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About Us: |
Stewart and Associates Counselling and Consulting Services Inc. (SACCS)
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Life's Transitions |
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Self-Renewal Involves Letting Go of the Old and Embracing the New... Throughout the course of our lives we experience many endings and many beginnings. In nature we observe times when things move slowly without visible change - and then suddenly an acceleration occurs followed by a transformation. Daffodil shoots emerge from the cold ground, and then before we know it bloom in a dazzling array of perfumed beauty. Tree leaves which have been green all summer suddenly turn gold and within a short time are blown to the ground, the tree's branches left bare. Transitions are as natural as night and day. And so it is with our lives. Life transitions are predictable changes in our lives associated with a discontinuity with the past. With each change we must give up the protective structures which have carried us through and then face the world anew with a sense of fragility and vulnerability. These times of disruption may force us to test the limits of our ability to adapt. However, with each transition we have the opportunity to learn a great deal about our inner coping resources and to ask ourselves what we really want out of life. This period of self-reflection can then lead to self-renewal and a new phase of stability and eventual equilibrium. At times transitions are thrust upon us dramatically and unexpectedly. Disabling accidents, the deaths of those in our lives, divorce, the loss of a job, an illness - all of these events mean that we must leave something behind and then adjust to a new way of living, even if we feel totally unprepared to do so. These events can strike without warning and leave us in a personal crisis characterized by denial, anger, mourning and withdrawal. But not all transitions emerge from negative experiences. Marriage, a new job, a move to a new city, the birth of a child, re-acquaintance with an old friend - these events, which may be planned and expected, can also lead us into the process of a life transition. Sometimes life transitions occur because we find ourselves in a rut. We may have the nagging feeling that something is wrong, although we can't quite put our finger on the reasons. Our lives are not going the way we thought they would and time is passing us by. We feel that it is time for a change. This can happen at any time, but it is most common during what Gail Sheehy has called the "predictable crises of adult life" which often accompany our decade changes (that is, our twenties, our thirties, our mid-life years, etc.) As William Bridges pointed out in his book, Transitions, our life transitions are composed of an ending, a "neutral zone," and a new beginning. When a transition occurs, we need to give up our old definitions of the world, our old ways of doing things, and we are challenged by the process of "letting go." Endings are difficult for most people, even when we are unhappy with the way things used to be. The known is more comfortable than the unknown. Once we let go, however, we enter a period of feeling disconnected from the past but not yet connected to the present - the neutral zone. This is a time which can engender great self-reflection, an assessment of what we really want out of life, and a time to reorient ourselves toward the future. Finally, the new beginning completes the successful transition. This is when we embark on a journey of new priorities and a sense of a renewed future.
The
Ending of the Old...
Bridges
has identified four stages of the ending process.
Disidentification
- Not only do our activities change, but we begin to give up our former
self-definitions. A person in the so-called mid-life crisis, for example,
needs to give up defining him- or herself as a "younger" person.
To do otherwise is to postpone the inevitable, to invite a perpetuation
of inner conflict, and to forego the advantages of moving into a different
stage of life. Some people try to initiate a beginning before they accomplish the work of the ending, mainly because endings are so difficult for most people. For example, they may try to find a new relationship before ending the old one. This creates a situation where the old structures, the old realities, are still in place and it precludes accomplishing the work of the healthy transition which can lead to true self-renewal. Before finding a new relationship, the person may find it preferable to spend some time alone, think about what the old relationship meant and what was wrong with it, and gain insight into what he or she truly wants at this stage of life. To do this, we must confront the challenge of the ending, and then move into the neutral zone. A life of integrity demands nothing less. The Neutral ZoneOther societies provide in their rituals of transition ways of dealing with the neutral zone. For example, the vision quest, where the person goes into the wilds alone in search of answers which may come intuitively, is a way in which some native tribes provide a transition between childhood and adulthood. Lacking such rituals in our society, we may not know what to do with the neutral zone. We may feel lost, confused, and disoriented, and may even seek treatment for depression. This time of confusion, however, can set the stage for self-examination and answers which guide us out of the transition and into the future. The neutral zone is a period of personal reorientation. Nothing much happens in the neutral zone, at least from the outsider's perspective. People in the neutral zone often say that they need a few days, or even longer, alone just to think - or pray or meditate. Without the old definitions of the world and our accustomed activities to fall back on, time in the neutral zone can create substantial introspection and heightened self-awareness. And out of this primal stew can emerge intuitions and insights which provide the recipe for the new beginning. This is a time to examine the course of one's life, to reacquaint oneself with the nature of one's inner self, and to think of ways to have one's dreams come true. Renewal emerges from an examination of one's inner resources.
Embracing
the New Transitions are a natural and inevitable part of life - and because we find comfort in the familiar, they can be very difficult. Psychotherapy is an effective way to make the most of our transitions - a way to understand the old, to look inward and discover that flame which represents our true inner selves, and to define the direction of our new beginnings.
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of Page Updated: August 03, 2011 |
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