The past, the present, the future. Where we choose to focus our attention has a profound effect on the quality of our lives.
Here you can read the 10 steps to stop the past spoiling relationships you have now.
Example 1: When what we have learned in the past is applied to the here and now we have the opportunity to develop new ways of behaving. Making the right choices in the present allows us to look forward to a future free of limiting beliefs and negative patterns of behaviours.
Example 2: If we fail to learn from the past, life has a habit of presenting the same lesson over and over again, until we actually learn and make a change for the better.
An example of this in a relationship: Some people choose the same sort of partners time and time again with disastrous consequences… A client had suffered through a string of terrible relationships. When we analysed what was going on she had always chosen her partner on criteria based on external characteristics, looks, lifestyle etc. When she began to think about the values she thought were important and likely to sustain a long term, loving relationship she realised that her ideal partner would need to be from a very different mould. A few weeks later she met such a man and they are now enjoying life together.
You can choose not to hold on to a negative past
Negative emotions are extremely expensive in energy terms and are corrosive to a sense of self worth and wellbeing. Holding on to anger, frustration, hate or a sense of rejection does nothing to get back at the person who has caused the initial hurt.
Understanding that you CAN choose for things to be different, giving yourself permission to express your feelings and then to forgive absolutely, gives you a sense of freedom, control and serenity.
By letting go of baggage many years after experiencing abuse or unhappiness, the clients I have worked with created a different and very positive present, and an exciting future for themselves.
Letting go does not mean forgetting all about the issue, it is about deciding to let go of the negative emotions surrounding the problem. Absolute forgiveness leaves the path clear for peace and space for growth.
When negative emotions have built up over a period of time, people have a tendency to interpret other people’s motives in a particular way. It is a default setting that causes the consideration of every action or lack of action, every word or lack of one from the person who we feel let down by, as being hurtful.
Lack of learning and continued negativity results in the continued interpretation of motives in a particular way so each situation becomes more proof that the negative thinking is right. The result is hurt piles on top of hurt with the potential to destroy the relationship.
Does your default setting take you to a negative place?
Think about the emotion you feel most commonly in the relationship that is causing you pain.
In the last week, which are the five emotions you have felt most commonly? List them:
1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
If you have spent a lot of time feeling negative emotions maybe it is time to break the pattern.
Your past does not have to dictate your future
We can actively choose to do things very differently. We can choose to create a set of empowering beliefs that support the very best future.
- This is not about giving in or thinking about who is in the right and who is in the wrong.
- It is about choosing whether you want your present and your future to be better.
Those who have suffered abuse as a child, been bullied or who have lived in unhappy circumstances have the choice to let their awful circumstances blight not only their childhood but their adult life too.
They can bring with them the sense of lack and a belief that they deserve no better, or they can let go of the past and the negative emotions created by their past.
Or
They can make a conscious decision to make adult life count for something else and if they have children, to ensure that their children’s childhood is very different.
You have that same choice. A useful place to start is to look at the way you interpret another person’s motive.
Step 1 – Identify your emotions.
Identify all the negative emotions you feel on a regular basis. Make a list.
Step 2 - What makes you feel this way?
Look at your list and identify what specifically makes you feel that way.
How much of the way you feel is actually based on something from your past? Does it remind you of the way you were treated by a parent or a previous partner? It is not uncommon for a tone of voice or specific actions to trigger powerful emotions from past situations. Have the two situations become confused? Do you need to deal with your baggage from this past relationship rather than let it spoil this one?
Step 3 – Change your physiology.
The way you stand, how you breathe, and your facial expressions all impact on the way you feel. If you are feeling sad, or angry or rejected change your physiology before you attempt to change your thinking.
You can do this by giving yourself a physical shake, by dancing round the room, gurning in the mirror, hopping on one leg or doing a silly walk. Dramatically changing your physiology will change your mood and emotional state.
Step 4 – Consider a different possibility.
Consider the possibility that the motive you have attached to the person and situation could be different in reality to the one you have assumed.
