Note: This is part of a 4 part series to cut your personal development’s learning curve. The rest can be found at the Urban Monk website (www.urbanmonk.net).
Step Three: Master your emotions.
The objective of most people is to be happy. This might not be expressly stated; for example, in the two steps above you might have identified that you want to improve your relationships, or your career. But what is the outcome of that? Happiness.
That is not to say, discard all your objectives and goals. But unless you master your emotions first, you will not achieve happiness. Stories abound of people who achieve a good career, the perfect body, a great wife or husband, and a big house, but are still unhappy.
Get happy first, is my advice. My family is reasonably well-off, and I had many luxuries as a child. Did that make me happy? It made me comfortable yes, but not happy.
By mastering your emotions, cleaning out resentments and grievances, and changing your old habitual reactions to events, you will achieve happiness – no matter what your external circumstances. Start with my Emotional Mastery category at the Urban Monk website. Be happy where you are now, and then work towards where you want to go.
Think of this analogy: You are a diamond in the rough, recently dug up, and still covered with dirt and mud along the years. Before you can begin to polish and shape the diamond, you have to clean the mud off. That is what emotional mastery means to me.
The dirt and mud refer to some events in your past that were painful to you. I don’t believe that anybody can come through the journey into adulthood unhurt in all ways. All sorts of abuse, emotional, verbal, and physical, could have happened.
This is an exception to the statement that you should take responsibility for whatever has happened to you, especially if you were young and helpless. I have to make this distinction here or I will get bombed with hate mail.
For example; if you are an adult and were in an abusive relationship (I was in several emotionally abusive ones when I was younger), then you have to take responsibility. This was hard for me to accept too. I thought I did all I could; and I honestly tried my hardest. I gave and gave when she abused me. I kept quiet, tried to keep the calm, I tried to make her happy, make her value me. “It’s not my fault!” I told myself for years as I wallowed in self-pity.
In fact, it was my fault. I could have, and should have, simply stood up for myself and walked away. I could have showed some self-respect instead of being a doormat. I could have simply told her that I did not deserve to be treated in that way, and walked away.
Now if something had happened at a younger age, say emotional abuse from my parents, it would be different. If I was helpless to defend myself, stand up for myself, or walk away from someone who violates me, then I cannot say that I was wrong. There is nothing you could have done in that case.
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