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Speaking Up For Your Inner Child

By Dr. Margaret Paul
August 01, 2016



Do you speak up for your inner child - your feeling self - when someone is judgmental toward you, or they are blaming you or discounting you?



A couple sitting next to one another on a bench that overlooks a lake. What do you generally do when you are in an interaction with someone and you are feeling anxious, scared or lonely from the interaction?

Perhaps the other person is judging you, blaming you, or threatening you, or is being sarcastic or discounting of you. Or maybe the other person keeps interrupting you and bringing the conversation back to him or herself. Perhaps the other person is going on and on, not letting you get in a word edgewise. Or maybe the other person is just completely non-responsive to you, not listening to you or acting as if you are not there.

These interactions will often bring about an inner feeling of stress. How do you respond to your inner stress?

Most people, in response to their inner stress, have learned to protect against the feeling in a number of ways: arguing, defending, explaining, attacking, withdrawing or complying. These are just of few of the ways you might have learned to protect against inner stress. Yet none of these actually deal with the stressful feeling.

This stressful feeling is your inner child telling you that something is wrong. The feeling is telling you that you are picking up a negative energy, an energy that is not in resonance with peace and love. If you respond to this stressful feeling with your own protective, controlling behavior, then you are also moving out of alignment with yourself, out of alignment with peace and love. By protecting against your stressful feelings with some form of controlling behavior, you have abandoned yourself, which results in even more stress. Now, not only are you responding with stressful behavior to the negative energy that is being aimed at you, but you have also abandoned your inner child in the face of it.

However, if you are consistently practicing Inner Bonding, you will begin to be more aware that the energy coming at you is negative. You will gradually become more aware of your feelings, of the stress that comes when negative energy is aimed at you. With consistent practice, you will be more and more able to stay in Step One of Inner Bonding - being mindful of your feelings.

Then you can move on to Step Two, moving into compassion for your feelings with a deep desire to learn what is causing them, rather than just reacting to them. Once you are in a compassionate intent to learn, you can quickly discern that you are feeling stressed due to negative energy being aimed at you. Once you are aware of this, you have a much better chance of moving into loving action - speaking up for your feeling self – your inner child.

In an important relationship such as with a partner, a close friend, or a co-worker, speaking up for your feelings - for your inner child - can take different forms, depending upon the situation. But a sort of standard response could be something like, "This isn't feeling good. This is feeling stressful." Once you have made this kind of statement, then you can decide what is the next loving action. There are really only two different loving actions you can take in important relationships when there is negative energy coming at you. One is to move into an intention to learn with the other person, which might look like this:

"This isn't feeling good. This feels very stressful. I'd like to understand what's happening for you right now. Are you willing to explore it with me?"

The other is to express your limit and take action on it, which might look like this:

"This isn't feeling good. This negative energy is feeling stressful. I'm going to take a 30 minute time out (or whatever time you want), and then see if we can talk about it with openness and caring." Then you would need to leave the interaction by going into another room, taking a walk, or getting off the phone. You can come back in 30 minutes or whatever length of time you stated, and see if the other person is open.

If the other person is not open when you come back, then it is best not to discuss the issue until both of you are open.

You will find that your stress level goes down once you become adept at speaking up for yourself.

Join Dr. Margaret Paul for her 30-Day at-home Course: "Love Yourself: An Inner Bonding Experience to Heal Anxiety, Depression, Shame, Addictions and Relationships."

Join IBVillage and receive compassionate help and support for your healing journey.



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We draw people to us at our common level of woundedness and our common level of health. Therefore, if you want your relationships to change from conflicted or distant to loving and connected, be devoted to your own healing and become the kind of person you want to attract into your life.

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DAILY INSPIRATION

We draw people to us at our common level of woundedness and our common level of health. Therefore, if you want your relationships to change from conflicted or distant to loving and connected, be devoted to your own healing and become the kind of person you want to attract into your life.

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