Do Your Behaviors Define Who You Are?

Do Your Behaviors Define Who You Are?  …  Not really.

When I was a camp counselor, various stories were told at the end of mealtime. These stories were meant to stimulate conversations for later, when the kids and their counselor returned to their cabins for the night.
The following story was so powerful that I’ve never forgotten it:

There Once Was a Girl With a Very Bad Temper

So the girl’s father wanted to teach her a lesson. He thought long about WHAT he wanted her to learn (as all good parents will do). Finally, he decided.

He gave her a bag of nails and told her, “Every time you lose your temper I want you to hammer a nail into the wood fence.”

On the first day the girl had driven 25 nails into the fence. “This is kind of fun”, she told her father. “”But by the time I’m done hammering,  I can’t even remember why I was so mad!”

Over the next few weeks, as she began to control her temper, the number of nails she hammered into the fence gradually dwindled.

Finally, the day came when the girl didn’t lose her temper at all. She was so proud of herself; she couldn’t wait to tell her father!

Pleased, her father said, Now pull out one nail for each day that you hold your temper“.

The days passed and the girl was finally able to go back to her father and tell him that she had pulled out all the nails.

Then, gently, the father took his daughter by the hand and led her to the fence.

“You have done well”, he smiled. “But look at the all the holes in the fencee. The fence will never be the same.”

The little girl listened carefully as her father continued to speak:

When you say things in anger, you leave scars,  just like these in the fence.

Even if you say you’re sorry, the wound is still there”.

                     ~ * ~

Later, I came to realize why it had special meaning for me.  My anger was used as a defense mechanism to protect me from an insensitive,  critical,  and abandoning parent. I learned, without conscious thought, that anger was safer than tears.   It became so automatic that I didn’t even notice the damage I was causing.

But like so many of our childhood coping skills, I couldn’t even turn it off in circumstances that didn’t involve my family. I came across as mad when I was probably sad or scared instead.

So when I heard this fable, I woke up.  I had to become aware of anger’s purpose for me.  I learned that my defenses were not who I was – they were survival/coping skills.  I had to decide that I didn’t want to be that way anymore.  After all,  I was no longer a child and realistically I didn’t need my mother to survive. So I learned, instead, to cope with the underlying feelings. I taught myself that being sad, confused, or scared, was “okay“.

If anger is expressed without awareness,  it will damage all of your relationships.

Take the time to learn to communicate effectively;  journal to become versed in understanding where  your feelings come from;  and get a book about Assertive Communication.

The Key to Detachment

Worth Reading! From Off the web.

Attachment arises out of a single flawed assumption of the ego-mind.

The ego assumes that when a goal is attained, when something happens that we want, then we will be happy, or fulfilled, or joyful. It also assumes that if something undesirable happens, then we will be sad, or angry, or hurt.

In truth, however, our state of Being is completely independent of any events that take place in our lives.

As you sit reading this right now, can you summon a feeling of joy? Go ahead and summon up a happy memory or a joyful expectation. Allow a bubble of joy to grow in the pit of your stomach and rise up to fill your heart. Smile until the smile becomes genuine. Take a few breaths, and inhale joy. Let the energy travel outward from your heart until it fills your Being. Go ahead and close your eyes. Sit with the energy of joy for a while.

Nothing happened in your life to create this joy. You generated joy all by yourself, through simple intention. You were both the cause and the result of joy. And you could create joy at absolutely any time, just by deciding to do so.

This is true no matter what events are happening in your life.
We can summon the state of being in love without being in a relationship. We can create a state of peace, even while watching the evening news.

The ego-mind will have us believe that all of these things -abundance, love, peace – are dependent on what is happening in our lives. The ego will have us believe that love comes into our lives from someone else. The ego believes that peace is the result of having all our tasks done.

So why aren’t we all constantly in a joyful, abundant, peaceful state of Being?

Go ahead and once again summon that energy of joy for a minute or two. If you remain in that state of being for a while, you will notice your mind getting bored. That’s right, joy gets boring after a while! There are no problems to solve, nothing to get worked up over. There are no worries to entertain the mind. That’s why the mind creates attachment.

If we are to stay out of attachment, we need to give the mind something to do. Left to its own devices, the mind is reactive. The mind reacts to everything – every event, what other people say to us, etc., and so creates our state of Being.

If our reaction is negative, the mind will come up with a goal that would create a positive outcome instead. And so we begin believing the illusion that a certain monthly income will give us abundance, or a romantic relationship will bring us love.

But we can become conscious creators.

We can deliberately generate the state of being that we desire for ourselves. We can then give the mind the task of expressing that state of being creatively, through action.

The outcome simply wouldn’t matter. We are already in the state that we want to create. We are simply taking action to give the mind something to do. The mind will think and solve problems and make plans. That is its job, and we can’t change that. But we can make our minds activity about creatively expressing joy, or abundance, or love rather than about creating a specific result.

For example, the mind might suggest that we could call our partner because we want him or her to tell us how special we are – to make us feel loved.
Or we could BE in a state of love, and the creative expression of that love is making a phone call. In this action, we don’t want anything out of the phone call – it’s just our state of being, authentically expressing itself.

While the action is still making a phone call to our partner, the first goal comes from a place of attachment. We want something out of that phone call to feel loved. The other has no agenda. It is just an expression of what we already have and are. Hence, detached.

What if every action we took was only a creative expression of our state of Being? What if every conversation were simply an extension of our Being, with no agenda, no attachment to outcome?

Our state of Being is completely independent of any event, outcome, goal, or person. Nothing that happens in our lives determines whether we are happy, or loved, or fulfilled unless we allow it. This is the key to detachment. We can at any time decide to be peaceful, or in love, or joyful. This is the true gift of free will and free choice.

Blessings,
Andrea

Edited for readability from:

The Key to Detachment | Empowered Soul
https://www.empoweredsoul.com/
The Key to Detachment
By Andrea Hess
Embrace Your Highest Path