Step into your Bigness*

“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us” – Marianne Williamson

In a recent session, a client who has chronic physical pain saw herself unzipping the small, narrow suit she has been trying to fit into since her childhood, and stepping into a big, unlimited self. Her big self (which can also be seen as her essence, or whole self) was free from old patterns of either needing to collapse to be safe, or fight back to try to assert her autonomy. Her body—and in particular her joints and nerves—had so much more space to breathe when it wasn’t trying to fit into others’ ideas of who she needed to be.

Although the degree can vary widely, all of us have been wounded. As a result, we developed beliefs and coping strategies to help us understand and manage those wounds. When our circumstances change, but our beliefs and strategies do not, the latter end up perpetuating the very thing they were designed to fight against. Crises (physical or emotional, internal or external) and feelings of stuckness are usually an indicator that a part of us is ready to grow and evolve, while another (usually younger) part of us is clinging to the old strategies for dear life, terrified of what the consequences might be if we let go. The way forward is for the young self to feel heard, held and acknowledged, while simultaneously realizing that the situation has changed, and that it’s safe to let go.

Here are five tips for accessing your bigness and stepping into your power.

1. Notice your small self

Start tracking what it feels like when you are triggered, reactive, or shut down. How does your body feel? What is your posture like? What are you believing about yourself and the world? Is there a pattern to what triggers you—such as feeling misunderstood, or like you don’t matter? I invite you to keep a journal for a week or more to take note of this.

2. Explore the origins

When we are triggered, we are usually filtering and reacting to the world through wounded child eyes, even though the arguments we use to justify our reactions may tap into our adult faculties of reasoning. When you are feeling reactive or collapsed, ask yourself “what age is associated with this response?”

If nothing comes up, I invite you think about your childhood. If there was an age when you started learning X (whatever belief you identified in #1), what age/ages might it be? It might also be a timeframe more than one age. What were the situations or the people you were learning that from?

3. Send compassion to your small self

Imagine that your adult self is with that young part of you. What would have been helpful to hear back then? For example, “It’s not your fault.” “I’m proud of you.” “You’re not alone anymore, I’m here.” “You did exactly what you needed to do.”

If it feels appropriate, imagine that you are projecting images of your current life to your young self/selves. Let them know that their situation isn’t going to be like that forever, that things are going to change, and that you have resources they didn’t have.

4. Step into your big self

I invite you to close your eyes, and feel back into that feeling of a small self. Imagine that in front of you is your big, wise, essential self. If that’s hard to call up, you can also bring in a powerful energy/being you feel resonance with. For example a tree, a tiger, a mountain, a spiritual teacher or religious figure. Visualize yourself unzipping your small self, and stepping out of it. You can do that as slowly as you need to, over several days or week if necessary. When you are ready, feel yourself merging with your big and wise self and/or with the powerful being you called in. Notice what that feels like in your body. What does the world feel and look like when you look at it through your wise self eyes? Once you feel somewhat comfortable with this big version of you, you may want to bring up a person or a situation that has felt problematic to you. Does looking at it through these eyes shift your perception?

In a recent session, a client of mine merged with mountain energy. When she looked at people who had always been intimidating to her young self through mountain eyes, they seemed much smaller. She could see how they were trapped in their own pain.

5. Creative depiction

I invite you to find a creative way to further anchor this version of you into your body and subconscious. When I say creative, I’m referring to whatever way you have of accessing a deeper part of yourself. You could do this as a guided meditation, or feel yourself stepping into your bigger self as you are hiking, walking, biking, running, swimming, paragliding… You can draw/paint it, write a poem on the theme, or dance the transition from small self to big self. You could do a body sculpture or mime it. A combination is also possible. I wrote a poem entitled “Ode to my small self,” drew a picture of myself shedding the old patterns and fully stepping into my essential self, and have been visualizing it in some of my daily meditation practices. Just in case the universe didn’t get it the first time.

I wish you luck on your journey, and feel free to leave a comment on how that went for you.

The following is a guided meditation for stepping into your wise self.

 

© 2020 Jenny Brav

 

 

 

 

 

Step into your Bigness*2023-06-20T11:50:38+00:00

Healing Childhood and Family Wounds*

Do you feel like your childhood wounds are still interfering with your life? Does being with and/or thinking about your family trigger strong reactions in you?

