The Power of Forgiveness – We Are All Super-Heroes!

The Power of Forgiveness – We Are All Super-Heroes!

The Power of Forgiveness

I go see every Super Hero movie. The latest one was Wonder Woman, and I even took my seven year old granddaughter —before I realized it was PG! (Sorry, Maisie, for having to cover your eyes sometimes!)

The reason I wanted her to see it was because Wonder Woman stood for the Power of Love — which is a good message to share.

I wanted her to know we are all Super Heroes, with infinite strength to create what we want. And I think one of our best super-powers is the Power of Forgiveness.

(If you are having trouble forgiving someone, check out my free gift here.)

We all have the Power of Forgiveness, but we just don’t always use it. When we do exercise our Power, miracles occur.

(1) We can turn back time.

Forgiveness gives us the ability to “start over.” We can reboot, re-do, or renew a relationship without the need to rehash every insult or slight. We can begin again, and create a better relationship with a sense of peace and inner balance.

(2) We can lift heavy burdens.

We don’t have to carry around the weight of resentment, judgment and blame. We can set ourselves free from the stories we tell ourselves, and experience the lightness of being present, and open to new possibilities.

(3) We can see through barriers.

Instead of seeing someone who hurt or offended us through the barricades of anger and bitterness , we can lower those walls around our heart, and change the filters through which we see the other, and create appropriate boundaries — without needing total cutoffs.

(4) We become impervious to pain.

Forgiveness sets us free from re-hashing or re-living the past. When we no longer focus on what offended us, we can put our attention on what brings us
joy. Especially when we forgive ourselves.

(5) We stand for what is right and good.

When we forgive ourselves for mistakes we have made, we allow ourselves to embrace our humanity as well as our divinity. (To err is human, to forgive, divine.) When we forgive others, it sets us free and allows us to view the other from a kinder perspective, whether or not we choose to interact with them again.

Wielding the Power of Forgiveness makes us all Super Heroes — because forgiveness is a daily practice.

We can always

  •  start over

  •  liberate ourselves from “old stories”

  •  break through the barriers of judgment and blame

  •  free ourselves from pain

  •  see both the human and the divine in everyone

So yes, Virginia (Maisie), there really is a Wonder Woman.

And she is you.

And she is also YOU!

P.S. Note to anyone who has trouble forgiving  — or just wants to learn a new way to communicate — please get my FREE Chapter of my award-winning book: Compassionate Mediation®:How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce. to help you create the relationships your desire and deserve. You can check it out HERE.

 

SELF in Mediation

SELF in Mediation

SELF in Mediation

(from a Mediation Training in 1998)

My twenty-one year old daughter (who is now 40) recently called me at the end of her first year of her doctoral program in psychology to tell me she really didn’t want to be a psychologist. She wanted a profession in which there would be one right answer and not so many possibilities. Worried that she was going to switch to law school, I mentioned that even in law, you can argue two sides. And her response was, “Yes, but there are only two.” And I thought to myself, she should never go into mediation.

On some existential level, I think she was trying to make sense out of this world. And the more she was learning, the more confusing it all seemed. And I thought to myself, the more confusing it seemed, the more she is learning about the world, and it’s in the acceptance of that confusion, we have the freedom to choose our version of reality. Kind of like mediation.

Within the same week, I heard Robert Benjamin speak at the first annual Mediation Council dinner. In his speech on the search for truth,  he said that too often mediators focus on the quest for the TRUTH, instead of emphasizing the QUEST itself. 

And I tell my clients that I wish there were some formula we could plug in when you’ve been married X number of years and you have X number of children that you are entitled to, or responsible for, X amount of maintenance for X number of years and the property division will be according to some preordained plan.

Now I sound like my daughter.

Sometimes I wish there were one answer and we could plug the data into some kind of program and spew out THE ANSWER. Kind of like some fool proof recipe. Take these ingredients and you have this specific dish. Take those ingredients, you have another.

Or at least have a computer program – perhaps call it Mediation for Dummies, and input the facts of the case and within seconds download the memorandum of understanding.

Once we have helped our clients generate all their options, we could have some automatic printout of the course they should take, the decisions they should make. We would offer them THE ANSWER, THE TRUTH.

Robert Benjamin said that we can do a disservice to our clients if we try to “heal” them and convince them with logic to reach an amicable resolution when they are really feeling anger, sadness, frustration.  He suggested we take them where they are and help them carve out a little bit of space where they can make decisions for themselves without other people in power telling them how to run their lives. We’re not seeking THE ANSWER, just AN answer that works for them within a myriad of possibilities from which they have the power to choose.

But who is making those choices? Is it us, as mediators? No, we are supposed to be neutral parties. Maybe at times we wish we could decide for them. Other times we may let them know what we think “if we had a vote.”

We might not tell our colleagues, but at times we might actually be directive and lead them towards our version of equity. But whether their understanding is organic with them or we play a role in the choices made, which parts of all of us are doing the choosing?

Which PARTS did I say? Yes, which parts?

I must digress slightly, or elucidate more clearly, depending on your point of view.

I have recently completed a two year training program(which I continued for another 17 years) with Richard Schwartz, a psychologist who introduced the theory of Internal Family Systems, which identifies one’s Self and Parts. To explain very briefly.

We all have a Self, with a capital “S”. And we all have different Parts that get activated, burdened, out of balance.

When we are in “Self” we are balanced, peaceful, calm, compassionate, open. When different parts are activated, we can blend with those parts and be angry, scared, frustrated, opinionated, know-it-all, patronizing, insecure, impatient, sarcastic, defeated …. or any number of feelings or emotions that keep us off center and out of Self.

Dick Schwartz also has posited that we have three different types of parts: the Managers, the Firefighters and the Exiles. The exiled parts have been hiding in the shadows since we were very young. Those are the parts that may be angry, scared, hurt, sad.  When something happened in our childhood to trigger those emotions, and we learned somehow that those feelings weren’t going to get us the nurturing we needed, we learned to exile those feelings, and to manage ourselves in a different way.

And our managers were born. These are the parts of ourselves that we show to the world.

These parts are often organized, social, intellectual, left-brained, logical, rational. These are the parts of ourselves that are in charge of our internal system, and they work to hold the exiles at bay. They fear deep down that if we let our exiles surface, and we actually felt angry, sad, scared, hurt, that the system would be overwhelmed with these emotions and somehow shut down. So the managers work hard to constrain the exiled parts.

What happens to the system, you might ask, if the exile starts to make it’s presence known. Then the third category of parts makes its debut: the Firefighters. Firefighter parts leap forward to help extinguish any awareness of the exiles. Firefighting parts make us eat, drink, gamble, do drugs, fight, get depressed, get fatigued, or other deflecting actions to help douse the flames of the exiled feelings so that we don’t put our internal system at risk from exile overload.

So how does this all relate to mediation?

I have come to believe that since there is no one truth, no recipe, no computer program, no correct answer,  that it is in the QUEST that we offer our guidance and expertise.

But who is doing the leading here? Our Self or our parts? And who are we leading or guiding or facilitating? The Self of our client or one of their managerial, firefighting or exiled parts.

It may seem esoteric, but it does make a difference.

It seems to me that the end product is definitely influenced by WHO is doing the choosing. And the more there is a critical mass of Self present in the room, the better the decisions are. And the most we can offer our clients at any given moment, is to ask our parts to step back as we come from our SELF.

How do we do that?

We do our own work, as mediators, as therapists, as attorneys, as individuals. We begin to identify for ourselves when a part is activated and which part is leading.
You’ll know them by the messages they are sending, by the voices in your head. Voices like:

“I like her or I don’t like him”.
“I know what is best for them”. 
“I forgot to pick up my laundry.”
“When will she shut up?”
“This is going nowhere, I have to stop them”.
“Now, I’m getting angry.”
“He reminds me of my ex-husband.”
“She reminds me of my mother-in -law”.
“If I say this now, they’ll think I’m really smart or insightful”.
“I can’t believe I just said that.”
“I hope they like me.”
“Boy, am I tired.”
“Get me outta here.”

They could be the voices of your Judge, your Internal Critic, your managing ego, your firefighting fatigue, your exiled anger. When those parts are up for you, you aren’t fully present in your Self.  Rather than being a compassionate witness to your clients parts, or a safe container for their work to come from their Selves, your parts have their own agenda for the three of you to follow.

So who is doing the leading? And who is being led?

When the Self is present, it serves as a conductor to the cacophony of our parts so that they blend together in a harmonic symphony. Left to their own devices, they can keep us off key and out of tune.

If our managing ego part is present, the “Deep down I know what is best for these people” part is up, then who is really making the decisions in the room. Are we present for their QUEST for their truth or are we leading on some pre-ordained expedition of our own choosing? And if that’s the case, what kind of follow up has been done on settlement agreements that are mediator determined versus ones that are organic to the couple themselves?

In that situation, are we simply deleting the middlemen of attorneys and judge and deciding for them what their answers should be. When we feel ourselves becoming too directive, we might want to check in and see if we are in SELF. And if we are not, we can ask that part to step back and allow us to be in Self and be fully present for our clients. Later we’ll do a demonstration to show you how to get your parts to step back.

Assuming we can and will learn how to be in Self, what do we do with all those parts of our clients?

And there will be parts of our clients, parts flailing about the room. Usually when clients first come to us, they may show us their managing parts, the ones that are holding their fragile systems together. He might be controlling and directive. She might be docile and compliant. Or any combination of successful managing parts that have allowed the marital system to be maintained.

But soon, as we begin to do the work, we see all of their parts beginning to make their presence felt, and often these are the parts they have exiled for years. Anger, sadness, recrimination, fear, revenge, retribution, sorrow, pain. All those parts become free to be heard.

And what they might do is trigger the firefighting parts of the spouse that is listening to the barrage of the exiles. So the spouse might be defensive, sarcastic, aggressive…. anything to try to force their partner’s exile back into exile.

And you’re there in the middle of the onslaught, wondering what to do.

As doctors follow the Hippocratic oath of “First, do no harm”, I think I believe our motto or mantra should be, “First, stay in SELF.’

You will know when you are in Self when you come from a place of compassion. When you can witness the process without judging it. When you can be present to what is, without trying to manipulate others. You can fulfill your role as mediator and maintain an inner peace.

If at least one person in the room is in Self, then you are on your way to providing the critical mass of Self that will create a safe container in which to hold and hear the parts that need expression.

Mediation is not therapy, or so I have been taught. However, there is something therapeutic that happens when two warring spouses are allowed to express themselves and be heard, perhaps for the first time. (From this belief, my book and my  Compassionate Mediation Training Program were born.)

We can model for them a way of staying centered and peaceful as we witness a part of another that has something to say. We can show them how to detach from the message and just be present to the messenger in a more compassionate and caring way. How do we do this? We do is by example, and we can do this by instruction.

I tell my clients a variation of the brief introduction I gave you to SELF and parts. I say at the beginning of our work that I believe we all have a balanced, peaceful, wise and compassionate self that has all the answers we need to live our lives. And we all have parts that get out of balance sometimes. I let them know that in divorce, many of the parts that get activated are anger, sadness and fear. And that sometimes those parts might get activated in the work we are doing. Then I ask that if those parts have something to say, that they let the Self speak for those parts instead of letting those parts overwhelm them and the work we can do together.

I say that this might not make sense to them yet, but it will as we go along.

Robert Benjamin said in his speech that we can do a disservice to our clients if we try to “heal” them and convince them with logic to reach an amicable resolution when they are really feeling anger, sadness frustration. In Parts terminology, that means we don’t lead with our part that wants to reason with them, but we detach from, but accepting of, the parts that are present at the moment. And we can help them learn ways to do the same.

To make an analogy of Self and Parts: I see the Self as the Parent speaking for his or her child when you go to school to confront a teacher on behalf of your son or daughter. You wouldn’t say the words as your child would express them, but hopefully you would translate the child’s feelings in ways that could communicate the message from a more acceptable position. You wouldn’t say to the teacher, “Johnny thinks you are a jerk.”

Preferably you might acknowledge there is a problem that you would like to discuss and enlist the teacher in formulating options rather than initially putting him or her on the defensive. As you stayed in Self, you would offer the opportunity to the teacher to do the same, and from this united perspective you can safely acknowledge the feelings of that sad, scared or angry child whose hand you are holding and whose feelings you are conveying.

The Self doesn’t become overwhelmed by a part, or blend with a part, or shut down the parts. Instead, the Self helps the Parts to be expressed safely.

I want to share some of  the work I did with my own divorce.

My divorce took a very, very long time because I was trying to mediate it myself, which as you can imagine is like a gynecologist trying to deliver her own baby. Maybe it can be done, but it’s certainly more effective to let someone else do it.

My initial efforts were futile, for many different reasons, and we went the adversarial route for awhile. Fortunately, we finally got to our mediator’s office, but my husband wasn’t totally aware of the process of mediation, and became frustrated when he realized he couldn’t just plead his case and have the mediator  tell me how right my husband was. So mediation at that time didn’t get us to settlement.

We had some more parts that had to act out their fear and suspicion and confusion and anger, and we went back to our attorneys. What finally got us finished was the twelve hours we put in alone together over a three-day period to work out the final details. We did that at my house in my den across the table from each other.

And we did it by staying in Self as much as we could. And when we started to feel angry or suspicious or like we wanted to walk out of the process, we acknowledged that a PART of ourselves was feeling such and such. And then that part spoke, and the other partner might offer, that this Part of me then felt such and such. And then we would come back to the present and back to our Selves.

So when we talked about what could happen if we actually went to trial the next week, we acknowledged it was only a PART of us speaking, and then the other could try to listen from the Self and the speaker could speak for that part instead of blending with it and becoming so angry that one of us would terminate the session and the whole process.

Now it took a lot of training on my part, and it took a lot of patience or both our parts, and it probably took the possibility of $50,000 in attorney fees the next week at trial that finally allowed us to get to our SELF, but it got us where we needed to be.

And that same day we finished our negotiations at 11:00 and were in court at 3:00 for the dissolution. And I brought with me my prayer that I gave to my attorney and his attorney. And to his credit, his attorney read the prayer and handed to my husband to ask him if there were any changes he wanted to make in it.

I’m going to read it now because it is how I think can come together as divorcing spouses, and a way to create the safe space to have that happen, which is our job as mediator.

I wrote this on the day I got divorced. It is in the form of a prayer asking for G-d’s help in staying in Self. For those of you or your clients who don’t feel as connected to a Higher Power, please just listen to the requests as a statements of intention.

Settlement Prayer (Intention)
  
Dearest G-d,

I pray for (or I intend to have) a peaceful and respectful settlement meeting, in which all parties come together from their Highest Selves and their truest connection to Your guidance, wisdom and love (their own inner guidance and wisdom)

I pray (I intend) that the parts of ourselves that are angry, fearful, defensive, revengeful, retributive, punitive, unloving, unforgiving, sad, young, abandoned, resentful, negative, hurting and hurtful – that all these parts be quelled with the leadership of the Self, coming from a place of trust in Your (my own) presence and light.

I pray for (I intend to show) compassion, forgiveness, gratitude and appreciation. Although our marriage has come down to a business closing of money and asset division, I ask (intend) that we remember the love that brought us together, and the wonderful children which our union has borne. For their sakes as well as our own, we wish to put an end to this process in as respectful and loving a way as possible.

Although we each carry our sadness and pain and mutual regrets, I pray (intend) that we can look beyond this difficult period to a time when we can be friends and coexist peacefully. I pray (intend) that our once intact family can be rearranged to two intact and loving homes, where our children feel connected and comfortable.  I pray (intend) that we can hold in a different light the love that once joined us forever; that on the deepest level we wish each other well as we let go and let G-d direct our lives.

