Wednesday 18 April 2018

WHEN YOUR SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON OTHERS: TREADING DANGEROUSLY



A few years ago one of my friends introduced me to The Invitation, a poem written by Oriah Mountain Dreamer. I went on to buy the book with the same title in which the poem is explained and explored in detail. It is one of those books that I always go to when I need to reflect and just question myself and where I am in life.


"It doesn’t interest me if the story you are telling is true. I want to know if you can disappoint another to be true to yourself. If you can bear the accusation of betrayal and not betray your own soul. If you can be faithless and therefore trustworthy."

The above hits me everytime when I read it because we place loyalty on this pedestal and though it is important to have and show loyalty, should it come at the expense of betraying ourselves? Should our primary aim be to keep the peace with others even when the decisions we make and actions we take to keep that peace causes us inner conflict?

With maturity and experience I have come to realise that school missed to teach us on the importance of validating ourselves. We don’t know how to pour into ourselves and this causes us to constantly seek others to fill us even when what they fill us with is poisonous, then we turn around and we are shocked at why we have become such bitter and vile people. We are socialized to be communal in our thinking and if we attempt to stand up for what works for us as individuals, we are frowned upon and seen as the bad guys. In the bigger scheme of things, it may seem like a noble act that we think of others before we act or make decisions but the danger comes in where it indirectly teaches us that we need to the approval of others before we can make decisions about things that matter to us. It builds dependence that others have to approve and affirm us and how we live otherwise we live in doubt of ourselves.

It has become increasingly important for me now to cultivate an acceptance of self because I want what people give me to be a bonus and not what I need to survive. If your survival depends on the affirmations and approval of others, your behaviour is automatically altered not to be what you are at peace with but to become more of what they approve of and applaud. I have also observed through people that I believe live for the validation of others, that I did not want to be that person nor do I want to live my life in constant hunger and need for others to validate who and what I am and what I do.

There are a few dangerous elements that come with being a person that is always seeking the approval of others and I have had the unfortunate pleasure of experiencing it first had over the last few months.

1.    People who seek validation are not trustworthy

They can not only lie with ease but they are loyal to whoever and whatever feeds their hunger for applause and validation in that moment and if they have to betray anyone to get what they crave, they will do so without feeling any guilt. When they are with this person or group, they say what they need to say and do to fit in even if it contradicts what they had just said to another person or group the day before. You cannot trust these people, sad but they will hurt you without as much as looking back to see the damage that they have caused.

2.    People who seek validation do not know themselves

There is no way that they can because in any situation or group, these are the people that you find going in whichever direction that the wind is blowing. They will not stand up for how they feel or even express their personal views especially so if it means that they may have to stand alone because others do not agree with them. They either do not know what they want or who they are or they suppress what they know about themselves to be affirmed by those whose opinions they value. They pretend very well – they can be anything depending on who they are with.

3.    People who seek validation buy their way around

It is hard to develop genuine relations with people who seek validation, if they are not buying love, they are saying and doing things that they should not, that they do not believe in – just because they want to belong and be loved by certain people. They do not see themselves as worthy of being love for nothing else than who they genuinely are, flaws and all.

4.    People who seek validation will never feel bad for betraying you because they have betrayed themselves too many times to count

We often want to hold people accountable for falling short of acting in ways that we approve of, when they hurt us we want answers and we seek to understand or justify the very behaviour that has caused us pain. When dealing with people who seek validation, aiming to hold them accountable for their actions or lack thereof is futile because it is easy to betray others when you have betrayed yourself countless times before. How can we expect that someone that has failed to be true to themselves to be true to others?

We need to make the conscious decision to pour into ourselves because the level that we have met ourselves on will determine the level on which we can meet others. It should be a requirement that is just as important as taking care of ourselves physically and externally, we need to invest into loving and affirming ourselves, accepting ourselves whilst acknowledging the flaws that we still want to work on. Anything that we hope to get from others, we should first cultivate and be able to give to ourselves - in that way we recognise if the price is too much to pay for what others are giving us. If it causes us to suppress who we are, takes away our voices and turns out into beings that have to betray themselves in order not to be betray others - then the price is too hefty to take a gamble on. 

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