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- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ames!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!zazen!anderson
- From: anderson@macc.wisc.edu (Jess Anderson)
- Subject: Re: Personal losses in CO 2
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.044415.21117@macc.wisc.edu>
- Sender: news@macc.wisc.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Madison Academic Computing Center, UW-Madison
- References: <1993Jan21.111021.21793@lclark.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 93 04:44:15 GMT
- Lines: 88
-
-
- In article <1993Jan21.111021.21793@lclark.edu>
- snodgras@lclark.edu (Bil Snodgrass) writes:
-
- >I don't know why I assumed any differently.....but my
- >mother, the person I love the most on this planet, voted Yes
- >on 2. I didn't ask her until today. [...] When I asked her
- >who she voted for she said Bush.
-
- >[...] I stopped the conversation almost in tear and told her
- >I had to get off the phone before I said something I would
- >regret. I am in a daze now. Guess I should have faced this
- >long ago.
-
- Perhaps, but spare yourself worry and recriminations now
- over what could have been, since that is more likely to
- drain away emotional resources that you need than it is to
- bring you helpful insights at this stage.
-
- Perhaps it will help to remind yourself that what today
- seems stunning and painful is taking place in a much larger
- context, so that downstream some suitable distance, weeks,
- months, or years from now (whatever it takes), these matters
- will be but one part of a longer-term perspective. Whatever
- it is that fills the life for you will have done so in
- whatever way it does, by then. Maybe there will be even be
- subsequent chapters or episodes that involve your mother
- that will serve as clarifications, modifications, or
- reconciliations of the present contretemps.
-
- >I could go on and on. I couldn't believe my mother. It
- >really hurts.
-
- There's this to say, among other things, about such pains:
- they are proof positive that we are feeling beings (not
- everyone is, of course), and this is a good thing to know
- about ourselves. The pain of a broken loyalty, even if it
- is really nothing more than an illusory loyalty, is sharp
- and disorienting, I think. As you say, disbelief: one can't
- quite take it in. The disorientation element, when it's
- present, is something like a magnifying lens, increasing or
- dramatizing the emotional situation, and in a sense it
- strikes us in a more vulnerable place, our *inner* sense of
- what is good and fair and right.
-
- >When I was getting ready to come out to them I remember
- >people talking about the chance that they could disown me.
- >That I could lose them.
-
- Maybe this explains, at least in part, why you find yourself
- now in a state of shock, set up by not having wanted to
- fully entertain the idea of such a rupture earlier.
-
- >Well I am here to say that it is just as possible for me to
- >let go of them. That I don't deserve the pain they have
- >caused me.
-
- >[...] I have to let go. They cannot or shouldn't have this
- >power of pain inducement.
-
- I suppose it's less a matter of *actually* (certainly in the
- sense of permanently) excluding your family from your life
- than it is of establishing a certain detachment and
- independence, to the degree required by your need for inner
- emotional stability and poise. Being *able* to let go, it
- seems to me, is a key ingredient there.
-
- On the matter of pain, there is always an element of our
- cooperation involved, and while you may never be able to
- change them, or (even more unfortunate) maybe they will
- never be able to change themselves, still some component of
- the feelings (loss or whatever they are) resides in your
- insides, and that you do have control over, even if in the
- heat or disbelief of the moment it seems less than clear
- that you do.
-
- Take heart in the long view, if you can. Such things not
- seldom get resolved in due course. In the near term, try to
- gather support from those nearest and dearest around you,
- make it an explicit objective to maintain your own mental
- hygiene, and chances are good that all will be well at some
- future time.
-
- --
- [Jess Anderson <> Madison Academic Computing Center <> University of Wisconsin]
- [Internet: anderson@macc.wisc.edu <-best, UUCP:{}!uwvax!macc.wisc.edu!anderson]
- [Room 3130 <> 1210 West Dayton Street / Madison WI 53706 <> Phone 608/262-5888]
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