“Holding Space”

When someone is going through a very trying time in their life, experiencing heavy trials and tribulations, it’s natural for those close to that person to offer them advice, to suggest things to do, and to provide whatever guidance they think might help them. But I’ve come to learn over time that this isn’t really the best way to help a person who’s enduring pain and suffering. Instead, I’ve learned there’s something far better I can do to help someone in need and that’s to “hold space” for them.

Holding space is when a person is willing to walk alongside another in whatever journey they’re on without judging them, making them feel inadequate, trying to fix them, or trying to impact the outcome. Instead, they open their heart, offer unconditional support, and let go of all judgment and control. This isn’t an easy thing to do because it’s in our nature to want to fix people, give them advice, or judge them for not being further along the path than they are.

I’m just as guilty of doing this as I’m sure many others are as well. But to truly support someone in whatever they’re going through, I’ve found it’s not in my highest good to take their power away by trying to fix their problems, to shame them into feeling like they aren’t doing enough and could do better, or to overwhelm them by giving them more information than they can handle.

So what’s the alternative? Well it’s all about holding space, which means I stay by their side and allow them to make their own choices, to unconditionally love and support them no matter what they’re going through, to give gentle direction when needed, and help them feel safe even when they make a mistake.

I read an article by Heather Plett that helped me understand much of this technique and in it, she provided eight tips on how to do hold space well. They are:

  1. Give people permission to trust their own intuition and wisdom, instead of having them become overly reliant upon you.
  2. Give people as much information as they can handle, as too much information leaves a person feeling incompetent and unworthy.
  3. Don’t take their power away, as this helps to empower the person instead of feeling useless.
  4. Keep your own ego out of it by not going to the place of believing the person’s success is dependent on your intervention.
  5. Make them feel safe enough to fail by not offering judgments or shame and instead providing encouragement to take risks and to keep going even when they fail.
  6. Give guidance and help with humility and thoughtfulness by recognizing the areas in which the person feels most vulnerable and incapable and then offering the right kind of help without shaming them.
  7. Create a container for complex emotions, fear, trauma, etc. to surface, which allows a person to feel safe enough to fall apart in front of you.
  8. Allow them to make different decisions and to have different experiences than you would, as the way you might handle what they’re going through is far different than the way they need or are meant to go through it.

I know this seems like a tall order and trust me, I’ve failed many times trying to hold space for close friends and loved ones over the years. But I’m working daily now on holding space for my current partner and for those closest to me and sometimes I have success and sometimes I don’t. The bottom line is that I’m going to keep trying.

Holding space for someone who’s going through any difficulty in life isn’t easy, but it’s benefits are far greater than when we judge them, make them feel inadequate, try to fix them, or impact their outcome. Instead, we must open our hearts, offer our unconditional love and support, and let go of all judgment and control because in doing so, we will see that holding space can truly help a person no matter what they’re going through…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Becoming God-Reliant Versus People-Reliant

One of the biggest things I’m working on right now in life is becoming more God-reliant versus people-reliant. About a year ago, I wrote about moving away from a life of self-reliance, which is where most of my former addictions took me. But to be perfectly honest, I’ve also relied on people far too much as well to make me feel happy and safe. To counteract that, I’ve been spending a lot of time lately walking through a tremendous amount of fears with God alone, because ultimately, I found that people-reliance constantly let me down just like a life of self-reliance did.

When I was growing up, the people I was mostly reliant on were my mother and father. If I got a bad grade, a boo-boo, felt sick, was picked on, or didn’t do so well in some sport, I went to them for reassurance. Rarely did I pray to God for help and guidance.

Throughout my college years, I found various people there too to latch onto for reassurance. Whenever I felt down, alone, did poorly in a class, got in trouble, or was at odds with someone, I’d go to them to help me feel better. Once again, rarely, if ever, did I pray to God for any help and guidance.

Then came all those years I ventured off on my own, post-college. I’d say that for at least those first fifteen years, I’d consistently have a rotating amount of individuals in my life to rely upon when things weren’t going so well. Whether it was a partner, a codependent friend, or even some doctor or practitioner, I’d go to them to help me out of all those moments of depression, anxiety, break-ups, job losses, family deaths, and plenty of other things too, instead of trying to go to God for any help or guidance.

Unfortunately, none of this people-reliance truly helped me in the long run. I became so codependent that time and time again everyone would eventually end up failing to give me the reassurance I most needed, which was just to feel safe. Sadly, I never quite learned how to do that with God from the very earliest moments of my life.

This is why I’m now finding it such a struggle lately to walk through all the fears I’m finding myself trudge through because I’m not going to all those people for reassurance anymore. While I do have a select few that continue to help me on my spiritual path, I’m spending a lot more time now alone on my knees praying and asking for the help I wished I had started doing a long time ago. While I can’t go back in time to change that, I believe I still have a good chunk of my life ahead of me, one where I hope to truly become more God-reliant instead of people-reliant…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson