Tuesday, February 20, 2007

SECRET #2: “The Jews Manifested The Holocaust”

At point Joe Vitale leans in and tells the camera (no, wait, he’s really telling YOU! He’s talking to you! Because he cares about you and believes in you!) that people often ask him if he thinks we’re really responsible for everything that happens to them. “Well,” he says. “I’m sort of here to kick your butt a bit and say yeah, you do attract everything.”

At first, this seems like a recipe for empowerment. Take total responsibility for everything. What could be more empowering?

But if you follow the logic just a little further the waters get murkier and more troubling. You can hear the voices a ways down that road declaring, “Yeah, those Jews with their Holocaust thinking! Way to manifest Hitler!” comes the response, “And Indigenous people. Holy Genocidal thinking Batman! How else can you explain what happened to them?” and another voice, “Yeah. A women in general. If 25% of women in the USA are raped then 25% of them must have some pretty strong rape-thinking.”

This is what is implied indirectly.

Here’s what’s also implied: that the world’s wealthiest manifested their wealth, thus they deserve it. They got it because they applied “The Secret” (and sure, used some trillions of dollars of unpaid slave labour, incalculable amounts of stolen land and treated women as property but . . . you’ve got to look past all of that and not focus on the negative so much).

Those who suffer, suffer because they attracted it. Those who are fabulously wealthy are wealthy because they manifested that. To change your cirumstance to become fabulously wealthy all you need to do is change your thinking.

I think it’s very important here that we draw some clear distinctions about responsibility. We need to be clear about what we are responsible for. We are responsible for our words and our actions and our intentions or focus. That’s about it in my books. Everything else we aren’t so much responsible for as we are able to be responsive to. I don’t believe that I’m responsible for how other people feel, but I can be responsive and empathic to them. I’m not responsible for other people’s needs - but I can be responsive to them. I may not be totally responsible for everything that happens to me - but I can be responsive to it. That is, I can choose a relationship to it that will strengthen me vs. weaken me.

And this is a point of major disagreement that I have with many new agers.

She attracted the rape.

In truth - I don’t know. The universe works in mysterious ways. But if a woman is raped, I can guarantee that I’m not going to start off by asking her, “So how did you create this?” She needs empathy and compassion. She needs safety. And, eventually, she may be open to receiving support in finding a relationship to that event which will make her stronger. Eventually, if she is to be happy and healthy, she’ll need to find a relationship to that event which will empower her.

Consider the words of Julia Ingram . . .

New Age Bullies

by Julia Ingram

Hannah followed New Age thinking for many years. She constructed astrology charts, worked with psychics and thought she knew something about the world. And then her 26-year-old son committed suicide. Prior to that tragedy (most bereavement counselors consider it the hardest loss to face), she believed in the adage: “Everything happens for a reason.” Hannah says, “I no longer believe that, nor do I believe I know anything about why the world works as it does.

“When people said my son died for a reason, or that he was in a better place, or worst of all, that he’d chosen to die,” said Hannah, “I was appalled and furious. It demeaned my son’s death.”

Not only did it demean her son’s death, it minimized her loss.

Hannah’s experience reminded me of a friend who underwent a severe bout of chronic fatigue. She went to see the minister of her “new thought” church, hoping to get some short-term help with shopping and housework. The minister provided less practical support: he promised to help her come to grips with the “lessons” she should learn from the illness. My friend dragged herself home and returned to her bed, feeling alone and ashamed.

During my 36 years as a psychotherapist, I’ve seen many clients who have been victims of people like those Hannah and my friend describe. I call them New Age Bullies — those who, sometimes with the best intentions, repeat spiritual movement shibboleths, with little understanding of how hurtful their advice can be. Some of their favorite clichés are:

It happened for a reason.

Nobody can hurt you without your consent.

I wonder why you created this illness (or experience).

It’s just your karma.

There are no accidents.

There are no victims.

There are no mistakes.

A variant of this behavior is found in the self-bullying people who blame themselves for being victims of a crime, accident, or illness and interpret such misfortunes as evidence of their personal defects or spiritual deficiencies.

I first used the term “New Age Bully” after attending a lecture in the early ‘90s. The speaker, a popular leader in the spiritual movement, recited a New Age nostrum: “We create our own reality.” A woman in the audience responded by recounting how she had taught this “fact” to her seven-year-old daughter. The child had fallen off her new bicycle and skinned her knee. When she ran crying into the house, the mother told her to sit down and think about how she had created that accident. To my shock, the speaker then led the audience in a round of applause for this woman. The message was reinforced: Even children need to learn how everything that happens to them is their own creation.

I jumped up and said, “I think the little girl needed a kiss and a band aid.” When I tried to elaborate, the lecturer cut me off. “Are you a beginner?” he asked and then told me how wrong I was. I sat down, embarrassed and confused. Only later, could I answer that question for myself: I am not a beginner, but a seven-year-old child is. And this self-appointed guru was teaching a belief, not a fact. He had bullied me that evening, and he encouraged others to do the same.

I chose the word “bully” because bullying is about power. In the aftermath of the Columbine High School tragedy, educators, law enforcement officials, and therapists began paying more attention to bullying. Mostly, they deal with malign bullying — the willful and conscious desire to hurt another person. That is bullying at its most destructive. While I have certainly seen examples of such abuse within spiritual circles, I’m also challenging those who push their beliefs on others in an overbearing, dogmatic manner, even when their advice is well-intentioned.

On the other hand, the belief that we create our own reality can be very self-empowering for some people — the psychological equivalent of moving mountains. My clients with strong beliefs that they are accountable for their own lives do much better in their recovery from psychological problems than those who stay stuck in the shame/blame cycle (of self or others.)

Classic books by holistic physicians, such as Bernie Siegel’s Love, Medicine and Miracles and Andrew Weil’s Spontaneous Healing, illustrate the value of empowering beliefs in recovering from illness. Neurologist David Perlmutter, author of the forthcoming The Better Brain Book, writes: “It is the belief that predestined reality can be modified that leads to statistically significantly better outcomes.”

Several years ago, Gen Kelsang Lingpur, now a resident teacher at the Tara Mahayana Buddhist Center in Tucson, was diagnosed with leu-kemia. At the time, she was a business executive from a Catholic background. “My first reaction,” she said, “was grief. I cried a lot and asked, ‘Why me?’ But then I thought, if I have only two years to live, I want them to mean something.”

Her quest for meaning led her to Buddhism, which, in turn, led her to a belief in karma. “I learned that everything comes from the Mind,” she recalled, “but not this [she smiled and pointed to her head] mind. Everything that happens in this life is a direct result of actions from a previous life.” Once she accepted the belief that her illness was the result of her actions in a previous life, she was able, with help from her physician, to heal through Buddhist practices.

So I asked Gen Lingpur how she applied her belief in karma when working with cancer patients. “I never say to them as a group that their cancer is a result of actions from a previous life,” she said. “I don’t know if that is their belief. That would be inappropriate.”

Her distinction is important. It is the reason why affirmations so often fail. Coming to a personally held belief is a process. For some, the insight may come in a flash but, for most of us, it takes work and experience to move from a desire to belief. It would be like skipping to the last page of an instruction manual and missing all the necessary intervening steps for proper assembly. If you are in the first chapter of recovery from childhood sexual abuse, for example, an early stage of recovery is to challenge the commonly shared belief that you somehow “caused” the abuse. This belief does not come from a position of power but from one of self-shame or blame. In my therapeutic practice, I have never seen anyone able to skip over this first task of realizing they were not to blame. Sometimes the only thing these clients are able to do in this early stage is to see that their abuser was to blame.

Some of my fellow therapists express concern that blaming others keeps the client in the victim role. While I don’t want my clients to get stuck there, if that’s what they need to do first, it can be a useful step. To tell a vulnerable client that there are no victims invariably leads them to internalize even more self-blame.

Blaming the Victim

Many people automatically and unconsciously blame themselves for being victims. Counselors who work in a battered women’s shelter or with rape victims know it is a long and arduous process for their clients to reclaim a sense of personal power. It would be utterly cruel to ask an abused woman what she did to create that experience or to suggest that she wasn’t a victim. I assume that most people reading this article would not condone such insensitivity, but there are subtler ways to blame a victim.

A client of mine was in a relationship with a man who shared her spiritual beliefs. At the beginning of our work, she described the relationship in mystical terms. However, she had severe stress symptoms as a direct result of trying to live with his eleven-year-old son who routinely screamed hateful remarks at her.

Her complaints about the boy’s out-of-control behavior and her pleas to her partner to get help for his son were met with disdain. He insisted the problem was her response to the situation. When she told him she was in emotional pain over the child’s behavior, he replied, “No one can hurt you without your permission.” The worst of the stress came from her buying into her partner’s reality — that it was her problem.

I said he sounded like a New Age Bully. He showed no compassion for her pain; he didn’t listen to her complaints or advice; and he shamed her for reacting to the child’s aggressiveness.

Once she stopped blaming herself for being upset and saw that the problem wasn’t her inability to handle whatever the child did, but her partner’s unwillingness to take her complaints seriously or show her any compassion, she ended the relationship. She was now in a place to examine the situation according to her own beliefs.

I encourage clients to carefully examine the belief that one should remain in an abusive relationship or job because of “the lessons to be learned,” as that can be a form of self-bullying.

Why New Age Bullies Do It

New Age Bullies often act from a sincere desire to be helpful. It may also be a defense. Think of a friend who has just suffered a terrible loss or someone who’s been diagnosed with a serious illness to whom you want to say something comforting. Or, someone who seems locked in a destructive pattern and you want to say something to get him to think differently or take charge of his life. The problem is, you can’t know how your words will be received. If they don’t share your beliefs, your advice won’t help. They may feel that you are blaming them or are indifferent to their feelings.

“In blaming or shaming a victim,” Gen Lingpur says of the Buddhist tradition, “you are assuming that the person knew the karma they were creating in a previous life and that they have that knowledge in the present. We don’t know. We can’t know ahead of time what the results of an action will be, nor can we remember what action created the result. It’s sometimes a problem in the Buddhist community when someone says of another’s suffering: ‘It’s just their karma.’ That statement lacks compassion.”

Psychologically, there’s another reason people blame victims. Viki Sharp, a victim advocate for 26 years, explains it this way: “People tend to blame victims because it makes them feel less vulnerable and more in control. A woman leaves her window open one night and a man comes through it and rapes her. The thinking is: ‘She was raped because of something she did — she left her window open and, since I don’t do that, I’m safe.’”

As a practice, I don’t give unsolicited advice because I can’t know for certain what another’s beliefs or vulnerabilities are. Of course, I will offer advice in the context of a therapy session or among friends whose beliefs and experiences are familiar to me.

Gen Lingpur agrees. In her role as a spiritual teacher in a Buddhist community, she finds it appropriate to introduce concepts like karma while leading her students to a deeper understanding of the spiritual belief that there are no accidents, no victims. But it’s also a question of intention, context, and the nature of the relationship. Spiritual teachings can be easily vulgarized and misapplied.

Perhaps we can all learn from what the Buddha purportedly said about belief:

“Believe nothing because a wise person said it. Believe nothing because it is generally held. Believe nothing because it is written. Believe nothing because it is said to be Divine. Believe nothing because someone else believes it. But believe only what you yourself judge to be true.”

Tucson-based psychotherapist Julia Ingram co-authored the best-selling book, The Messengers. She can be reached through her website http://www.juliaingram.com/

In my experience, a tragedy of the new age is the exaggerated sense of power and control it gives people. Perhaps our intentions have power. But so do the intentions of others. So do the actions of others. So do so many things over which I have little or no control. Sometimes bad things happen to good people. Sometimes children are abused. And perhaps, through a great deal of their own work and through a lot of love, they will turn that wound into a gift for the community. But this is not the same as saying that they were responsible for their father’s beatings of them. Or their parents divorce. We have choices to make. So do others. And sometimes the choice that others make is to impose their wills on others.

Sovereignty is a very sacred thing. Respecting the ability of others to choose their own course in life.

Consent as sacred thing. Respecting the ability of others to draw boundaries on their interactions with us.

We are responsible for some things.

We can be responsive to the rest.

Let’s not confuse the two.

2 comments:

Angie Evans said...

Thanks for sharing that article Tad. Excellent! This was the other thing that jumped out at me in the movie - the group or nation blame. Whenever i here about creating our realities i get lost in trying to apply it to entire groups or nations who are living in hell. One can go on forever with blaming victims, their past lives, soul contracts, present consciousness, etc in trying to figure out why something happened. It gets exhausting!

Anonymous said...

Hmmm, I have really struggled with the whole idea of creating one's own reality, for myself and for others. For years I found it alternately empowering and then self-damning. I have been forced to re-examine so many of my beliefs around "creating reality" since having breast cancer.

Did I create breast cancer myself? Well, not exactly....it's multifactorial. I do remember fearing that I would have cancer, and maybe that was my body's way of bringing my attention to something already there. Did I play some role in it's appearance? Clearly.....though the entire truth is not known. Was it the art materials I exposed myself to? Eating the wrong foods? Thinking the wrong thoughts while eating? The list is endless. And at some point, all of us faced with a life-threatening disease have to make a choice; accept it and do what feels you need to do, or give up.

I chose to use the cancer experience as a learning... because I found that empowering. I made the best choices I could at each step of the way. But I still question what actions I will take in the future. What do I put my faith in? What precautions are correct? Is natural medicine the Right Way? Is conventional medicine BAD? If I do affirmations can I rest easy that I won't have a recurrence?

Ultimately I learned that none of us have The Answer.

I'm constantly assessing my patients' roles in maintaining, resisting, and/or overcoming their illnesses and issues. I strive to help others become more aware of how their beliefs keep them limited. I do this because I believe if I can help individuals shift their awareness, they will have that much more potential to impact other individuals and groups they interact with.

I'm still swimming in the depths of questioning of my reinvented life after cancer. I still sometimes look at tarot cards. I still consult psychics on occasion. I still use affirmations. But I keep getting the same answer: there is no answer.

So I keep putting one foot in front of the other, and little by little I find myself connecting with the moments in my life more often than the theory. That translates to a quality of interaction that touches people's hearts. Which is really why we're all interacting with one another.