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For
empaths who find themselves in the role of being the emotional advocate
for a dissociated person, it is very hard to break out of this cycle.
However, becoming aware of the dynamic between the empath and the
dissociated can start the shift. Calling someone who is severely
dissociated on his behavior hardly ever works---they feel too threatened
and will either withdraw, attack, or go into denial. In less
extreme cases the empath is better off explaining that her own emotional
health is in jeopardy, and for her own sake, she must leave the
relationship if the dynamic does not change.
In some
cases, departing from the relationship is not necessary if the empath
can successfully create the energetic emotional boundary by not
processing the dissociated person's energy. In this way, the
empath takes full responsibility for her own energy system, and
with her words and actions begins to grow proper boundaries with
the others in her life.
We have
all become processors for other people's emotional energy by choice.
A healthy example of this would be a man and woman coming together
to share their lives. Under ideal conditions, both people
are aware and independent of the other. They make a conscious
choice to share their emotional energy in the form of support---they
make the choice to become emotionally interdependent, with healthy
limits to this dependency. Most of us have not been raised
to be emotionally healthy, and so we can easily become stuck in
unhealthy emotionally dependent relationships. A drastic example
of this relationship is the spouse of the alcoholic who never leaves
because she thinks the alcoholic cannot survive without her support.
But, many of us
do not live in these extremes. We are all somewhat healthy
with a few blind spots. Some of us are emotionally dissociated
with only certain emotions, like anger. If one partner is
comfortable with handling anger, and the other partner is not, the
tendency is for the more adept partner to work all the anger for
the couple. In my own life, I had this very experience with
my husband. My husband comes from a family that does not express
its anger well. In fact, anger is usually repressed or ignored
entirely. In my original family, anger was expressed all the
time. I learned how to be angry from my family, but my husband
did not.
At one
point my husband became very angry with a few of his family members,
but he was not willing to handle it given his family programming.
Since I was empathic, and I had no problems with anger, his anger
naturally became a part of my energy system. The effect was
I was irrationally enraged with his family members, and could not
figure out why. My husband couldn't figure out why I was so
mad, especially since he wasn't angry at all. This led to
a lot of useless strife between us.
When
the usual methods for resolving conflict did not work, I began to
ask myself if this anger was really mine. When it became apparent
that it was my husbands, we had a long talk about his willingness
to be angry. He admitted that he was not comfortable with
anger. We did some soul retrieval work around anger and confrontation
to release him from much of his family programming. Then,
I set the intention that any of his anger that was in my system
would travel back to him on my breath. I literally blew his
anger back into his body.
Almost
immediately my husband felt his anger, and he did not like the discomfort
of the emotion. That very discomfort led him to confront his
family members, which eventually led to a mending of one relationship.
The air was cleared, and true enjoyment of the relationship was
restored. What was strange for me was that I was not angry
any longer at his family. Now, whenever I become angry regarding
something related to my husband, I ask if it's my husband's or if
it is mine. Even after this incident, and its successful resolution,
I still find myself taking on his anger for him.
Staying in our own
energy, in our own "stuff", is a practice for empaths.
And it is a practice for my husband to not push his anger away onto
the closest empath. As partners we help each other overcome
and retrain ourselves out of a very bad habit. This willingness
to stay conscious is what eventually will help us both heal and
grow. My husband has the opportunity to learn how to handle
emotions that have been uncomfortable for him, and I have more opportunity
to practice not processing energy for him.
Many
empaths take on the energy of others, thinking that they are helping.
In most cases, this is not true. We all need our emotional
energy---it is literally the fuel of life. It also gives us
access to our internal feedback system. If we take someone's
emotional energy, ultimately we are disempowering them. In
my case, I was taking my husband's energy, keeping him from learning
how to empower himself with anger, and I was making myself ill by
trying to process his foreign energy. Empaths must learn that
helping others does not mean running someone else's pain, grief,
anger, or fear for them. Those emotions have specific purposes
and are needed to have a successful and ultimately happy life.
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