Morning Vibes With Dr Jerry - The First-Episode 159/The Difference Between Letting Go and Running Away
Monday 19th February 2018
Morning Vibes With Dr. Jerry - the First
Hello and welcome to
#MorningVibesWithDrJerryTheFirst-Episode 159
Title: The
Difference Between Letting Go and Running Away
This is a true life story
of a Lady who was deeply hurt in her adolescent stage and who instead of
letting go of the hurt and pain decided to run away from the hurt.
I am retelling the story
in her words.
I do hope that this story
would resonate with you if you are in the same exact situation where you have
allowed yourself to run away from any hurts of the past instead of resolving
them and letting them go
“It’s about our ability to leave our death on the battlefield of
life. Or having the strength and courage to give them our love and to bring
them back.” ~Edward Frenkel
"It took me almost
twenty years to realize that running away from ourselves isn’t the same as
letting go.
That realization, as with
so many others, came at a time when I was at one of my lowest points.
The day everything changed
began as one of the worst of my life.
I was struggling with the
breakup of a long-term relationship.
We’d been due to move in
together when I discovered he’d betrayed my trust so badly that remaining in a
relationship was impossible.
I was working long hours
in a job I'd grown to hate and I was exhausted. I was barely sleeping, and when
I did it was the kind of nightmare-filled, fitful sleep that took forever to
return from.
I'd wake up each morning
feeling as though I'd been in a battle as I slept. My fatigue was so overwhelming
that I could barely manage to keep my house clean and parent my son.
I was beat, emotionally,
physically, and spiritually.
My son was staying with his grandmother for the weekend, and
once I no longer had to hold it together for him the floodgates opened. It was
more than the loss of the man I’d believed I would spend the rest of my life
with; it was the knowledge that my life had become passionless across the
board.
I wanted to live a
creative life, to sustain myself and my son via spiritual and creative
expression. But I felt blocked at every turn and I could no longer hold in my
grief and desolation.
I spent hours wandering
from room to room in my silent house. Every now and then I would curl up on the
floor and howl uncontrollably. Eventually, I couldn’t cry any longer and I
wrapped myself in my duvet and put videos on autoplay, hoping to distract
myself into numbness.
That’s when it happened. I
was half-listening to a talk by the mathematician Edward Frenkel. I’d heard it
before and enjoyed it, but this time something he said utterly gut-punched me.
He said:
“Do you leave your deaths on the battlefield of life, or do you
have the strength and courage to give them your love and bring them back?”
And that was when I knew
Edward Frenkel and I had something in common. We both knew something about
dying.
Frenkel described a time
in his life he had only recently begun to understand. It was a moment when he
was sixteen and he was refused a place at university in Russia because of his
Jewish heritage.
Despite going on to become
wildly successful in his field, he spent years disconnected to the
sixteen-year-old adolescent inside of him. To the pain of that moment when his
dreams were crushed.
As I listened
suddenly she was there
again. The girl I had tried to forget. The girl I had left on my own
battlefield.
I’d spent years training as a contemporary dancer. I won
scholarships and top roles in performances as well as competitions in
choreography. I was young, talented, passionate, and obsessed.
One dance school called me
more than others and I dreamed of finishing my training there. The day of the
audition, on my seventeenth birthday, I traveled to that dance school, floating
on a wave of excitement, nerves, and a sense of ‘rightness.’ Of knowing this
was exactly where I needed to be.
The process was
emotionally brutal. Only five people out of a cohort of over forty were called
to the next stage after doing group classes and individual solos. The rest were
told to go home, as they’d been unsuccessful.
I was one of the five. I
waited in the corridor for my physical exam and interview. The instructor told
us to relax, we’d passed the dance part of the audition and now it was just
wrapping up the formalities. We talked about what it would be like in September
when we started.
I went home and slept in a
kind of peaceful joy, knowing my dreams were coming true.
Three days passed and the
letter arrived. I began to tear it open, barely registering that it didn’t look
quite right.
It wasn’t a thick envelope, stuffed full of information about
course equipment and places to live; this envelope was small and thin. Inside
was a letter that simply said they regretted to inform me I had been
unsuccessful.
And that was the day a
part of me died. She stayed dead for a very long time.
I wasn’t as strong as
Edward Frenkel, who continued with Math. I know nothing about his home life,
but mine at the time was awful.