Is your partner doing and saying (or not doing or saying) something specifically to hurt or annoy you or could there be a different reason? Could it be that their behaviour is more about them?
Step 5 – Interpret the motive differently.
Consider how things would be different when you choose to interpret their motive as being less about you and more about them.
Step 6 – Change the trigger to the negative emotion.
People have a tendency to make conditions for feeling emotions. They often make the conditions for feeling positive emotions very difficult to achieve and those for feeling negative emotions very easy.
I will only feel happy when… I have the perfect partner, a top notch job, a huge house, children who never argue and always keep their room tidy, a holiday home on a desert island and.. and.. you get the picture. Even when they achieve all the conditions for achieving happiness the likelihood is that they will simply add more conditions.
I feel rejected… every time my partner is late home from work, or when they don’t have time to talk to me when I phone them at work, or when they respond to a phone call from work, or when they bring work home or when they don’t hear what I say or when they disagree with me or.. or …
You can choose to do it differently. Our emotional state is actually a choice we make!
Make it easy to feel positive emotions:
It is a new day, I choose to be happy. Every time I see someone smile, or I give or receive a hug or a kiss, or I see the beauty of nature or I focus on helping others or I ask for or accept help I will feel happy.
Make a decision to make it more difficult to feel negative emotions:
I will feel rejection only when they kick me in the shin, spit in my eye and tell me they reject me. Rejection only comes if I were to consistently believe in the illusion that it is all about me and when I consistently focus on what I don’t have rather than what I do. Instead I choose to take the opportunity to make the first smile, ask about them, lighten up and enjoy.
Create your own list of conditions for achieving positive and negative emotions.
Step 6 – Breaking the pattern.
Most partnerships have a pattern of behaviour and response. Eventually the responses within the relationship become automatic. This is particularly true of relationships where there is negative behaviour going on (including that of parent and child). Each person takes on a role and the initial trigger and response become automatic and an ongoing cycle of negative behaviour is created. There is little room for interpretation – it is as if each person is programmed to behave in that specific way and indeed that is exactly what is happening. Until someone breaks the pattern, the cycle of hurt and unhappiness will continue.
Think about how you have responded to your partner in the past.
Now think about how you might do things differently.
Step 7 – Identifying different responses
Think about how it feels to take an active choice to do things differently, to take control of the situation and to know that you have so many more options.
- Identify the three situations in your relationship that currently give you the most pain.
- Change your perception of the motive behind the actions that are the problem.
- Think about how you might do things differently in each situation and create a list of as many possibilities as you can.
It is important that this comes from a positive place within you. This is about changing your responses to the situation not about trying to change them.
Rehearsing your new alternative in your head can be very helpful. Have several alternatives ready for the right circumstance when they happen so you feel prepared.
Step 8 - Trying out the non-judgmental response
Be curious about how things are going to work and remember you are just trying things out, you may need to try the same thing several times or try several alternatives before finding ones which work for you. Remember too that trying something once is unlikely to be a magic bullet.
A small change consistently applied can make an enormous difference over time.
Remember step 3… the tone of voice, your body language and facial expression are all incredibly important. Simply saying words is not enough. See yourself as others see you, watch what is really going on.
Step 9 – Evaluate what is going on
If things work well – celebrate. If it doesn’t appear to work as well as you would like ask yourself “what can I learn from this?”. Think about whether you simply need to persevere with the same thing or whether things need to be done differently in the future.
Make yourself the focus, you are the only thing you can truly control. This is not about failure, it is about experimenting until you find which way works.
Step 10 – Get some support and help
Dealing with your sense of self worth and identity makes an enormous difference to how you feel about life and relationships. Dealing with your own emotional baggage and learning to forgive others and yourself will give you the very best foundation to enjoy a wonderful present and an empowering future. Working with someone you trust and who can help you manage the process can be incredibly helpful.
You cannot change the past. What you can do is make sure it doesn’t spoil your present and your future.