“When you cast blame, you disempower yourself
and relinquish control of your destiny.”
Kirk Charles
When we hear ourselves blaming or finding
fault with others we can be assured that we are still keeping ourselves infused
in the grip of the blame trap and we are not fully accepting the vast amount of
opportunities awaiting for us. We have been conditioned to compare, rate,
score, judge, and assign value to movies, oranges, music, furniture, cars,
people, animals, professional sports
teams, and so much more. We discuss good and bad, beautiful and ugly, skinny
and fat. We notice gorgeous, awful, stupid, wonderful, nice, better, the worse
and the best. Nothing seems to escape the critical, judgmental, evaluative
mindset of this country (Sherfield, 2004).
Blaming others is a good example of
our con-ditioning which has provided us with a means of not taking
responsibility. It is a way of using language to assign ownership to someone
else for the choices we made. As a result of blaming others, we have given up our
personal power and put them in the driver’s seat. We give them the power,
rendering ourselves powerless and out of control which prevents us from
examining our role in any given situation and diverting responsibility (White,
2008).
Some
examples to help us decide if we are residing in the blaming trap are:
·
“It’s
my parents’ fault. They were too abusive.”
·
“My
spouse’s abuse ruined my life.”
·
“My
boss is the boss from hell” (Coleman and Harris, 2000).
Self-criticizing will trap us in the
blame game. Self-criticism comes in various forms: second guessing; self
put-downs; and using adjectives to describe ourselves, such as “I am fat.” We
need to move from describing ourselves to describing our behaviors. Think back
to our childhoods. Many of us were called a bad kid because we did something
like track mud into the house. It would have been better to be scolded for not
taking our shoes off at the door? Another example, we could say “I am not fun”
and change it to “I was not fun last night.” See the difference. We are not
attacking our entire being, only one behavior.
Second guessing is very easy to
recognize because we add shoulds and should nots to our conversations. Avoid
using the word should. We can’t change the past so we may as well learn from each
and every experience.
Accepting reality is one the goals
of many healing modalities. Facing and coming to term with reality is
beneficial. Acceptance is frequently the turning point for positive change. We
have many things to accept through the course of any given day. Our present
circumstances include who we are, where we live and who we live with, where we
work, our mode of transportation, how much money we have, what our
responsibilities are, what we may do for fun, and any existing problems.
Sometimes accepting the things in our life can be a breeze when things are
going well, then it is when things are not going so well (Sherfield, 2004).
When dealing with unresolved trauma,
we may feel overwhelmed by problems, losses or change. Even our healing journey
can reveal losses we are struggling to accept. If some things in our lives have
not been going well, we may have accepted a life filled with these problems. We
need to understand acceptance does not mean adaptation. It doesn’t mean
resignation concerning the problems we are facing. It means we acknowledge and
accept our circumstances, including our-selves and the people in our lives, as
we are and as they are. It is only from the state of acceptance we can achieve
the ability to evaluate our present situation.
We have been conditioned to judge so
many things that cross our paths from sport teams to cars. If we fall into the
blame trap, we limit our opportunities to enhance our skills at handling
difficult situations. Avoid using the word should will allow us to be in the
present moment instead of hanging out in the past or our reaction to the past.
Getting past our need to self-criticize ourselves will free us from our
self-hatred prisons. We need to be careful to only judge our behaviors and not
our entire being. Taking responsibility for everything life has to offer places
us in control.
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