Making Wholeness Possible
Show Notes Three Ways to Get Into Action This Week 1. Ask: What did I learn about personal responsibility in my first formation? Blame can feel safe. It can feel justified. It can even feel powerful. But what if blame is also one of the ways we give away responsibility for our own lives? In this episode, Danae and Ken talk about one of the most common ways we avoid taking responsibility for our own lives: blame. Blame often shows up when we are stressed, hurt, disappointed, afraid, overwhelmed, or angry. It can feel like a way to protect ourselves, explain our pain, or justify our reaction. But over time, blame can keep us stuck. Ken and Danae explore how personal responsibility is not the same as self-blame. Taking responsibility does not mean everything is your fault. It means asking honest questions like: * What am I responsible for? * What am I not responsible for? * What is mine to own? * What is my role in keeping this problem in place? * What choice is available to me now? Think back to your family of origin and the first 18 years of your life. 2. Ask: What limiting story am I telling myself? What limiting story am I telling myself? Ask yourself: * What did I learn about responsibility growing up? * What did I learn about blame? * What did I learn about keeping other people happy? * What did I learn about managing other people’s emotions? * What did I learn about speaking up, setting limits, or asking for what I need? Do not settle for the first surface-level answer. Go deeper. Many of our current patterns were formed long before we realized we were practicing them. What limiting story am I telling myself? Ask yourself: * Where am I saying, “I can’t because…”? * What story have I been using to explain why I am stuck? * Is that story completely true? * Is there any responsible step I could take? * What choice might still be available to me? 3. Ask: What is my role in keeping this problem in place? This is a hard but powerful question. Ken reminds us that we almost always have some kind of role. It may be active or passive. Ask yourself: * Am I staying silent when I need to speak up? * Am I avoiding a hard conversation? * Am I not asking for what I need? * Am I tolerating something but continuing to complain about it? * Am I blaming someone else while refusing to own my own choice? * Am I keeping the problem in place because I am afraid of what change might require? Once you identify your role, take responsibility for the part that is yours. A Hopeful Reminder No one can do the work for you. But you do not have to do it alone. If this episode stirred something in you, or if you feel like you need someone to come alongside you, reach out to us at: makingwholenesspossible@gmail.com We would be glad to connect with you and help you find a next step. Faithwalking’s course, What No One Told You About Life: Growing Up Emotionally, Managing Anxiety, and Improving Relationships, is designed to help you grow in emotional maturity, manage anxiety, and improve your relationships. Learn more here: https://faithwalking.com/what-no-one-told-you-about-life/ [https://faithwalking.com/what-no-one-told-you-about-life/] Taking responsibility for your life does not mean taking blame for everything that has happened to you. It means reclaiming the power to ask: What is mine to own, and what responsible step can I take from here?
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