Some thoughts about recovery. * Take what you like and leave the rest.
There is one feeling we need to pay particular attention to inrecovery: feeling victimized. We do not need to becomecomfortable with that feeling.
How do we feel when we’ve been victimized? Helpless. Rageful.Powerless. Frustrated.
Feeling victimized is dangerous. Often, it can prompt us intoaddictive or other compulsive behaviors.
In recovery, we’re learning to identify when we’re feelingvictimized, when we are actually being victimized. And why we’refeeling victimized. We’re learning to own our power, to take care ofourselves, and to remove ourselves as victims.
Sometimes, owning our power means we realize we are victimizingourselves – and others are not doing anything to hurt us. They areliving their lives, as they have a right to, and we are feelingvictimized because we’re unreasonably expecting them to take careof us. We may feel victimized if we get stuck in a codependent belief,such as, Other people make me feel … Others hold the key to myhappiness and destiny … or, I can’t be happy unless anotherbehaves in a particular way, or a certain event takes place.
Other times, owning our power means we realize that we are beingvictimized by another’s behavior. Our boundaries are beinginvaded. In that case, we figure out what we need to do to take careof ourselves to stop the victimization; we need to set boundaries.
Sometimes, a change of attitude is all that’s required. We are notvictims.
We strive to have compassion for the person who victimized us, butunderstand that compassion often comes later, after we’veremoved ourselves as victims in body, mind, and spirit. We alsounderstand that too much compassion can put us right back intothe victim slot. Too much pity for a person who is victimizing usmay set up a situation where the person can victimize us again.
We try not to force consequences or crises upon another person,but we also do not rescue that person from logical consequences ofhis or her behavior. If there is a part that is our responsibility toplay in delivering those consequences we do our part – not tocontrol or punish, but to be responsible for ourselves and to others.
We try to figure out what we may be doing that is causing us tofeel victimized, or what part we are playing in the system, and westop doing that too. We are powerless over others and theirbehavior, but we can own our power to remove ourselves asvictims.
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