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Book Excerpt
Chapter Seven:
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Freedom Through Forgiveness
Speaking
with Anger vs. Speaking Your Truth
p.
163 - You Have Chosen to Remember: A Journey from Perception to Knowledge,
Peace of Mind and Joy by James Blanchard Cisneros.
There is a
difference between speaking with anger and speaking your truth. When you
speak with anger, know that the ego-self is speaking. Know that you're
reacting to and focusing on an illusion you see as real. When you speak
with anger you bring forth, knowingly or not, emotionally repressed
feelings from the past. You replace the present with the past and you
lose the opportunity to experience what is really going on.
When you speak with
anger, you are not really concerned with how those listening to you will
feel. All you really care about is that your point of view is heard.
When you come from such a place, all you are doing is making the
listener defensive. The listener then puts up a wall to defend himself
or herself against the perceived attack. As a result, you end up arguing
or shouting at a wall with the hopes of being heard. Regardless of how
smart or right you believe yourself to be, you will not be heard by a
wall. Obviously, a wall is not a good listener, which creates
frustration. The frustration leads to confusion, which then ends in
regret. This person, knowing that he cannot communicate with you, will
move on to someone he believes will listen to what you did to him. This
creates more frustration and miscommunication on everyone's part. In
short, whenever you speak with anger, regardless of whether or not you
believe you have every right to do so - frustration, confusion,
separation and regret are your end results.
Before making an
effort to speak your truth, you must first understand how the ego has
trained you. It has trained you to believe that defense is a proper
response to a perceived attack. Thus it has taught you that when people
begin to either disagree with you or raise their voices, you are under
attack. The ego has taught you that it is right and honorable to defend
yourself, and so you do. You put up a wall, defending yourself against
the perceived attack of a brother or sister. The ego has reinforced in
you that these actions are an attack, yet if you listened to your
Godself, it would remind you that these actions are simply calls for
help, calls for love. Yes, any and every time that your brother or
sister raises his or her voice to you, he or she is really asking to be
loved.
When your baby or
young child cries, what is he or she asking for? What do you usually
offer? What is the result of your behavior toward your child? Do you not
offer your child comfort and love? Does your child not respond by
becoming calm, feeling comforted, smiling, laughing and continuing his
or her play? Can you not see that this result is absolutely possible
with all your brothers and sisters if you offer love and comfort instead
of confrontation and defense? My friend, this offer of love and comfort
is the Godself's answer any time you perceive a brother or sister
attacking you, regardless of the manifestation. Thus, if you choose the
Godself's way of reacting to a brother or sister's perceived attack, you
will create a safe place where two or more individuals with different
points of view can come together. In other words, you can come together
in a place where people agree to speak and listen with an open mind, as
non-judgmentally as possible, so that all points of view can be
discussed, heard, understood and respected. In order to create this
place, try the following five steps:
1) Be quiet.
Understand that the ego-self will try to answer first by attacking
and defending. The less insane person in any argument takes control
of it by being quiet.
2) Bring your
thoughts into your Godself. Understand that your brother or sister
is simply asking for love in the best way he or she knows how, in
the moment.
3) Send your
brother or sister peaceful and loving thoughts. Surround yourself
and him or her with light and invite God to enter the situation.
4) Listen
non-judgmentally to whatever your brother or sister believes he or
she needs to express. Give your brother or sister the time he or she
needs.
5) Go to your
Godself and ask it how you should deal with the situation, what you
should say, and when and how you should say it.
Understand that
there are those who are so invested in the ego's thought system that
they believe that if you do not get physically upset, shout and argue
with them, you do not really care about them or love them. Sit quietly
for a moment and understand what this says about those individuals.
Imagine how lost and confused they must feel. They equate love with
being physically upset, shouting, arguing and regret. But do not judge
them, for they simply have bought the ego's fairy tale as true. My
friend, only small children believe fairy tales are true. Thus, if you
encounter such beings, simply offer them even more comfort and love, and
one day they will realize that comfort and love are the only sane
responses to comfort and love.
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