unexpected
peace
by penny bond
When
I signed up for the State of Grace Document workshop, conducted by Maureen
McCarthy and Zelle Nelson on October 22-23, 2005, I had no idea what
was awaiting me. I knew about the process from a friend, and thought
it would be a positive addition to the way we do business that would
be congruent with our values. I had no idea of the personal transformation
that was to come. But, then I seldom do. Mostly I find that life has
to push me through open doors of personal growth opportunity backwards
because of my resistance or ignorance.
On
Sunday we were introduced to the work of Byron Katie, where the idea
of questioning our stories was explored. I was surprised by the notion
that everything is story; that we make up stories around our experiences,
or are handed down stories from parents or society that we internalize
without much thought. The idea of questioning the stories of my life
had never occurred to me. Based upon my memories of what had happened
to me as a child, I lived my life with mostly unconscious assumptions
about what to expect from myself, others, and the world.
I
had polio when I was 2 years old and spent six weeks in a polio isolation
ward. I can remember my parents walking out of the door at the other
end of the ward, like it happened yesterday. I can still hear my own
desperate screams, and how I fought the nurses with all of my tiny strength,
who then tied me down and left me captured in my crib. I have memories
of medical abuse where I was subjected to various experimental treatments
involving electroshock to my paralyzed leg, bracing, restraints, and
nurses threatening to not let my parents return if I wasn’t a
“good girl”. My first experience with the whirlpool bath
was traumatic. It was located in a cold, tile room, and the whirlpool
itself, to the eyes of a 2 year old, was enormous. It appeared to be
boiling (the water jets), and in the cool room, the warm water put off
a visible vapor.
Designed
for adults, the nurse lifted me up to lower me down into the water where
she had to hold me, as the water was so deep I would have drowned. I
was convinced, from my sister reading Hansel and Gretel to me, that
I was about to be boiled and eaten! The nurse later told my mother that
I had “passed out”.
And
then, there came the years of rejection I experienced in school by my
peers who were terrified they would catch the disease from me, wouldn’t
let me sit down on the bus, and who stared mercilessly at my brace.
High school was horrible. The story of my young life was not a pretty
one. How could one question that?
As
the final part of the workshop, we were asked to create our part of
a state of grace document which involved looking at our interaction
styles and warning signs of potential emotional melt down that would
inform our co-signers of who we are and how we experience the world
of relationship. I went out to the Labyrinth on the property, and as
I walked in to the center, I held the thought of being totally honest
with myself. When I sat down in the center and began to write, the idea
of questioning stories came up again. As I tentatively began to explore
my assumption of abandonment, I began to see the many experiences I
had in the hospital that were comforting, helpful, and not abandoning.
I thought about how my mother, after bringing me home, had diligently
conducted my daily physical therapy exercises (often without much cooperation
from me), and had cherished me, so grateful that polio had not taken
my life. And suddenly, I realized that overall, I had not been abandoned
like I thought I had. And, Maureen’s words rang in my ears: “To
see what I thought happened, didn’t; that is the source of real
forgiveness.” And I wept from relief, and from a profound sense
of revolution in how I saw my self.
Still
sitting in the center of the Labyrinth, I began to see how my assumption
of abandonment had impacted my relationships, and how I could relate
from a different place now that I had changed my story. However, just
as that began to settle into me, I started to feel a deep and terrible
self hatred. “What’s this?” I asked myself, wondering
how I could come to some peace and have it immediately jerked from my
grasp. Memories began to flood in of all of the children, their taunting,
their avoidance, their wholesale rejection, that by the third grade
had left me wishing that polio had killed me instead of leaving me to
live this life. I wept again, for that pain was just too much. But,
in the midst of it, the thought came to me, that I am no longer rejected.
I am a competent adult who endeavors with all sincerity to be a blessing
to my world. Those feelings were of the past, and that story needed
to be changed. I had not realized how I carried around inside of me
the self hatred I had internalized as a child from the rejection I experienced.
By changing the story, I have begun to know self forgiveness, and a
new appreciation for who I am. I have realized that I can question stories
and assumptions that have hobbled my life, and by choosing to see another
perspective, can find gratitude for what I previously judged negatively.
With that has come a profound sense of peace.
With
a major shift in perception, living it out is also a revelation, as
the subtle, internal changes reveal themselves in unexpected ways. Prior
to the workshop, I would have never considered writing an article about
my experience with polio. I have spent my adult life trying to hide
the disability so as to be “normal”, so writing about it
would have made me feel too vulnerable to rejection. I would have felt
“outed” in that sense. But now that I have “changed
my story” about rejection, having suffered with polio and disability
is no longer a source of shame for me, but a symbol of my solidarity
with humanity. Suffering and imperfection is something we all struggle
with. It is not something to feel ashamed of. Once I let go of my own
internalized rejection, I realized that. A deep comfort in knowing that
I am OK has settled in to my life. The day after the workshop, knowing
that something significant had happened, I wrote in my journal, “Today
is the first day of the rest of my life.” That statement is far
truer now than I imagined when I wrote it.
One
never knows when opening to new opportunities what kinds of healing
are available. I am indebted to Maureen McCarthy, Zelle Nelson, and
WNC Woman magazine for providing me the chance to heal issues that have
plagued my life. What greater blessing is there?