Concerns From the Past
All right, so by virtue of the fact that you are reading this post, you are some number of years old. These years have afforded you experiences. And the nature of experiences is that they can be either good or bad. Both have affected you in some way. Sometimes you draw upon moments of success and triumph to inspire yourself today. Sometimes you utilize the lessons of hardship and failure to make better judgments moving forward.
Other times, though, it is difficult to find any meaning in your past other than just pain. Sometimes when you draw upon certain memories, all you can do is hope that they recede back into the depths of your mind to keep from putting you through it all again. These memories are your traumas, your wounds, and any other unresolved pain.
How the Past Affects the Present
It is easy to find comfort in the idea that making it through a difficult time is all you might need to come out better on the other side. And sometimes that is absolutely the case. When it isn’t the case, though, the past has many ways of working its way into disrupting your life today.
As mentioned previously, finding meaning in past experiences opens the door to drawing upon those memories in positive ways. However, when it is difficult or impossible to find meaning in them, their context in our lives deteriorates, but the memories remain. And this remains to be true even if we do our best to push such memories away. Maybe, you could even say that this makes it worse. Now, we are dealing with an inherently painful memories that stirs up certain negative emotions compounded with a sense of anxiety about even bringing it up in the first place.
This is the part where you have likely heard somebody else express the unwarranted advice that you just need to work through it.
How to Actually Work Through It
It is worth taking a moment to note that as I am talking about past events and their effect on the present, specifically do not mean very recent events. If you have just gone through something, there is naturally a period of recovery (and that period can vary depending on how severe it was). What I am talking about are the situations when you have had adequate time to heal but it simply has not happened. This takes a different mindset and approach, and it is
Being perfectly honest, there are many different ways to do it. However, there are certain goals and markers along the way that should help. First, if recalling a certain memory stirs up a significant amount of pain (similar to the level as when it happened), that is a clear indication that this is a point of focus. Ultimately, one of the most important ways of dealing with this is to be able to provide yourself some context.
While you are living through something painful or difficult, you have no way of knowing how things will turn out. Even right after you make it through a trying time or traumatic event, it can be difficult to foresee how things will settle down. The more time that builds between that event and where you are now, the more opportunity you have for context. Sometimes it is even necessary to let that time build before you can revisit your pain in a constructive way.
Once you have reached that threshold of time, though, the tempting nature of trying to forget begins to become more and more of an obstacle. Many times, it takes support from somebody else to muster the courage to revisit the event again, but being able to acknowledge what happened in as unfiltered terms as possible will go a long way in beginning your journey to healing. As you do this, your beliefs and feelings that you hold in regard to your memories begin to come to the forefront of your mind. Once you have the opportunity to face these beliefs, you will find much of the source of your current pain.
And this brings us to one of the keys to healing. The beliefs that you hold in regard to your painful memories influence the meaning that you derive from your experiences. This meaning drives the narrative that you tell about your own life. All of this starts with your understanding of your pain in the greater context of your experiences overall. But gaining any understanding means that it is necessary to take a courageous look at your pain to begin with.