Inner Child Healing Techniques--Robert
Burney
"When we are reacting out of old tapes based on attitudes and
beliefs that are false or distorted, then our feelings cannot be
trusted."
"When we are reacting out of our childhood emotional wounds,
then what we are feeling may have very little to do with the situation we are in
or with the people with whom we are dealing in the moment."
In order to
start be-ing in the moment in a healthy, age-appropriate way it is necessary to
heal our "inner child." The inner child we need to heal is actually our "inner
children" who have been running our lives because we have been unconsciously
reacting to life out of the emotional wounds and attitudes, the old tapes, of
our childhoods."
The one who betrayed us and abandoned and abused us the
most was ourselves. That is how the emotional defense system that is
Codependence works.
The battle cry of Codependence is "I'll show you -
I'll get me."
We have an age of the wounded inner child that relates to
each stage of the development process. It is very important to start getting in
touch with these parts of ourselves and building a Loving relationship with each
of them.
Anytime we have a strong emotional reaction to something or
someone - when a button is pushed and there is a lot of energy attached, a lot
of intensity - that means there is old stuff involved.
It is the inner
child who feels panic or terror or rage or hopelessness, not the
adult.
We need to ask ourselves "How old am I feeling right now?" and
then listen for an intuitive answer. When we get that answer then we can track
down why the child was feeling that way.
It is not that important to know
the details of why the child is feeling that way - it is important to honor that
the child's feelings are valid. Sometimes we recover some memory and sometimes
we don't - the details are not that important, honoring the feelings is
important. Trying to fill in the details isn't necessary and can lead to false
memories.
"It is also a vital part of the process to learn discernment.
To learn to ask for help and guidance from people who are trustworthy, . . .
That means counselors and therapists who will not judge and shame you and
project their issues onto you.
(I believe that the cases of "false
memories" that are getting a lot of publicity these days are in reality cases of
emotional incest - which is rampant in our society and can be devastating to a
person's relationship with his/her own sexuality - that are being misunderstood
and misdiagnosed as sexual abuse by therapists who have not done their own
emotional healing and project their own issues of emotional incest and/or sexual
abuse onto their patients).
Someone who has not done her/his own
emotionally healing grief work cannot guide you through yours. Or as John
Bradshaw put it in his excellent PBS series on reclaiming the inner child, "No
one can lead you somewhere that they haven't been.""
When one of our
"buttons" is pushed - when an old wound is gouged - it is very important to
honor the child's feelings without buying into the illusion that it matches the
adults reality.
"What we feel is our "emotional truth" and it does not
necessarily have anything to do with either facts or the emotional energy that
is Truth with a capital "T" especially when we our reacting out of an age of our
inner child."
The following paragraphs are excerpts from one of my
columns. It is entitled "Union Within" and explains some of the dynamics of the
inner child parenting process.
"Recovery from Codependence is a process
of owning all of the fractured parts of our selves so that we can find some
wholeness so that we can bring about an integrated and balanced union, a
marriage if you will, of all the parts of our internal self. The most vital
component of this process in my experience is the healing and integration of the
inner children. In this column I am going to be talking about some of my inner
children in order to try to communicate the importance of this integration
process. . . ."
"The seven year old within me is the most prominent and
emotionally vocal of my inner children. . . .
The despairing seven year old
is always close by, waiting in the wings, and when life seems too hard, when I
am exhausted or lonely or discouraged - when impending doom or financial tragedy
seem to be immanent - then I hear from him. Sometimes the first words I hear in
the morning are his voice within me saying "I just want to die".
The
feeling of wanting to die, of not wanting to be here, is the most overwhelming,
most familiar feeling in my emotional inner landscape. Until I started doing my
inner child healing I believed that who I really was at the deepest, truest part
of my being, was that person who wanted to die. I thought that was the true
'me'. Now I know that is just a small part of me. When that feeling comes over
me now I can say to that seven year old, "I am really sorry you feel that way
Robbie. You had very good reason to feel that way. But that was a long time ago
and things are different now. I am here to protect you now and I Love you very
much. We are happy to be alive now and we are going to feel Joy today, so you
can relax and this adult will deal with life.". . . .
"The integration
process involves consciously cultivating a healthy, Loving relationship with all
of my inner children so that I can Love them, validate their feelings, and
assure them that everything is different now and everything is going to be all
right. When the feelings from the child come over me it feels like my whole
being, like my absolute reality - it isn't, it is just a small part of me
reacting out of the wounds from the past. I know that now because of my
recovery, and I can lovingly parent and set boundaries for those inner children
so they are not dictating how I live my life. By owning and honoring all of the
parts of me I now have a chance to have some balance and union within."
We need to be the Loving parent who can hear the child's voice within
us.
We need to learn to be nurturing and Loving to the wounded parts of
us.
We can do that by actually working on developing a relationship with
those wounded parts of us. The first step is to open a dialog.
I believe
that it is important to actually talk to the children inside of us.
To
open communications in any way we can through talking to those parts of
ourselves in a Loving way (which means also to stop calling ourselves names like
stupid - when we do that we are abusing our inner children), right hand/left
hand writing, painting and drawing, music, making collages, taking the child to
the toy store, etc.
At first the child will probably not trust you - for
many very good reasons. Eventually we can start building trust. If we will treat
ourselves with one tenth as much compassion as we would an abused puppy who came
into our care - we would be Loving ourselves much more that we have
been.
"As long as we are judging and shaming ourselves we are giving
power to the disease. We are feeding the monster that is devouring us.
We
need to take responsibility without taking the blame. We need to own and honor
the feelings without being a victim of them.
We need to rescue and
nurture and Love our inner children and STOP them from controlling our lives.
STOP them from driving the bus! Children are not supposed to drive, they are not
supposed to be in control.
And they are not supposed to be abused and
abandoned. We have been doing it backwards. We abandoned and abused our inner
children. Locked them in a dark place within us. And at the same time let the
children drive the bus - let the children's wounds dictate our lives."
It
is very important to nurture ourselves out of the Loving adult in ourselves -
the one who understands delayed gratification.
It is the wounded child
in us that wants instant gratification.
We need to set boundaries for
the wounded part of us that wants to go unconscious or indulge in things which
are abusive in the long run.
"The pain of being unworthy and shameful was
so great that I had to learn ways to go unconscious and disconnect from my
feelings. The ways in which I learned to protect myself from that pain and
nurture myself when I was hurting so badly were with things like drugs and
alcohol, food and cigarettes, relationships and work, obsession and
rumination.
The way it works in practice is like this: I am feeling fat;
I judge myself for being fat; I shame myself for being fat; I beat myself for
being fat; then I am hurting so badly that I have to relieve some of the pain;
so to nurture myself I eat a pizza; then I judge myself for eating the pizza,
etc. etc.
To the disease, this is a functional cycle. The shame begets
the self-abuse which begets the shame which serves the purpose of the disease
which is to keep us separate so the we don't set ourselves up to fail by
believing that we are worthy and lovable."
Click Here to return to
our Articles Page
Click Here to Visit
Healingroom Home Page