“When we’re all living in the space of the inner child, loving, honoring, respecting, and embracing its desires, we are at peace.” Kim Ha Campbell

Most of our core wounds come from our childhood experiences. We might have gotten the message that we were too much, not enough, that parts of us weren’t acceptable and had to be hidden. We may have experienced neglect, abuse or other forms of trauma. The beliefs and coping strategies we developed as a result often stay with us long after our circumstances have changed.

Whether we are still in touch with our family or not (and whether our family members/caretakers are alive or not), the holiday season and certain anniversaries can be triggers for all that old stuff to come to the surface. Similarly, the old patterns often rear their heads when we are on the cusp of big transitions, and one part of us (usually the current, adult self) is ready to change, while another part (usually a very young self) is terrified and thinks change means certain death.

The following are five tips for beginning to heal childhood and family wounds:

1. Identify the wounds

Most of the time, we are not even aware of the old programing that is still running our thoughts and our nervous systems. Something happens, and whatever we are feeling and thinking feels like the truth: we are being dismissed, or victimized. Others really don’t care and can’t be trusted. However, these are just beliefs, the lens through which we are interpreting events. The first step is therefore to identify what the wounding and the beliefs are.

Is there a feeling or thought that is often recurring for you? For example, do you have a story that you are not welcome, or that nobody sees you? Perhaps think of a recent situation that triggered a strong reaction, or a difficult interaction with a family member. What were you believing about yourself or the other in that moment? Examples include: “I don’t matter,” “I’m invisible,” “others’ needs matter more than mine,” “I can either honor myself or please others, but not both,” “showing vulnerability is weak, and others will take advantage of me…” Write down your belief.

2. Feel into the emotions

To go more deeply into the wound, I invite you to notice what emotions come up for you when you are believing the words you wrote down in #1. These might include sadness, frustration, helplessness, rage, fear, confusion and so on.

When you access these emotions, check in with your body and notice the physical sensations there. Does any area get tight, achy or jittery? Does any part of your body (or perhaps even the whole body) feel distant or numb? There is no need to try to fix or change it, we are simply exploring and getting curious about what is there, what is wanting our attention.

3. Trace the belief and feelings back in time

Closing your eyes, imagine that you are following the belief, emotions, and physical sensations back in time, to a time, situation or place when you first or most significantly felt something similar. You might get a memory, or just a felt sense of something. You might also access a time period more than a specific incident. What was happening at the time? How was your young self feeling? What was he/she learning about him/herself and the world? What was s/he deciding to do to cope with the situation?

4. Bring love and healing to your young self

The wounding happened because your young self was needing something he/she didn’t get. Common unmet needs include safety, connection, feeling seen/understood, feeling that our voice matters and so on. The best way to begin healing the wounds and upgrading our coping strategies is to start offering that missing experience to the young self. What were they needing that they didn’t get?

Once you have a felt sense of your young self, imagine that your current self is entering the space with your young self. Let them know you are there to support them. Say something to them that would have been really helpful for them to hear at the time. “It’s not your fault.” “I’m here, I’ve got you.” “You are perfect exactly as you are.” “Their inability to be there for you in the way you need reflects on them, it has nothing to do with your needs.” Or if what your younger self is needing is physical presence more than words, you can feel yourself holding that part of you, giving him/her love.

 5. Start imprinting new possibilities

Give your younger self an energetic hug. Let them know you will keep on checking in on them. Now imagine that you are fast forwarding in time to a time when you have released that belief about yourself and/or the world. You realized that it was just a belief you developed when you were very young as the best way you could make sense of your experiences at the time. It’s not the actual truth.

What new belief would you like to replace the old one with? How are you feeling and living your life with this new programming? Feel and imagine it in as much detail as possible. And if it doesn’t feel accessible yet, keep doing the first four suggestions until it does. When you are ready, visualize yourself dropping this image of you operating on this new belief into your crown, and letting it permeate all the neural pathways that have been conditioned to the old belief. Feel it spreading to all the cells, muscles and tissues in your body. Placing your hands on your heart, imagine you are filling your heart with this new belief. When your heart feels full, feel it radiating back out into the universe.

