Release Blame and Choose Responsibility

Just as “certainty” can seriously undermine our transformation, a “blaming” mindset can covertly keep us stuck.

Normal people don’t walk around saying “I blame others for most bad outcomes and don’t take personal responsibility.”  It is amazing how few people acknowledge this common pattern, yet how widely it is expressed in everyday life.  I’m not here to criticize people for this self deception, but rather help expose the pattern so you can release it and grow.  This is a common part of the human machine we can grow beyond, but only with the fortitude to look past our comfort zone.

What do I mean by “blame?”   I mean attributing the cause of events, circumstances, and even your own actions and thoughts, as originating outside yourself.  Sometimes this involves specifically communicating that others are at fault, but mostly it is an insidious internal habit.  The habit creates external causes for your life, particularly the aspects you don’t like.  This forms the basis of a — dramatic pause — a victim mindset.  In stronger forms, I believe this blame habit is the root of many clear victimization perspectives, wherein people attribute much of their life to other people, the system, the unfair world, the evil human parents, and so on.  As with the blame habit, no one thinks they have a victim mindset. Both are subtle infections that undermine our lives from the inside out, rather than appear in our internal awareness.

Sometimes it is reasonable to blame others.  You’re eating in a restaurant and someone crashes into your legally parked car.  A burglar breaks into a locked building and steals something.  Even in these cases, beware of subtle hiding of your participation and power — did you park properly, did you secure your valuables reasonably?  Even if you are not the cause, be open to learn and alter the circumstance in the future when appropriate.

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Truth and Facts - Doorway to Freedom

What do facts and truth have to do with personal growth?

Many books have been written and dance around this topic.  I’ll cover a lot of ground quickly and give you the key points to help you escape what I call the Truth Trap.  Give me some time, and put aside your doubts while your reading.  Understanding the nature of what is in your head is worth the investment of your time and mind.  In the end, keep what you like, discard what you don’t.

Our brains are wired to examine our surroundings, draw conclusions, repeat the decisions that work, and replace those that don’t.  Early learning, memorization, experience wit h the world, along with our brain’s tendencies, combine to create the fact-based brain.  Our schools impart essential shared “knowledge” that is necessary to function well as a society.  In an effort to live socially and standardize, we face correct/incorrect, right/wrong, and true/false perspectives constantly.  All of this reinforces a fact-based ecosystem of thought.  From this environment and the wiring tendency in our brain, we form the basis of the absolute real world in our head.  We learn to treat almost everything in our minds as either facts in principal or quasi-facts that serve the same role in practice.  We conversationally attest to uncertainty and openness, but we think and act as though our minds are stuffed with immutable facts.

I’ve had to completely rewire my own brain, as I once believed in facts.  In very abbreviated form, I held the philosophical view that knowledge is fully possible, since if even one piece of the universe cannot be known, it leads to a problem that nothing can be truly known.  I recognized that in practice, much was unknowable, but placed high value on that which I thought I knew.  I believed in principal everything could be logically snapped together, even if the logic would be fuzzy in some areas.  This perspective seemed more than reasonable at the time.

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