Layers of trauma from a
close relative’s mental health issues were taking their toll. I’d witnessed multiple
suicide attempts and holding it together for my mother, who was struggling to
cope, had torn into my psyche.
Dance had been my
refuge from all that. The one thing that had never let me down. The one thing I
trusted, believed in, and knew with everything I had I would do with my life.
The shock of the rejection
floored me. I didn’t know what to do. I cried, once.
And then? I ran.
I wasn’t strong enough to pick myself up and audition again the
next year. Instead, I ran away. I ran to an older, abusive boyfriend. I ran to
university instead of dance school. I ran to drugs. I ran to self-harm that
lasted right up until the day I became a mother.
That day almost twenty
years later, as I listened to Edward Frenkel's words I realized that at aged
thirty-six I was still running.
Part of me had died that
day; the part of me that was filled with creative passion and obsession. The
part of me that felt a spiritual flow and call so deep there were no words for
it.
I’d spent years putting a
band-aid on the pain. I busied myself with little creative projects, even
danced a bit as a hobby. I’d told myself it was okay and I had to let her go. Let go of the passion I'd once felt, the
sense of rightness and surety.
But I was kidding myself.
I hadn’t been letting her go all those years. I’d been running away from her,
running away from the pain of rejection. And not only that, the fear of
rejection was still so great I was running from my current creative dreams.
That day my head began
spinning. Could I go back for her? For that girl I’d left dead on the
battlefield of my life? How could I, after so many years of rejecting her?
I paced my room for a few
more minutes and then slowly something shifted. I picked up the phone and I
called a good friend.
That night we drove to the
beach.
I’ve always had an
affinity for the sea. It’s where I feel the most alive and peaceful. The stars
were out in the clear night sky and pools of water on the sand held the moon’s
reflection. I walked alone to the water’s edge and quietly I began to talk to
that girl.
She was angry. Hurt. I’d
rejected her and denied her existence for so many years. But slowly, she began
to listen.
I told her that yes the dream we’d had was over and I was sorry
for running away from that dream. I told her I was sorry for running away from
her. I told her I loved her. Deeply and completely. And, I told her that if she
wanted, we could create a new dream together.
There were a few moments
of silence and then I felt her. She was inside me, still. And I realized that
all those years I’d been trying to forget her, to ‘let go’ of her, to surrender
her passions, when what I really needed to do was embrace her.
In order to let go of the
pain, I had to accept it, allow it, and integrate it and my past self into who
I was now.
Killing her had done
nothing for me. It was only by having the strength and courage to give her my
love and bring her back to me that I could stop letting the shattered dreams of
the past rule my dreams in the present.
That night I slept
properly for the first time in weeks and when I woke up I knew what to do.
For so many years I’d
played at the edges of a creative career. I’d told myself it was “unrealistic”
or I’d get round to it “one day.” But I was lying to myself.
The truth was I'd been so afraid to feel the rejection of my
passion again that I sidelined every opportunity that came my way.
This is what happens when
we cut ourselves off from our passions in an attempt to protect ourselves from
pain.
Because we've been hurt,
we try to stay safe by remaining wherever feels comfortable, even if that
comfort is actually preventing us from accessing potential joy.
But without risking pain,
we prevent ourselves from growing, and the irony is that by holding ourselves
down to ensure we don't fall we actually create far more pain in the long run.
When we go outside of our
comfort zones and risk falling it opens up a whole new world of purpose,
excitement, and engagement.
Realizing this was
difficult but liberating.
A year after that morning
I’d quit the job I hated and was making a living from writing, my other great
creative passion.
It wasn’t easy.
Facing down every
objection my mind could throw up about why I should just go back to what was
familiar was challenging and sometimes exhausting. Sometimes it hurt like hell.
To date, I’ve had my
writing rejected more times than I can count.
But with each rejection,
she’s there. I hold her close. I tell her I love her.
Together we dance. Then we
begin again."
https://tinybuddha.com/blog/the-difference-between-letting-go-and-running-away
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again, this is #MorningVibesWithDrJerryTheFirst
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It doesn't matter how many times a man falls. What counts is his ability to get up after every fall. I've been there and I understand exactly what she felt but time and experience eventually heals everything.
ReplyDeleteThanks @Kelechi Obasi for your wonderful comment and I totally agree with you that the character of a man is judged not when he has fallen but when he musters enough courage to rise and continue with his journey. Great comment you made here
ReplyDelete