution (I live in Europe, so I’m safe from this!)
  • If I listen to the ‘wrong’ music (for example, Celine Dion*) or wear the ‘wrong’ clothes, then I’m punished by my peers by being laughed at (if I was famous, which I’m not, then I’d be a regular subject of sarcastic journalism in the fashion press!).

This way of thinking isn’t serving me. The reality is that I often get stuff ‘wrong’ and beating myself up (or being beaten up) is neither constructive nor healthy. I’m developing a way of thinking and acting where I can’t do anything ‘wrong’ because I don’t have this concept in my head.

I’m talking about the situations where I’m clear I messed up and not the times we just disagree (for example, I think 2+2=5 and you think something different). You know I screwed up, I know it, everyone and her dog knows it. Those situations where my actions have damaging consequences for other people.

For example, I run down the street, bump into you and knock you over. I lie to you, you find out and lose trust in me. I shut myself away and you worry about me because you haven’t heard from me.

My actions (or inactions) always have consequences for other people whether I like it or not. Getting it ‘wrong’ in my new definition means doing something that hurts you (or me) in some way while getting it ‘right’ means contributing to your life in a positive way. If this is the case, why would I ever do something ‘wrong’ in the first place?

There are three reasons I can think of:

1  I’m inherently evil and deserve whatever comes my way

Now I’m not a big fan of this explanation and I think this notion of ‘human-beings-are-all-sinners’ has done enough damage and it’s time we moved on as a species! I put it here because I could be wrong to leave it out and I have no idea what the consequences might be if I don’t include it.

But moving quickly on …

2  I don’t have all the information

Most of what I do is in the conviction that I’m ‘right’ – to the best of my current understanding. But I don’t know everything and I can’t predict the future with any accuracy so I’m often ignorant of the likely consequences of my actions. It turns out from time to time that there are consequences I didn’t know about or information I was missing. If I had known then I probably would have done something different.

As I’m running down the street, concentrating hard on getting to my meeting, I’m unaware of your presence. If I had been, then I’d have slowed down!

3  I didn’t know another way

It happens that I know exactly what the consequences will be but I just don’t know any other way of behaving at the time. If I’d seen an alternative course then I would have taken it.

I was feeling insecure and afraid of telling you the truth and to protect myself I lied. I knew you would find out and stop trusting me but in that moment I didn’t know any other way to feel safe. I would have told the truth if I’d known how to do so and feel secure at the same time.

This is not about making excuses or absolving myself of responsibility. In fact it’s the opposite. It’s about seeing clearly and taking responsibility for the consequences of my actions. I did something that damaged you and I’ve learned. Next time I’ll act differently. I’m not going to beat myself up about it by blaming or punishing myself and if I choose to apologise it will be out of genuine sadness at the results of my action and not motivated by ‘repentance’ thinking.

Isn’t this healthier and more real than going on the attack? Isn’t this a more gentle and loving way to learn from my mistakes?

* I just want to be clear about this. I do NOT enjoy the music of Celine Dion. Despite having one of her albums. But I never listen to it. Honest!

Protecting our children

Last night I came home with Elena (my 5 year old) to find two policeman in the entrance to our apartment. They were attempting to ‘persuade’ a drunk to move on after he’d fallen asleep on the pavement, large bottle of some unnamed liquid at his side. This was probably not the first time it had happened, judging from the state of the man and his proficient direction of extremes of the Polish language towards the police.

Elena was fascinated by what was going on and stood and watched in fascination for several minutes. I resisted an urge to move her on quickly and pretend that nothing was happening. She’s not blind! Of course I expected the stream of questions that came next and that she was a little upset because the man had stuck his tongue out at her as we passed.

‘What happened Daddy? Why is that man on the ground? What are the police doing? What is he saying? Why did he stick his tongue out at me?’ etc..

She naturally wants to understand the world around her but this brought me face to face with a dilemma. I want to be honest with her in a way she can understand and I also have this yearning to protect her from the less pleasant aspects of life. I told her that the man was tired and fell asleep and the police were helping him find his home so he could sleep in his own bed. This seemed to satisfy her and we then made a game of sticking our tongues out at each other, which amused her and we laughed a lot.

I know this was not the truth, but then I did not myself know what the truth was. I just had a small scene in front of me and had no desire to get involved in the story other than as a passer by. I decided in that moment that she could not understand about homelessness or drinking – or was I simply twisting the truth in my wish to protect her from reality?

I know that terrible things go on in the world and I know that she’ll come face to face with some of them during her lifetime. I always want to be honest with her but I want to protect her right now while I can, even though I know I can’t do this forever. I chose to explain it in terms I guessed she can understand, even if it was not entirely honest.

What would you do in this situation?