"Evolution is speeding up, not time. Consciousness is evolving, becoming aware of itself as creation's mentor. Children are evolution's front edge. They push at boundaries... challenge the status quo...irritate convention. That is their job...to set free all that sullies the human heart and blinds the mind to the relationship between the Creator and the Created." ~P.M.H. Atwater~
MY WORK...MY PASSION
~ Certified Transpersonal Hypnotherapist ~ Dream Analysis (Jungian, Gestalt, Freudian) Workshops ~ Trained Psychotherapist: 13 Years Experience (Gestalt, Jungian, Zen, Reality and Energy Therapies) ~ Men and Their Journey: the neuroscience of the male brain, and the implications in sexuality, education and relationship ~ Women: Their Transformation and Empowerment ~ ATOD (Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs) : 21 years experience ~ Ordained Interfaith Minister & Official Celebrant ~ Child and Human Rights Advocate ~ Spiritual Guide and Intuitive ~ Certified Reiki Practitioner ~ Mediation / Conflict Resolution • “Intentional Love” Parenting Strategy Groups ~ Parenting Workshops ~ Coaching for parents of Indigo, Crystal, and Rainbow Children ~ International Training: Israel & England ~ Critical Incident Stress Debriefing ~ Post-911 and Post-Katrina volunteer
B.S.UNCG M.S. UNC-Chapel Hill
"The degree of our enlightenment is the degree of passion that we will have for the whole world."
~The Greystone Mandala~ ~
"Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow."
Thursday, April 28, 2011
THE WAYSEER MANIFESTO........... “
"What Is Emotional Abuse?"
from the Counseling Center at the University Of Illinois:
What is Emotional Abuse?
Types of Emotional Abuse
- Aggressive forms of abuse include name-calling, accusing, blaming, threatening, and ordering. Aggressing behaviors are generally direct and obvious. The one-up position the abuser assumes by attempting to judge or invalidate the recipient undermines the equality and autonomy that are essential to healthy adult relationships. This parent-to-child pattern of communication (which is common to all forms of verbal abuse) is most obvious when the abuser takes an aggressive stance.
- Aggressive abuse can also take a more indirect form and may even be disguised as “helping.” Criticizing, advising, offering solutions, analyzing, probing, and questioning another person may be a sincere attempt to help. In some instances, however, these behaviors may be an attempt to belittle, control, or demean rather than help. The underlying judgmental “I know best” tone the abuser takes in these situations is inappropriate and creates unequal footing in peer relationships.
- Invalidating seeks to distort or undermine the recipient’s perceptions of their world. Invalidating occurs when the abuser refuses or fails to acknowledge reality. For example, if the recipient confronts the abuser about an incident of name calling, the abuser may insist, “I never said that,” “I don’t know what you’re talking about, “ etc.
- Withholding is another form of denying. Withholding includes refusing to listen, refusing to communicate, and emotionally withdrawing as punishment. This is sometimes called the “silent treatment.”
- Countering occurs when the abuser views the recipient as an extension of themselves and denies any viewpoints or feelings which differ from their own.
- Minimizing is a less extreme form of denial. When minimizing, the abuser may not deny that a particular event occurred, but they question the recipient’s emotional experience or reaction to an event. Statements such as “You’re too sensitive,” “You’re exaggerating,” or “You’re blowing this out of proportion” all suggest that the recipient’s emotions and perceptions are faulty and not to be trusted.
- Trivializing, which occurs when the abuser suggests that what you have done or communicated is inconsequential or unimportant, is a more subtle form of minimizing.
- Denying and minimizing can be particularly damaging. In addition to lowering self-esteem and creating conflict, the invalidation of reality, feelings, and experiences can eventually lead you to question and mistrust your own perceptions and emotional experience.
Understanding Abusive Relationships
Are You Abusive to Yourself?
Basic Rights in a Relationship
- The right to good will from the other.
- The right to emotional support.
- The right to be heard by the other and to be responded to with courtesy.
- The right to have your own view, even if the other has a different view.
- The right to have your feelings and experience acknowledged as real.
- The right to receive a sincere apology for any jokes you may find offensive.
- The right to clear and informative answers to questions that concern what is legitimately your business.
- The right to live free from accusation and blame.
- The right to live free from criticism and judgment.
- The right to have your work and your interests spoken of with respect.
- The right to encouragement.
- The right to live free from emotional and physical threat.
- The right to live free from angry outbursts and rage.
- The right to be called by no name that devalues you.
- The right to be respectfully asked rather than ordered.
What Can You Do?