For the sake of all we once had, and for all we had planned to share together, let us now finalize the terms of our marital dissolution so that we are both free to get on with our lives.

Let us complete this last painful task with a sense of trust in the love we once shared and hopefully can remember after this part is over.
Let us not work from purely simple and self-serving motives, but keep in mind the general welfare of each other and our children.
Let us request our attorneys to contribute what is needed for the mutual benefit of all concerned.
In the end, let us know that we behaved civilly, that we can look back with a clear conscience, and that as much as we could, we came from our hearts.

G-d bless us and direct us all. Amen.

So to go back to where we began. Yes, Virginia there is a Santa Claus. But no, Kimmy, there is no one right answer.

But there is a truth for an individual that will allow them to reach some agreement with someone they had once loved enough to marry. In divorce, those truths are not evident. They are buried behind parts that are burdened with pain.

Our job includes staying in our Self to create a safe environment for our clients to express their parts safely. Learning how to express the message of the parts from the Self offers them the opportunity to find their real power in their Selves. Ideally it is from the place of detachment and balance and compassion, they can learn how to make suitable decisions for themselves and their children.

We can help our clients learn to stay in Self, and they can provide the opportunities for us to do the same. And it is in within this collective compassionate energy that the appropriate answers will appear.

Please get a free chapter of my book: Compassionate Mediation for Relationships at a Crossroad: How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce.

Learn more about my Compassionate Mediation® Program and Compassionate Mediation® Training for Professionals.

Invitation to Heal and Transform Your Relationship

Invitation to Heal and Transform Your Relationship

This article may not pertain to you, but it may help someone you know. Please feel free to forward it to them.

I hope you have the relationship you desire and deserve. Do you ever have challenges that feel difficult to overcome?

When you experience conflict with your partner or spouse, it is often not what you are saying but how you are saying it that can cause problems.

When there is fighting, withdrawal, distancing, or an impasse over issues — such as finances, parenting, sex, or basic communication skills — you  may revert to some coping mechanisms that become bad habits and erode the love you once shared.

You may want to improve your marriage, but don’t know how to resolve your differences. Marriage counseling can help, but may not address the ambivalence one or both of you feel about staying in the relationship.

In other situations, you may desire to peacefull separation,  but without the proper guidance and support, you can end up with devastated children, broken hearts, depleted finances, and destroyed businesses.

In my 25 years of counseling hundreds of women and men, I have observed the people in the most pain are the ones who are not sure if they want to stay or go.

Sadly, some people leave when they could have stayed, and others stay when they should have left.

The good news is that there is help, and that’s what I’m here to offer. I can help you learn all of your options for healing and hope in your relationship.

That’s why I am inviting you to come to (or share) my upcoming FREE LIVE Webinar on June 8th at 1PM CST:

June 8th – 1PM CST. It’s FREE! Sign up here:

“Should I Stay or Should I Go? “
Five Vital Questions to Help You Know

It only takes one person to make a positive difference, and you can be the one to set that intention.

In our time together, I will:

  • Cover the 5 questions to help you get clear on what you want and need.
  • Offer ways to calmly discuss every issue that causes conflict.
  • Discuss all the options available to you.
  • Show you how to forgive yourself and your partner
  • Add more compassion into the healing process.
  • Answer your questions

And so much more!

You can learn how to communicate from your highest and best SELF, and begin to create a more peaceful and loving dynamic in your home.

Instead of being triggered and reactive to your partner’s actions, you can learn how to become more calm, clear, and compassionate as you resolve your differences.

The Webinar is FREE and even if you can’t make it live, you’ll have access to the replay.

But first you have to register!

You can also send me questions you’d like me to address to support@LindaKroll.com, and I’ll answer them live on the webinar. Anything you send me will be confidential and anonymous.

I’d love to help you —or someone you know — get clear on how to stop feeling stuck — and begin to make calm, clear, and confident decisions.

I’m looking forward to taking this journey with you.

