Listening
With All Our Heart
by
Scott Stoner
Beginning today, and continuing through Friday, I will use
the Living Compass Model for Well-Being and its four quadrants of heart, soul,
strength, and mind to structure my reflections about listening to ourselves.
Today we will focus on the Heart quadrant, which includes our Emotions and
Relationships.
As a psychotherapist, I commonly meet with people who initially want help in getting rid of uncomfortable emotions, such as fear, sadness, anger, or anxiety. I typically respond that the most important first step is to begin by listening to what those troubling emotions are trying to say. Our emotions function like the warning lights on a car dashboard, letting us know that there is an underlying issue that may need to be explored and addressed.
Just as it is wise to learn to listen to uncomfortable
emotions within ourselves, it is also wise to learn to honor and listen to
discomfort if or when it arises in an important relationship in our lives.
Ignoring uncomfortable feelings rarely helps them to go away. Instead, gently
facing discomfort in a relationship, and risking what initially may be an
awkward conversation, can be crucial in deepening and improving the
relationship.
Because uncomfortable emotions, either within ourselves
or in our relationships, are well, uncomfortable, it is understandable that we
might want to avoid them. If we do that, though, often we will find that what
we resist, persists, and that what we face, with time and care, can be
resolved.
Making
It Personal: As you listen to what’s happening right now
with your emotions and/or your relationships, what do you hear? If you are
experiencing any discomfort, can you sit with it to see what it has to teach
you? What do you think of the idea that “what we resist, persists”?
Living
Well Through Lent 2021
Copyright
©2021 Scott Stoner. All rights reserved.
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