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Exploring Our "Dark" Side
by
Alice Carlton, LCSW
Think of your most embarrassing moment
and you find your "dark" side.
You know, that part you wish weren't
there, the part you want to hide or forget ever existed.
Most of us stuff these moments into the
bottom of our memory bags. But you know what happened when
you hid those veggies you hated under the tablecloth when
Mom wasn't looking? She eventually found them, and you got
found out. It's the same way with hidden parts of ourselves.
Like neglected children, they eventually cry out for attention.
Those hidden parts can only stay hidden
as long as no one lifts up the tablecloth. If the defenses
we build around these hidden parts are penetrable, we may
unveil them ourselves.. When we form an intimate bond with
a romantic partner and live with that person on a daily basis,
the tablecloth usually gets lifted eventually. But if they
are made of heavy iron mail, even falling in love cannot melt
them. Then the relationship may fail, as if we unconsciously
choose to hide and be safe rather than to grow in intimacy
and experience our full aliveness.
So why do we not go ahead and take that
inner journey on our own? What stops us? Let's look a moment
at human development.
We are born whole (holy). As Wordsworth
so beautifully expressed it: "trailing clouds of glory
do we come." Look into the wide open eyes of a newborn
and you know this is true. If our parents notice and respond
to our needs, we feel great. To the extent they don't, we
feel pain. Believing our survival is at stake (and sometimes
it is), we do our best to please our caretakers. We hide the
needs that weren't met. Somehow they get lost in the shadows.
In most families, only parts of us get
nurtured and developed, usually the parts our parents had
nurtured and developed in themselves by their parents. What
came through the intergenerational transmission process often
determines how much of our true nature gets encouraged by
our parents. Some unhealthy messages about how to live get
passed down. To grow into the magnificent beings we were born
to be involves shining light on our dark side. Then those
split off parts - our lost selves- can be reclaimed and given
the nurturing attention they didn't receive when we were children.
But how do we do this? Here are three
ways: attending to our dreams, noticing the traits we most
intensely dislike in others, and noticing the traits we most
intensely admire in others.
Dreams show us aspects of ourselves that
we haven't yet recognized in our waking life.
Once as a young woman newly out of school,
I struggled in a work situation that required me to interact
closely with someone I found very abrasive and critical. As
a child, I was taught always to be a good girl and never to
rock the boat. One night I dreamed that I physically attacked
my obnoxious co-worker. When I awoke, I was horrified. But,
as I had been taught, I wrote the dream down just as it occurred,
noting the mood, to see what I could learn.
This led to the beginnings of learning
to be assertive. Slowly, over time I dared to move into the
middle ground between being the good girl who dared not rock
the boat or acting out my dream behavior. I began to express
myself more directly, saying clearly what I wanted from my
co-worker. Although I did not shed a tear when he left his
job, I should have thanked him, because working with him gave
me an opportunity to learn to use my own power more effectively.
That was an example of working with my shadow.
Finding our lost selves through observing
what we despise or admire in others can be a bigger challenge.
I do an exercise with groups or individuals
that involves thinking of people you dislike the most and
admire the most and listing all the corresponding negative
and positive traits. Cull the list down to the top five. Then
identify the polarities, i.e., rageful vs. passive.
In many cases, if we hate rageful people,
we lean the other direction and become passive. We let others
use us like a doormat and pile up resentment that can build
into rage. This energy has to go somewhere. It may implode
and create illness, or it may explode and then we blow our
stack and feel guilty and horrible afterwards.
Here is an exercise that may help. For
the negative traits, fill in the blanks in the following statement:
when you decided you could not be ____________ (negative trait)
the positive aspect of being _________ (negative trait) that
you lost was the ability to be_______________. For example,
when you decided you could not be rageful, the positive aspect
of being rageful that you lost might be the ability to tell
your truth. From there you create a personal behavior change
request. Such a behavior change request for yourself might
be, first, to look for moments in the next week when you hold
back your truth and, then, to dare to express it one or two
times..
Similarly, when we put those we admire
on a pedestal, we often fail to nurture the seeds of greatness
in ourselves that we see flowering in them. Looking up to
them may prevent us from looking inward to claim those traits
we can't imagine finding in ourselves.
We spend our early lives creating our
shadow. To become whole means investing time and energy into
illuminating it and reclaiming our lost selves. Just as valuable
ore is found deep inside the darkest caves, the gems of lost
life energy are found deep within our dark side. Replace fear
and shame with courage and curiosity and we can become spelunkers
of our souls.
Alice Carlton, LCSW, is a Clinical
Social Worker in private practice in Chapel Hill with over
27 years experience. She specializes in hypnotherapy, Imago
Relationship Therapy, and relationship coaching for singles.
Contact her at alice@alicecarlton.com
or 919-942-3494.
2/1/04
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