Compassionately,

Linda

P.S. I want to make sure that you don’t miss out on this important webinar, so a replay will be made available if you cant make it live. Register here to get the replay.

P.P.S. If anyone you know would benefit from this webinar, please FORWARD this article to them! Make sure to register yourself first. Join me on the Webinar.

Compassionate Mediation®- Communicate from Your Best SELF!

Compassionate Mediation®- Communicate from Your Best SELF!

Compassionate Mediation® starts with Compassionate Communication

If you are having conflict in your relationship, Compassionate Mediation® will help.

You will learn how to connect to your highest and best SELF and resolve your issues with empathy and respect.

Compassionate Mediation®  starts with Compassionate Communication.

To learn more, please join me in the Compassionate Communication Community on Facebook. www.Compassionate Communication.GROUP.

Compassionate Communication

Compassionate Communication allows you to connect to your highest and best SELF, let go of limiting beliefs and judgments, unburden pain from the past, and relate from your heart.

Connect to your best SELF

When we are “in SELF,” we’re calm, clear, and compassionate.

We’re usually not “in SELF.”

We’re in our Parts, and the parts that we’re in, we either EXILE some parts and push them aside and don’t tell our partner that we’re really sad and scared, and instead we try to MANAGE by being nice or pleasing or being stoic or being hardworking or pretending we’re in self. Pretending everything is okay. But we’re really feeling a lot of these hurt, sad, scared, maybe even angry feelings that we’re not sharing.

So instead we do things to numb ourselves. We stay real busy. We exercise too much. We drink. We take drugs. We go have an affair. We get depressed. We get enraged. We do a lot of different things, but these are all human reactions to a very painful, scary condition.

When we’re in self, then we are less reactive and can be more responsive.

Four Ways to Get to SELF

There are four ways to get to self. The first way is to just take a breath because all that anxiousness, all those voices, “Do I want to stay? Do I want to go? What do I want to do? How do I want to be? Can I put my wall down? Is it safe? How am I going to look at him or her through the filter?”

  1. We take a breath. We come to the present moment, and we’re not regurgitating the past to what they did to us then, and we’re not projecting that into the future as if it’s going to be that way forever, but we’re present. In that present moment, there’s a lot more possibility.
  2. Speak for our parts not from our parts
. The second way to get to SELF is to recognize that we have these Parts and we speak for them, but not from them. It’s okay to say from your higher SELF, “There’s a part of me that’s angry because of something. There’s a part of me that’s scared when you do that. I’m feeling sad because.” When we’re talking from SELF, it’s a whole different dialogue.
  3. Let go of limiting beliefs
. When you are compassionately communicating, you are relating from self. You’re letting go of your limiting beliefs and judgments about the other person. You are unburdening the pain from the past, not carrying it with you and projecting it into the future.
  4. Relate from your heart
. When you’re in your higher SELF, it’s safe to open your heart. It may mean you’ll be setting more boundaries. It may mean that you choose to leave, but you can do it from your higher SELF.

When you bring your best SELF to your relationship, it will improve no matter what your partner does or doesn’t do.

You will also know that you are not adding negativity to the situation.

Whatever the outcome of the conflict, you will feel better about your contribution.

Try it, you’ll see. You will also inspire your partner to show up with less defensiveness and reactivity.

Together, you can create a SELF-led relationship that fosters more compassion and connection.

You can begin to make positive changes today
by taking my FREE Relationship Assessment.
(CLICK HERE)

"I’ve experienced significant improvements in my relationship with my husband and children."

 Mary

"I learned there could be a Compassionate Divorce."

Paul

“We’re building an entirely new marriage.”

Liz

“Linda guided us mindfully through the impact of divorce."

Gina

“I came to Linda seeking mediated divorce documents and came out with nothing but peace and hope."

Jeremy

“I am breaking free from destructive patterns.”

 Carol

“Linda helped me love all ‘Parts’ of my SELF!”

Deb

“With Linda’s caring guidance, I moved forward with peace and strength.”

Ann