Category Archives: Change

Help Yourself

This morning in yoga, when Niight asked us to set our intention for the class, I remembered something I had read yesterday: “Eventually you realize you can only help those willing to help themselves…And that begins with helping yourself,” (from a post by Jen Gresham on Everyday Bright).  I shortened that to “Help Yourself” and set my intention for class.

But as often happens, my intention for Monday morning’s yoga class is really much bigger than that, and follows me off my mat. I have been struggling with some family situations, two specific people who are in trouble that I really want to help, but they don’t want to be helped, don’t see the problem.  They aren’t just making a mess of things for themselves, they are hurting people close to them, people who love them and want to see them safe and happy. Then, in turn, this second set of people become stressed out and strained and sick.  Ripples of suffering continue out, and out.

It goes back to that empathic intuition and awareness thing again, the center of my power but so often the source of my pain.  I can feel what they are feeling, understand their experience of things, but I can also see how wrongheaded it is, how confused.  I can see their internal motivations and where this is going to lead if they don’t wise up, what they should do instead that has a real chance of providing comfort and positive change.

It’s as if they are headed straight for a cliff, but I can’t figure out how to convince them to take their foot off the gas, maybe even hit the brakes.  I am not in the car with them, so the only thing I can do is watch them go and pray something happens between now and the edge.

Photo by Marinaomi

And yet, even with the intellectual awareness that you can do nothing to stop them, that everyone has to live their own life, make their own choices and endure the consequences, you find yourself at times running after them, screaming “Slow down! Stop! Please turn around!” until you lose your voice and drop to your knees, your breath choked by the trail of dust they’ve left behind.

So it comes back around to this: “Eventually you realize you can only help those willing to help themselves…And that begins with helping yourself.” You can’t force other people to change, to do what’s right, to make better choices and live happier lives.  You have to continue to chose balance and stability for yourself, stop making yourself sick thinking about their situation, their suffering.  Like the 3 C’s of Al-Anon puts it: “Didn’t cause it, can’t cure it, and can’t control it.”  Leave the chaos and the co-dependency behind, let it go.

And yet, it takes a strange sort of courage to give up on, to renounce people you love, those you want to help–“give up” meaning that I accept you can make your own choices and I cannot control what you do.  I cannot keep you safe.  I cannot make you happy.  And if you attempt to draw me in to your circle of suffering, insist that I agree with your confusion, even adopt it as my own–I cannot go there with you.  Courage is necessary because by saying “no,” by letting go, you run the risk of being alone.

Even if you find yourself having to let them go, you can continue to be a good example, someone who is sane, healthy, happy and safe.  And I suspect, even as there are those you have to “give up on,” there will be others who seek out your kindness, who welcome your help, and who return your good will.

I’m giving up, and I am going to help myself, as I continue to wish nothing but love to those who are stuck and who are struggling.  Eventually, we’ll all find a way out.

  • “It’s not going to stop ’til you wise up, so just…give up.”

How do you change?

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” ~~Albert Einstein

It seems so simple: if you want things to be different, you must do something different. And yet, many of us are stuck in our bad habits and addictions.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately, spent the morning reading about addiction, how to help an addict, co-dependency, and shame.  Specifically what I’ve been trying to figure out is when we become aware that things aren’t working for us, but we’ve been stuck in the same loop for so long, how do we change?

I am reading Brene’ Brown’s first book, “I Thought It Was Just Me (but it isn’t): Telling the Truth About Perfectionism, Inadequacy, and Power.” In the first chapter, she talks about real power, and describes it as: “the power to create and live by our own definition” and later says that there are “three specific components to real power: consciousness, choice and change.”  She says:

In order to effectively make changes and address the problems in our lives, we need to first be conscious or aware of the problem. Second, we need to be able to problem-solve and identify the choices we can make to address the problem. Once we are aware of the problem and our options for dealing with it, we need to be able to facilitate change–we need to be able to act on those choices.

In other words, this is going to take some time…


This morning, before I read this passage from Brene’s book, I came up with my own list–if you are stuck, things aren’t working out or are going bad, there are three basic things you have to do:

  1. Stop digging. If the problem is that you find yourself in a deep, dark hole, don’t expect any help or any escape if you continue to dig.  Don’t ask for help digging, or for money for a new shovel.  If what you are doing isn’t working and you want it to stop, first you must stop.
  2. Stop blaming. If you think your situation or circumstances are someone else’s fault, stop it.  “When I blame someone else for something, I give up my power to them,” (Al-Anon saying).  If you are busy “smashing yourself to bits” because of all the trouble you’ve caused, stop that too.  It really doesn’t matter who did what, or who’s responsible.  It only matters if you are planning to punish someone, and that isn’t going to bring the change you are looking for–let it go.
  3. Stop waiting. It is a waste of time to wait for someone else to fix things, to help or rescue you.  You have to save yourself.

Easier said than done.  Seriously, this is going to be really hard, and it’s going to take a really long time.  The sooner we get started, the better.  Leo Babauta of zenhabits.net has written a few posts recently that I’ve found helpful: “How I Changed My Life, In Four Lines” and “The Half Step That Will Change Your Life.”

  • If you want things to change, why not now?