- Educate yourself about emotionally abusive relationships. Two excellent resources include:
Engle, Beverly, M.F.C.C. The Emotionally Abused Woman: Overcoming Destructive Patterns and Reclaiming Yourself. New York: Fawcett Columbine, 1992.
Evans, Patricia. The Verbally Abusive Relationship: How to Recognize It and How to Respond. Holbrook, Massachusetts: Bob Adams, Inc., 1992. - Consider seeing a mental health professional. A counselor can help you understand the impact of an emotionally abusive relationship. A counselor can also help you learn healthier ways of relating to others and caring for your own needs.
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Artificial Organ Regrowth
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Creating Rich Relationships
Licensed Psychologist. He is available for coaching in any area
presented in "Practical Life Coaching" (formerly "Practical
Psychology"). Initial coaching sessions are free. Contact him: (970)
568-0173 or E-mail: DrLloyd@CreatingLeaders.com or LJTDAT@aol.com.
CREATING RICH RELATIONSHIPS
By Lloyd J. Thomas, Ph.D.
Most of us are not very skilled at creating enriching relationships.
Many of us take pride in our sense of independence. Some of us are
unaware of the impact our behavior has on others. We believe
ourselves to be separate from others. We often use our sense of
"being different" as a protection against being disappointed, hurt or
abandoned. We believe "my needs are different, so I don't belong" in
a group, community or network. Sometimes we feel we don't belong even
in our own families.
If we grew up in frightening, hostile or troubled families, we begin
to withdraw from others in our family. We seek emotional safety by
mentally dividing the human species into two different categories...me
and everybody else. In our minds and in our behavior, we isolate
ourselves from others. We decide we are special and everyone else is
different, inferior or even dangerous. Herein lays the root of
racism. We fear and fail to recognize we are of one species...human.
Buddha once said, "In separateness lies the world's greatest
misery." Theologian, Paul Tillich wrote, "Sin is separateness."
Therapist, Wayne Muller writes, "As we close ourselves inward, we
create a sphere of safety that becomes smaller and smaller until it
has room enough only for ourselves, removed from anything or anyone
who could ever love us, from anyone who would touch, caress, or heal
us."
When we habitually isolate ourselves from others, our relationships
become psychologically bankrupt, empty of any kind of emotional
richness. Such relationships die, and their deaths seem to prove to
the "loner" that he or she is indeed different, separate and alone.
How can we enrich our relationships? First, we need to recognize,
whether we like it or not, we are all interdependent. We are each
unique individuals, yes. Nevertheless, we depend on others for food,
shelter, transportation, clothing, music, entertainment, need
fulfillment, even life and breath. Each of us is woven into a
delicate fabric of interdependence.
After we realize our interconnectedness, we need to make what
Stephen Covey calls "emotional deposits" into those relationships. We
need to balance our relationship accounts by not withdrawing more than
we deposit.
Covey, in his book, "The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People,"
describes five types of emotional deposits and their counterparts,
emotional withdrawals. The first is Kindness vs. Unkindness. Every
act of kindness is nourishment to a relationship. Every unkind act is
a poison.
The second is: Keeping Promises vs. Breaking promises. Trust is
based upon promises kept. Relationships break when trust is violated
through broken promises.
The third is: Honoring Expectations vs. Violating Expectations.
Healthy relationships are based upon mutual expectations. We need to
respect the expectations we have of ourselves, and honor the
expectations others have of us. When we violate others' expectations,
the relationship becomes weakened.
The fourth emotional deposit is Loyalty. Its counterpart is
Duplicity. Loyalty is exemplified when we speak well of others when
they are not present. Duplicity (being "two-faced") for example, is
when we speak well of others when they are present, and negatively
about them when they are absent. Friendships thrive with loyalty, die
with duplicity.
Covey's final emotional deposit/withdrawal to relationships is
Apologizing vs. Pride. Recognize we all make mistakes. When you or
another make mistakes, apologizing sincerely and forgiving completely
is a huge emotional deposit. If we are so insecure and pride-full, we
never apologize, we make an equally huge emotional withdrawal from the
relationship.
I would add one more very important emotional deposit: regularly
communicating appreciations. The opposite of appreciation is
criticism. Positive appreciation enriches relationships, whereas even
"constructive" criticism makes a large withdrawal. If you want to
create an emotionally nourishing relationship, begin by daily
communication of at least 5 characteristics, behaviors and attitudes
of the other person. Keep in mind that repetition of appreciations is
okay. The more often you genuinely express appreciations, the more
likely the people will believe you... and believe in themselves.
Daily practice of making emotional deposits in all your
relationships will make you one emotionally very rich person. Your
life will become filled with emotional health, abundance and delight.
