Anyhow, I now know that like many children who are abused, we tend to blame ourselves as we learned to. However, today, I know the difference, I can only take responsibility for my own actions and I will no longer attempt to change others' behavior as I know I simply can't. This process is possible because I chose to CHANGE. I realized I could not fix nor change the past, I could however CHANGE my own behavior in the present hence influence my future. I didn't want to be a doormat for others, I wanted to respect myself enough to ask for it from others. I learned to set boundaries (still a process), something only myself could do. I had to be the one making the changes. Whether my mother ceased drinking would not change how I reacted to others or situations I felt distress from.
Changes take time and patience as well as practice. For instance, I didn't change overnight, though I set small goals, which at the time felt genuinely impossible. I learned to practice saying "NO" to others instead of always feeling the need to please others even to the point of ignoring my own feelings. I used to fear that saying NO meant I was letting others down. I learned that I was really letting myself down and was indirectly misleading others, as internally I felt frustration toward them. I realized though that if I said NO because truly it was too much, I was being honest with them, really I was demonstrating them the respect I wanted myself. I certainly did not want others to lie to me, nor make them feel forced in anyway. I am still struggling at times to say NO, though instead I find myself telling them why I can't.
Changes occur if you are willing to accept your own shortcomings. Why otherwise want to change? I would react to others, and really I was allowing others to affect me. I learned I did not have to. I couldn't make others' retract their words nor could I change them into someone they were not. I could however, accept that we were different, and adjust my own behavior accordingly. For instance, if someone I wished to be friend with, lied to my face, I would call them out on it. After all, we all make mistakes, often due to fear. If however, the person could not own up and I felt "uncomfortable" with it, I could hope all I wanted that they would apologize, which obviously they were not going to, driving me "nuts". However, I had a choice. I could elect to keep them around and continue to be a constant reminder of their shortcomings or I could remove myself of this "frustrating" situation.
I can think of one specific example, I used to walk my dogs with someone I didn't feel comfortable with. I felt obligated to walk with that person. We had met by him approaching me years earlier as I walked my dogs and he walked his. Over time, as he learned my routine (my need for control), he would "stalk" me. I was fearful of hurting his feelings if said something plus, I though he needed a "friend". Overtime, I grew more "frustrated" on those walks. I felt that I was part of the problem. He was an alcoholic and I persuaded myself I could encourage him to seek help. It soon became apparent, he was toxic and unwilling to help himself. However, I was part of the problem as I was enabling his behavior. So, I elected to remove myself. As I tried to alter my routine as to avoid him, it backfired, he began to scare me. Each time though I excused myself when really I didn't need to. So, how could I change this? I accepted I could not change him and I was kidding myself and really enabling him. I believed that I could be the one that would get him to seek help and attend an ACOA meeting. However, he made it clear, he was not willing to change and I knew this was a toxic relation. I had to make changes. I accepted I was NOT responsible for him. I had a responsibility to myself. I needed to be honest with myself. I felt drained and very uncomfortable around him. I was also lying to myself, he was not going to change. So, I parted ways, it was difficult in the sense I thought I was letting him down though I kept reminding myself, I could only be responsible for myself.
One of the changes I elected to make in my journey is to be "honest to myself" and act accordingly. I know today that I can change only myself hence if I feel like I am with someone who affects me negatively, I need to ask myself why? I need to cease making excuses for them (as my friends tend to remind me, I do this constantly as I want to believe in others). Truth is I tend to want to fix others as I avoid looking at my own shortcomings. I really can't fix anyone else, I know I have my own problems I need to solve. Hence, if I "accept" the difference between what I can change (myself) and what I cannot (others), I elect to do what is necessary. Sadly sometime, it feels as if I am abandoning them though I know I am not and I remind myself that they are NOT my responsibility. A friend of mine (really wiser woman) likes to phrase it this way: "Not my monkeys, not my circus" (a new mantra of mine).
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