Emotional Survival

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Saying our parents “did the best they could” in no way absolves us of having to do the emotional work in the areas where they fell short. In order to keep evolving as a species, we must look to our past so that we can move forward and become better people. It is only by working on what it means to be fully human, that we can move into more spiritual awakening. We must stop protecting our parents and ancestors, we must hold them accountable for their and our shortcomings. It’s not about blame, it’s about truth.  Psychologically, Emotionally and Spiritually, the truth really does set us free.

What would the world look like if we had the sensitivity required to pay attention to our children’s emotional injuries? What kind of a world would we be helping to create, if we could be as proficient at attending to our children’s emotional needs as we are to their physical needs? The dream of restoring full sensitivity to our children, can only come to be, if we are willing to look at and heal our own emotional wounds. If we truly want to make the world a more caring place, we need to become more sensitive to the emotional needs of our children, and in order to do that, we need to find out how to heal our emotional injuries. We need to go back and confront the places in our past where our emotional needs were neither acknowledged not attended to. We need to move beyond the emotional limitations of our parents.

Our emotional and physical lives are forever intertwined. When a child falls, the pain is both emotional and physical, and both require equal attention. We know from studies that serious physical injuries cause, psychological distress, but we are only beginning to understand how our psychological distress jeopardizes our physical health. We all suffer from emotional injuries that our parents inflicted upon us. They had no choice. If they endured any emotional injuries and hadn’t ever had the opportunity to work through them, then the emotional injury inevitably got passed down to us.

Love is the emotion that creates connection, and as far as our babies and children are concerned, all they long for emotionally and physically, is that loving connection to us. It’s important to realize that the emotions, we as adults would prefer not to feel; anger, fear, sadness and need, are the only tools our babies and children have for letting us know when connection is at risk.

When we are responding to our needs. When we are willing to receive comfort, when we are living well, it is a result of having known comfort and having had our needs met. From the place of security, that these emotions offer us, we are able to care for others. If we truly know these emotions, and have access to them, then our mere presence can at times provide relief and love to others. However, wherever we are lacking in our capacity to feel the emotions of comfort and love, we are challenged to care for ourselves or anyone else. It is only by reawakening our deeply buried, emotional needs for our parents’ comfort and love, a need most of us at some level were forced to forget, that we can find compassion for ourselves and others. When we honor that vulnerability which unites us in our humanity we can finally know peace.

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Author: This Emotional Life

Carla Melucci Ardito is a New York City based teacher who has been personally experiencing, studying, and exploring the art of healing for over 40 years. Carla is a graduate of NYU, and a lifetime student of yoga. She is committed to studying how we can improve the condition of the human mind by looking for answers in the human body.

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