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Surrender and Letting Go

A Very Commonplace Gesture
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Psychoanalysis and psychology let us know that repression is unhealthy. Yet, we frequently find ourselves sublimating ourselves when we are resisting something new. The’funny’ thing is, we withstand the new even in many times where we’re on the edge of having a new desire manifest in our life, or where we are about to achieve or learn something new and fantastic.

What we repress in these instances is our desire to surrender to something new and forceful that we think will make our life miles better than it was before. We wish to surrender to this new wave of good fortune, let it wash over us, carry us where we would like to be, where we feel we belong now.

But , we have a problem : we have been taught that only tiny kids surrender, and they do so because they’re weak and helpless or have no idea any better. We’ve been taught that folk who surrender are defeated people–after all, if there’s a war and your side surrenders, your side lost and the enemy can impose its will on you. If you surrender all hope, you have completely given up on having or doing something you wanted. So–if you surrender to something that you are puny, or ignorant, or you have been beaten ; and in all those cases you are in danger of being mistreated.

Yet, as we use’surrender’ as a usually negative metaphor, we don’t see that surrendering to something truly just means to stop resisting it ; and if that something is good and wonderful, why shouldn’t we surrender to it? But , of course, this implies we must give up our fake sense of already being perfect and complete. We surrender this concept ; we surrender to the nice thing that’s making an attempt to tear down our walls of scared resistance so it can present us with its blessings.

Probably the most prominent example we have of this is falling in love. When many of us are finding themselves falling completely in love with somebody, or they meet someone who could very well be a dream ( wo ) man, they don’t exhibit their feelings for them. As an important point, what number of us essentially give the person mixed or false signals? We try and cheat them ; we make them think that we do not find them to be anything special…we have no need for them…sure they’re nice and we enjoy their company but that is’s the way that we feel about many of us, what’s so nice about them?..we actually hate to burst their bubble, but…they have no power over us!

As a matter of fact, we’d tell ourselves those very same lies. Why do we do these childish things when it comes to the best force in the world–love? We fear being hurt, that is the reason why. What if we surrender to our love to find out that we’re not good enough and don’t make them happy? What if the relationship turns bad after some year and it all has to end? What if ( s ) he turns out to truly be some terrible beast? What if…what if…?

‘What if’ may be employed as a statement of novel opportunities, but too many times it becomes used as a statement of fear. We do not have to fear the love that comes to find us. We can surrender to it sweetly, and let ourselves be swept away in grace and beauty, repressed and hurting ourselves no more.

Letting Go

Letting go of the old is one of the hardest things in the world for most human beings. Letting go of old worn-out habits, old ineffective thought patterns, old routines that simply do not fit anymore, old impressions of places or folk that are now no longer useful, old feelings that are emotional scars that will not heal and get in the way of progress, are all things that most of the people when reading of them nod their heads and agree should be thrown away like an old ratty security blanket from youth. Yet, how few of those folks actually would dump or learn past these things! Most would just continue holding on to them.

Change–which is the one constant in the universe and in life–is quite a scary thing for most people. Not tiny changes, for tiny changes are so common to our everyday experience that we even take them for granted. We take for granted that the sky will change and it’ll be lighter today and darker tonight, or if it is clouded today it’ll be bright in a day or 2. We even take for granted some longer-term changes ; we all know that we were shorter and weaker when we were 5 than we are now, and we know that the short, puny five-year-old before us will one day grow into a taller, stronger woman or man. There are even some gloomy changes that we take for granted : if we have a pet dog we all know that one day that dog will grow old and die. We hate to think of that day and so we rarely do, but we know it will happen and we don’t lose sleep over it.

But there are other norms that we cling to with a quiet despondency, and anything that threatens to modify them we feel threatens us. The thing of it really is, all these changes have to do with things that are within us. They could be embodied in outward circumstances, for example our careers or homes, but even then they must do with what we feel we are as a soul, a personality.

There is one thing that most adults fear more than death or, it appears, even physical torture. And that’thing’ is being wrong. It is this fear of being wrong that impedes us, the majority of the time, from letting go of the old. Too many times, when we are about to let go of the old we feel that we are admitting to having been wrong ( and the assumption that there’s something shameful about being wrong is itself a negative, fake assumption ). You see, we feel as if we have invested just too much time and energy to learn and work out what we think we have. We have , an overwhelmingly dynamic emotional investment in what we think we know–our techniques of doing stuff, our priorities, our beliefs, our feelings about folks and places and things.

The ego, which is rightly the gatekeeper to our spirit, claims to us,’Wait a minute! You’re thinking about changing you techniques with this? You are making preparations to change your opinion about that? Don’t you remember when that certain event happened to you that proved to you the way you’ve been doing things since then works? You’re safe! Why change? It could be really dangerous!’

But the ego forgets that change is the only continual in life. It forgets that the past is dead ; only the here and now is real. We will be able to let go of the old when we find that it’s no longer helpful, or it gets in the way of a different level of achievement, or our circumstances have changed. It is natural for us to let go of the old ; for as children we do so easily. But as we age, we become a bit more and a little more expected to have permanent understanding of stuff. Our society values our pride in thinking we all know everything. Instead, we can and must learn how to show pride in being courageous about making howlers, changing, seeing a new point of view, letting go of the old, and reveling in the never-ending journey the end of which is not an arrival but an evolution into ever-new probabilities.

If you’re looking for a tool or technique which will help you to let go, there are a number of options you can consider. However , one that i have found to work outstandingly well for me is the Sedona Method. It’s a straightforward and easy-to-learn system which will work for any one. You learn how to tap your natural capability to let go of uncomfortable and unwanted feelings on the spot. It will help you release old patterns of discomfort, damaging habits, or poisonous relations.

When you wish to buy the Sedona Method course, check out a review to affirm that it’s what you are looking for. I discovered from a Sedona Method review that it is unique is in its universal applicability. You just need to check the list of conditions that may receive benefit from this one simple, yet potent, tool that are noted on the site.

Dougie Rossin is a self help expert, author and blogger who has a deep interest in self improvement and personal growth. His number one recommendation is the review of the Sedona Method.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/self-help-articles/surrender-and-letting-go-1536286.html


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