12 Comments , Comment or Ping

  1. dc

    “You don’t realise that you are the only one who can stop your suffering, not a lover you have, not a lover you are waiting for, not your parents.”

    I wrote that sentence down! With my fountain pen!

  2. Hehe, thanks dc. I also noticed a small grammar error in that sentence, I should have used a ; not a , I ‘ll have to go back and fix that. Thanks for the comment, mate!

  3. RJ

    Great article Albert, I really enjoy your writing.

  4. This couldn’t be truer, Albert. I can’t tell you how many patients I have seen come to our clinics who are very attached to their suffering. They often have a treatment where there is great emotional release and a relief of symptoms, but they don’t come back despite expressing their gratitude for what has already happened. The same thing happened to me! I had to stay away for a few weeks before I understood that I was simply so attached to my pathology that I didn’t want to give it up!

    I’ve also noticed this when I get very busy at school/work. I find that I perpetuate a state of unhappiness and project it to others so that they will understand that I’m in a difficult situation and, hopefully, help me out.

    I could just ask instead, I suppose. :D

    Thanks for the great article.

    Eric

  5. My first thought when I read your title was that my best friend needs to read this. My next thought was, “What does that thought say about me?” It is easier to see it in someone else before we see it in ourselves. With some of my health issues of this past year, I have begun to ask myself, “What is my pay-off for having this illness, this pain, this headache?” Sympathy, compassion, a reason not to be working outside? As aways, your article makes me think, “What is my part in all of this?”

    By the way, I was really tempted to ignore answering your questions. I am glad I didn’t. Those answers show that I have really grown in some areas. Thanks.

  6. @ RJ: Thank you kindly!

    @ Eric: Thank you as well - it’s interesting I never thought of it that way…I mean the “having people help me at work” bit (I was thinking more about someone moping at home whinging about their sad life like I used to do). Thanks for the added insight.

    @Patricia: Heh, glad I helped. As KL pointed out to me, I showed cognitive distortions of my own in my last piece about anxiety - I stuck in so many warnings in that article. I was writing about something that I myself suffered from and it took a fellow blogger to wake me up. So yes, it is very hard to see it in yourself. (I took out most of the warnings though haha).

    And yea thats the problem with asking questions, everyone just tends to ignore them. I always do.

  7. The happiness I’ve found when I’m able to just LET GO, is amazing :-)

  8. Hey Modern Worker,

    That is actually quite amazing. I’ve heard many teachers say simply let go of your unhappiness, but I have no idea how to do it. Mine comes back if I just simply let let go. Can you expand more on how you actually do it? Is it a mental agreement, or a physical relaxation, or something? Much appreciated if you can!

  9. “To let go,” is not quite right. While we all have the best of intentions when we decide to let go of some painful incident in our minds, the very need to let go keeps us attached. Although it is a seemingly admirable action, it keeps us in a loop of thought and leads us back to the same place.

    The statements, “I will let go,” “I am letting go,” “I am going to let go,” imply elements of psychological time. But if I am clear as to the root of my suffering, and I have seen the danger that is there; all of the pain and images I have created, all of my projected thoughts that keep me away from the moment; I will drop it and never pick it up again. Psychological time cannot take root, and therefore, the illusion of my suffering has ended.

    As it occurs, it is more appropriate to say:

    Do not let go of your suffering. Question your suffering and it will let go of you.

    But there is only so much that can be said in a short reply, right?

  10. Hey Takuin

    That is a good reply, and I agree. In my experience, at least, letting go simply doesn’t work. I have no doubt it does work for some people, just not for me.

    And agreed with you on the questioning part of it. I was researching some Buddhist text on removing negative thoughts, and investigating it is one of the five ways the Buddha prescribed. I’ve got a post on it half done :D . Thanks for the insight.

  11. It’s like Dr. Phil said, “You do what works. And everything you do, good or bad, get get a payoff for it. Including the bad stuff.” I’ve seen the payoff in many people before, I just didn’t know what was the purpose of it. I do now. It gets you what you want.

Reply to “ The Elusive Key to Emotional Mastery, Part 5: Why do we cling to unhappiness? ”

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