Gift : 12 Lessons to Save Your Life Edith Eger (pdf e book reader TXT) đ
- Author: Edith Eger
Book online «Gift : 12 Lessons to Save Your Life Edith Eger (pdf e book reader TXT) đ». Author Edith Eger
âI do my best to make sure theyâre safe,â she said. âBut I wonât always be there to protect them. I donât want them to live in fear. I donât want to pass on the fear.â
But everyday events, like dropping her daughter off at camp, provoke enormous fear. âIâm up all night, thinking, âWhatâs going to happen to her? Is something happening to her right now?âââ
We should never stop seeking safety and justice, doing everything in our power to protect ourselves, our loved ones, our neighbors, our fellow humans. But we have a choice how much of our lives we give over to fear.
Fear uses the most insistent, relentless, provocative words: what if, what if, what if? When fear comes like a panic storm, and your body shakes and your heart races and the trauma you already survived threatens to swallow you, take your own precious hand and say, âThank you, fear, for wanting to protect me.â Then say, âThat was then, this is now.â Say it over and over again. You already made it. Here you are. Wrap your arms around yourself and rub your own shoulders. âAttagirl,â you say. âLove you.â
You never know whatâs coming from the outside. You canât predict who might show up to cause harmâyell an insult, throw a punch, break a promise, betray your trust, drop a bomb, start a war. I wish I could tell you that tomorrow the world will be safe from cruelty and violence and prejudice, from rape and depravity and genocide. But that world may not ever come. We live in a world with danger, and so we live in a world with fear. Your safety isnât guaranteed.
But fear and love donât coexist. And fear doesnât have to rule your life.
Releasing the fear starts with you.
When weâve been hurt or betrayed, it isnât easy to let go of the fear that weâll be hurt again.
Fearâs favorite words are âI told you so.â I told you youâd regret it. I told you it was too risky. I told you it wouldnât turn out well.
And we hate to disappoint our hunches.
We hold on to fear, thinking vigilance will protect us, but fear becomes a relentless cycle, a self-fulfilling prophecy. A better protection against suffering is to know how to love and forgive yourself, to be safe for yourself, to not punish yourself for the mistakes and hurt and pain that are inevitable parts of life.
This was Kathleenâs struggle when I spoke with her in the aftermath of her husbandâs affair.
Sheâd been happily enjoying her twelfth year of marriage to a handsome, accomplished doctor, taking a pause in her career to focus on their young sons, when she got the phone call. A man sheâd never heard of claimed to run an escort service and threatened to expose her husbandâs affair with one of the escorts and ruin his career if she didnât pay up. It was sordid and outlandish, the stuff of soap operas and nightmares. But when she confronted her husband, he said it was true. Heâd engaged the services of an escort. The man whoâd called Kathleen was her pimp.
Kathleen went into a state of shock. She shook uncontrollably, she couldnât eat or sleep. Her world was upside down and inside out. How had she been so oblivious to the truth? She entered a state of perpetual vigilance, prodding her life for clues that would help her understand why her husband had cheated, and for evidence that he might be straying again.
But over timeâand with lots of help from a marriage counselorâthe infidelity became an opportunity for her and her husband to rediscover their marriage, to rekindle intimacy. As they regained stability, he surprised her by becoming more attentive and romantic. Their marriage felt more joyful. They hosted a giant Christmas party, their house full of light. On Valentineâs Day, her husband woke her before dawn and led her down the dark hall to the staircase bedecked in rose petals and twinkling tea lights. They sat in their robes together and cried. Sweetness and trust had returned to their relationship.
Little did she know he was weeks away from another destructive decisionâthe start of another affair with a young colleagueâor that in a few months she would stumble on a passionate letter that heâd written to his lover.
Kathleen and I spoke two years after the devastating discovery that heâd betrayed her again. She chose to stay in the marriage, and once more they engaged in intensive couples therapy and rebuilt their relationship, from the ground up. She told me that in many ways their bond feels stronger than ever. Her husband is less walled off, less prone to edginess, more affectionateâhe hugs and kisses and comforts her, checks in frequently, video calls her from work or dials out from his work phone so she knows heâs really where he says he is. Heâs open about why he cheated againââI was a powerful narcissist, trying to have it all,â he saysâand speaks his heartfelt regret.
But Kathleen is still imprisoned by fear.
âI have the loving, attentive husband Iâve always wanted,â she said. âBut I canât accept it. I canât believe it. I play the mind movies all day, reliving the past, waiting for the other shoe to drop, for him to cheat again. I know that Iâm robbing myself of my own life. I know I need to learn to trust him again. Iâm trying to stay in the present. But I canât escape the fear. I canât stop policing and monitoring him.â
When weâre living with a lot of doubt, weâre on the lookout for signs that will calmâor confirm!âour fears. But whatever weâre looking for on the outside, we need to address within.
âMaybe itâs not your husband that youâre doubting,â I said. âMaybe itâs you. I heard you say four times, âI canât.âââ
Her bright eyes filled with tears.
âYouâre not giving yourself enough credit. So letâs work on dissolving that self-doubt.â
The prison of fear
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