Avoidance is a lot of things.
I would picture it as a lot of little rivers that feed a large body of water.
I recommend starting with Rising Strong. It’s a great book on being more vulnerable and what building true connections look like- both with others and yourself.
As far as it being selfishness, I think being overly selfish or overly unselfish comes from the same thing- a lack of something that you are trying to fill. I think it’s how we look at connection. Either we have to take, take, take because we keep looking for our validation in them proving their love. Or we have to give, give, give hoping we can earn love. It’s two sides to the same coin.
I personally believe that we are trying to substitute that rather than learning to love ourselves.
So, each day think about putting the water in the little rivers that feed our life (the larger body of water) each day. I don’t think you can talk yourself out of being avoidant, it’s more about consistency in changing how we look at ourselves.
The type of work involved seems unrelated, but it’s things like:
A daily gratitude practice. This one sounds trite, but it’s huge. Studies show gratitude literally changes the wiring of your brain in as little as 21 days. It’s not just sitting and thinking of all the things you are grateful for. Pick a few each morning and really reflect on your appreciation of them. If you choose 3 things for 21 days, all the sudden you have 62 new things you will connect with and notice because you are now mindful of them.
When you feel the abundance from gratitude, you find you already have what you need to be happy without taking more from others.
A daily practice of becoming aware of your thoughts and reaching for better ones. When you tune into your self talk, are you talking to yourself in such a way that you would someone you love or your best friend? Reframe them.
"I am so stupid" is one I often said to myself. I would correct myself as often as I could be aware of it and say something like "I am learning new things all the time". "What a shitty day" became, "I am having a hard moment, that’s okay." I would take a short walk and a deep breath and tell myself "okay let’s try this again"
Daily devotion to do something good for others. Make it your bs as often as possible. The rule is though, you do it for them, to make their day easier or better, not to get something in return. We feel good about ourselves when we learn to give. In fact, I think a lot of the magic of love is in what we put into it. What we invest in it.
So those are some ideas about how you set up your "little rivers" to flow positive things into your life.
It’s not really just about changing your avoidance. It’s about becoming proud of who you are, feeling the abundance in your life, creating healthier thoughts will always yield healthier behaviors, and when you show yourself kindness and compassion, it’s far easier to show it to others. Our relationship with ourselves is that big body of water that I am talking about feeding. And when you learn to make that fill with as much positive as you can you will hold your head high in situations rather than avoiding them.
Start with rising strong, because she really will help you understand how to have true connection. Most of us don’t know what that looks like or how we are the ones who keep ourselves from having it.
And realize that the more you can be in each moment the more joy you will have, and the more you will have to spread. When we are in our past we are depressed. When we are in our future, we are anxious. Try dealing in the current moment as much as possible. The more you can be present, the more you can be mindful, the more you can change your "rivers" in those moments and the more positive momentum will make you lean into your life.
There is no such thing as a book that can tell you how not to be avoidant and fix you right there. It’s a mindful daily practice that can only be as effective when you are consistent and mindful.
These things sounded so left field to me when I was recovering. I needed something quicker because my life was falling apart. But the more I watched the falling apart instead of getting in there and doing the repairs, the more isolated and avoidant I became.
Are you in therapy? If you can afford it, I think you would find it helpful. They will help you trace where these things that aren’t serving you come from so that you can let them go.
[This message edited by hikingout at 11:15 AM, Monday, April 1st]