Feeling Hurt? Recite “Love, Forgiveness, Peace”!

My heart became extremely heavy the other day after spending a short period of time with my partner’s family members. For the entire hour I was with them, not one person struck up a single conversation with me nor did the majority even say hello to me when I arrived. Sadly, things really haven’t been the same with any of them for around a year now since a disagreement transpired over a family heirloom (a ring) that my partner gave me. While the two of us have done everything we can to mend this rift, it’s clearly visible that most of them still don’t want to. Thankfully though, I never got resentful with any of them the entire time I was there that day or even after leaving and I believe that’s due to only one reason. I continue to recite three simple words in situations like this when I’m feeling hurt and they are “love, forgiveness, and peace”.

About a year ago I wrote an entry on this very subject, which you can find by clicking here. In it I talk about how I used to be a very resentful person, especially when things didn’t go my ego’s way. In fact, how my partner’s family has been treating me is a prime example of something that used to drive me to complete anger and maybe even rage not all that long ago. But my spiritual teacher taught me the power of saying the words “love, forgiveness, and peace” anytime I’m feeling hurt and it became quite evident to me the other day when all this happened that doing so definitely helped.

Looking beyond this healthy practice, I honestly wish I knew why my partner’s family has such issues with me. I’ve done everything I can to show them unconditional love and be a part of their extended family, but for whatever their reasons they’ve kept the door shut on it. I have my theories why that is, except saying them would only be pure speculation and judgment at this point in time. The reality I’ve come to is that it really doesn’t matter. What I believe does matter though is that I continue practicing unconditional love towards each of them, even when in the midst of not getting any of it in return. So far the only way I’ve been able to achieve that is to recite over and over again those three words, “love, forgiveness, and peace” anytime I get around any of my partner’s family.

Saying these words during each of the moments when I’m feeling rejected and hurt by them seems to help me become more compassionate with them. Somehow my pain gets transformed into unconditional love instead of anger and hate in doing so. While I’m sure my ego would like to understand why that is, I’m just grateful it does, as I never liked being that resentful person I once was when I didn’t utilize these three simple words regularly in my life.

So if you happen to be someone who is feeling hurt from one of your own situations right now in life, I encourage you to take a moment, breathe, and start reciting the words “love, forgiveness, and peace” towards it again and again. In doing so, I’m sure you too will find yourself becoming transformed from a person once filled with anger and resentment to that of unconditional love and light…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

“Examine Your Motives!”

My ego can justify just about anything when it really wants to, which is dangerous especially when it leads to addictive behaviors. But a sponsor in recovery once told me something to combat any of those illusions my ego often tries to create and it came in the form of three words, “Examine your motives!”

Examining my motives is definitely something I didn’t do when I was acting out in any of my former addictions. Take my past addiction to alcohol for example. One of the things my ego would frequently tell me was to drive a certain way home because it would be more convenient. But it wasn’t the convenience of less time in my car that it was referring to, even though at a surface level I would believe that. The real convenience was that I would actually pass by a package store on that route home that sold my favorite beer.

The same principle holds true with my past sex and love addiction. My ego has occasionally tried to tell me to attend a new meeting I’ve never been to before. On the surface level that seems harmless now doesn’t it? But truthfully, the real reason it wants me to go there was only to see a person who attends it that just so happens to be someone I’m seriously attracted to.

In either of these cases, using the three words, “Examine your motives!” has helped me to re-evaluate any of those quick impulses my ego ever tries to send my way. So when it tries whispering to me to hang out with someone in recovery because they have good things to say when they speak, I only have to apply these three simple words to realize my real motive is a serious attraction I have to that person.

I apply this three word motto today to as many different things as I can including the friends I hang out with, the meetings I go to, the sponsees I take on, the events I attend, or the places I might stop by. Numerous times I discover my ego’s hidden agenda by just slowing down enough to say this phrase, “Examine your motives!” a few times. The fact is my ego is quite crafty and has time and time and time again led me into one addictive behavior after another because I didn’t do that. Taking even the slightest moment though to say this phrase has often been enough to prevent me from going down that slippery slope.

So the next time you find yourself about to make a quick decision to do something, I encourage you to take a moment, breathe, and say to yourself a few times, “Examine your motives!” It may be exactly what’s needed for your Higher Power to show you the craftiness your ego is trying to create in that particular situation. It has at least for me, and hopefully it will for you as well…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

The Feel, Deal, And Heal Path Of Life

If you have ever suffered from spiritual, mental, emotional, or physical pain, how have you handled it? Did you try to numb it with something until it went away? Or did you totally feel, deal, and then find yourself completely heal from it?

I heard this expression long ago about the feel, deal, and heal path of life in that it’s next to impossible for any of us to ever heal from anything unless we feel and deal with it first. It took me a good while to figure this out, but over time I did and now it’s become my way of living.

I honestly think it’s quite common for most of us in this world to want to numb ourselves when anything painful happens. Life has many of those moments such as ones that deal with death and dying, poor health issues, friendships ending, job losses, divorces and break-ups, financial hardships, and well I’m sure you get the point. But how does each of us go through any one of these things when they happen to us? Movies and television shows constantly tell us that alcohol and drugs are the primary source of comfort we should seek when any of them manifest, except that’s an illusion as they’re only numbing a person from beginning that path to healing. There are plenty of others ways we can numb ourselves in this world as well if any one of these burdens in life should arise. Overeating, smoking, binge shopping, becoming highly medicated, and gambling are just some of the many ways we may try to do that. Unfortunately, none of these things do anything more than stave off the healing process. In other words, they suppress our pain for a time, and in my case, for years.

Take for example when I went off to college. I knew then on some level that I was attracted to the same sex as me and that was an extremely painful time in my life. I didn’t want to be that way, as it wasn’t the norm I saw around me so I chose alcohol and drugs as my outlet to numb myself from feeling any of it. Four years later I was no closer to dealing with that pain and instead alcohol and drugs were ruling my life. It took me getting fully clean and sober from them both to begin the path of dealing with my sexuality. And eventually, once I dealt with it enough through therapy, recovery, and the like I came to acceptance and was healed from the pain it originally caused me.

The same thing held true with my father’s suicide. Although I was clean and sober from alcohol and drugs when he passed, I utilized other numbing agents such as money, sex, and doctor’s prescriptions to bring me comfort. It took me three years to actually stop doing each of these things and start feeling the pain of his death in entirety instead. Once I did, I went to various support groups, joined a men’s spiritual organization, and used a therapist to deal with that pain. And eventually, once I dealt with it enough like I did with my sexuality, I came to acceptance and was healed from the pain of my father’s death that I had tried to avoid for all that time.

I have learned in my life through repeatedly trying to numb myself from any of life’s difficulties such as with my sexuality and my father’s suicide, that it will always just prolong that which I seek within, which is to heal. To get to the place where I became fully healed required me to feel the pain in its entirety first. It was never easy, but God consistently put enough support in my life when I became ready to completely face it without staying numb. Through that support, I was able to endure the pain until the day arrived when I reached acceptance of whatever the difficulty originally was. And time and time again when I did, that’s when I’ve realized I had ultimately been healed.

So if you should happen to be going through any one of life’s arduous moments at the present time, I encourage you to take a moment, breathe, and try to not numb yourself from feeling its pain. Fully feeling it in its entirety is so crucial to being able to fully deal with it. And fully dealing with it is so crucial to being able to fully heal from it. Don’t let your ego tell you otherwise like mine did for decades, and know that God can and will get you through whatever it is when you’re ready to face it unanesthetized…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson