By
Judith Kroll
How do we get the past to stop haunting us?
We might feel we could have been a better parent. We might think
of specifics where we were less than honorable to our children. Maybe
we suffered a divorce, and we think, maybe if I did this or that? We
continually visit the not so pretty trenches of our childhood at times
as well.
We all let ourselves be haunted by the past at one time or
another. If we dwell on could of, would of, and should of’s, we can
make ourselves very unhappy. We all have pasts, and we all wish we
could go back and change some events or ways we have acted or how we
handled a situation in the past. What is interesting is that we
constantly gauge our past with our newly evolved selves. We all grow
emotionally, and we judge our past selves, by our new thinking.
Let me illustrate. When raising our children we tend to look
back and say, “If I wouldn’t have done this, or if I wouldn’t have said
that, my child wouldn’t have felt so bad at that time.” We must
consider who we were back then, and who we are now. Chances are we did
the best we could at the time, with what we knew, and what our
circumstances were. Everyone is different now, that is one reason we
treat our grandchildren differently than we did our own children. Our
perspectives are always changing. If we dwell in the past with our newer
versions of ourselves, then we are just making ourselves miserable. We
have to let it go.
Talking with someone helps. Just letting it loose from our hearts
by sharing the details as we remember it to a dear soul who is
committed to listening can be helpful. One of the simplest ways to let
go of anything that is a burden to us, anything that is stopping us from
moving forward in life, is to let it go. How do we do that?
Remember the old movies where the sound of the bugle meant the Calvary was on the way to rescue those in need?
We have our own Calvary. The vast unseen helpers in the universe
like our Angels, Guides, and our family and friends who have passed
before us. They help us. Just ask them to take away the pain we keep
dredging up from our past. Thank them for taking it away. I have done
this, others I know have as well, and it truly works.
Marianne Williamson shared her quote that fits in this situation. “We do not heal the past by dwelling there; we heal the past by living fully in the present.”
So when a hurtful thought arises turn your attention to the present.
Think about the flowers in your yard, the smile of your loved one, the
love of the universe, and your life will joyful.
Remember that if we dwell in the past, we miss the present, and then that will once again make for a miserable past. JudyKroll, Encore
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