The following is a guided meditation for healing your younger self based on the above tips:

 

 

© 2019 Jenny Brav

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Healing Childhood and Family Wounds*2023-07-11T11:41:30+00:00

From -Ism to Is-ness

Have you experienced prejudice and discrimination because of race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, ability, religion, nationality, ethnicity etc.? Do the effects continue to impact your beliefs about yourself and the world?

“We recall our terrible past so that we can deal with it, to forgive where forgiveness is necessary, without forgetting; to ensure that never again will such inhumanity tear us apart; and to move ourselves to eradicate a legacy that lurks dangerously as a threat to our democracy.” – Nelson Mandela

sunset-734049_1280Core wounding
In our essence, we are all whole and complete within ourselves. However, as babies and children, we are dependent on the outside world to get our physical and emotional needs met. We thus learn to derive our sense of safety and self from external cues. Core wounds occur whenever there is a split between ourselves and our sense of wholeness. We learn that we need to change, suppress, or trade-off certain parts of ourselves to feel safe or get our needs met. There are countless possible causes for core wounding: birth trauma, fear, abuse, anxious/overwhelmed caretaker(s), multi-generational trauma, neglect etc.

As a response to the pain of what we experience, we develop a belief about ourselves and the world, such as: “I’m not safe, I am not enough, I am not lovable, nobody is going to protect me.” We then develop compensatory strategies to overcome those beliefs, as well as distractive strategies to avoid feeling the pain of our beliefs.

Wounding experienced in our families is insidious enough. Its effects are further compounded by societally endorsed discrimination/prejudice. Many of us have grown up with (and may continue to live with) pernicious messages that some part of our identity is simply not OK, or is less than. This often causes a split between the part of us that learns to defend ourselves and tries to prove others wrong, and the part of us that internalizes some of the messages we have received.

While this is a huge topic, and cannot be addressed in one blog post, the following are four suggestions and a guided meditation for starting to heal some of the internal effects of discrimination.

#1 Exploring internalized beliefs
What messages did/do you receive about yourself that were/are “otherizing” and/or discriminatory in nature? What is the impact on your life now? Notice what you feel in your body as you start calling up these messages. Are there any places that feel tight, achy, or numb?

What coping strategies have you developed in response to these messages? Start noticing if there is a split in your psyche between the part of you that gets angry and tries to defend yourself, and the part that may have internalized some of the messages of not being enough?

#2 Compassion
The first step to healing is self-compassion. While it may seem obvious, many of us have learned to be our own harshest critics, especially when we are wanting to change. Notice any negative messages you are sending yourself, and send yourself love and understanding for that, knowing that this is an old strategy for trying to motivate yourself. And ask yourself if there is any way you can treat yourself more kindly.

The effect of discrimination and the internal split it causes often activates a trauma response in us. If you notice yourself going into fight/flight or (very commonly) freeze, instead of getting angry with yourself, see if you can send love to yourself.

#3 Forgiveness
Forgiveness can be a sticky topic, as it can seem like an invitation to condone or ignore structural inequality and prejudice. It may not always be accessible or appropriate. When we are able to access forgiveness, it is for ourselves, not the other. The intention is not to accept what has happened or social inequity, but rather to free ourselves from its effects so we are not held back from being our highest selves because of outsider fear energy that has been projected onto us.

Is there any particular event or person that you are not able to forgive? First give yourself compassion for the pain and anger that reside in you, knowing they are there for a reason. Give yourself permission to hang onto the anger as long as you need to feel safe. And then, start positing the possibility that at some point, you may be able to let go of what happened (or is happening, if it is ongoing). Not to condone it, but so you can be free from its effects. Knowing that whatever happened it had nothing to do with you. They were just acting out based on their fear and the messages they had received about power and the world.

#4 Reconnecting to your wholeness
Start feeling into the part of you that knows, deeply, that you are OK exactly as you are. If that feels like science fiction right now, you can put a hand on your heart and one on your belly, and breathe. Otherwise, imagine a situation where you feel completely yourself. It may be doing a creative activity, or a sport, or out in nature. Notice how that feels in your body, and invite your cells to memorize this feeling. This is your birthright. This is who you really are. Whole and complete. Exactly as you are.

The following is a guided meditation to start getting in touch with and heal our wounded younger parts (and if the wounding happened later in life, work with that age).

From -Ism to Is-ness2022-02-03T14:34:54+00:00
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