Self-awareness: key to growth and change
“Know thyself” was the famous injunction over the entrance
to the temple of the Oracle in ancient Delphi. I wonder how
many of those who went there to learn of their fate were really
aware of the potentiality of that statement. Becoming
self-aware is the key first step for anybody wishing to achieve
personal inner healing, or a change in themselves, in how they
are with others or in what they wish to accomplish.
In Gestalt therapy, it is said that one needs good sensing
and then awareness, in order to form clear figures of interest
around which one will mobilise and take action. One of the
founders of Gestalt, Fritz Perls said that “awareness in and of
itself is curative”.
At one level, “getting it” enables one to do something
different next time, and the next, and perform better at what
one needs to do or get more of what one wants. Very many would
be very happy with that. It’s a great tool and there’s lots of
self-help material or coaching available that can help too. At
another level however, being self-aware is a vital tool in
self-help and personal growth, can utterly change your life for
the better and enable you to enter wholly new realms for
experiencing a vastly more contented and effective quality of
life. At another level still you can if you chose enable
yourself to enter the powerhouse of the temple of your own
Being, as meditators and others have known for thousands of
years.
A common comment given in feedback to people being
considered for promotion at work is: “he or she is excellent
technically but lacks self-awareness”. About troubled
relationships, it is often remarked that a couple seem unable
to identify the part each plays in the upsets they experience
due to the lack of awareness each has of her or his
contribution to what occurs. When we experience difficulty in
dealing with others, if we lack self-awareness we might not see
how our own behaviour has played a part in what takes place. If
we experience some troubling emotion in our lives, if we lack
self-awareness we won’t notice what happens that triggers the
uncomfortable feeling, and therefore will lack access to vital
data, recollections, past experiences and so on that may have a
bearing on how and why the phenomenon is experienced.
When we have self-awareness, we can access a vital mechanism
for noticing what is going on within us. When we become aware,
we can take responsibility, we can start to have choice and we
can do something about it. We can manage our internal state for
the better. Not for nothing has Daniel Goldman in “Emotional
Intelligence” identified self-awareness and self-management as
two of the key areas for one’s greater emotional
intelligence.
When I first decided to do some real work on myself, my
world was one of conflict with others. Feedback given to me was
that I was aggressive at work and intolerant and impatient of
others. In myself I felt full of stress…oh yes, and my marriage
had broken up, my mother had died, I was a single parent and
having difficulty finding someone else. I was probably very
difficult to live with. Maybe the problem lay with me. When I
embarked on the first in a series of personal growth
programmes, a major liberation for me was when I learned about
self-awareness. Suddenly I had a way to notice what was going
on in me, how I felt inside and what feelings and thoughts kept
cropping up that didn’t serve me. Then I could really start to
change things.
The beauty and the puzzle about self-awareness is that it is
so very simple and obvious. However, while we use it to manage
our day-by-day survival, taking care of ourselves, we don’t use
it for inner work. The young ego’s urge to survive and cope in
a seemingly dangerous world means that we cut off our
sensitivity to ourselves and our feelings, we close down on the
very mechanism that can help us make things better. So, to
truly use self-awareness we must accept that we are maybe going
to get in touch with and release those uncomfortable feelings
within, and those thoughts that we don’t like to face, which is
why really developing self-awareness is usually best done with
a skilled professional, one who has him or herself trained in
this skill, in programmes, with a coach or mentor, or even a
counsellor or therapist if it’s deep. This is the cautionary
note here. It is important to take care of yourself and seek
advice if need be. Then you can use the tool well. It’s about
facing the truth about ourselves.
To be self-aware, you will need to train yourself, to become
skilled in observing and monitoring your internal state. You
can start by developing your sensitivity to yourself. Learn to
scan through your body mentally, scanning each limb and muscle,
feeling into your body, and asking your body how you feel and
what’s that feeling about. You will probably benefit from
learning to identify and release feelings that you find
uncomfortable. They are after all only feelings and we can
learn to let them go. That in itself is also a skill. And you
can start to notice what thoughts come up, those thoughts that
are often repeated and that you can learn don’t serve you. You
can write them down, talk about them, reflect on them, meditate
on them, pray about them, confront them, challenge them, and
let them go too. They are a product of the ego, the limited
self, whom we are not.
By doing this, you get to notice your patterns of feeling,
thinking and behaving that are no longer useful and then you
can choose to give them up. That‘s the inner work I’m speaking
of.
In the process of real inner work, we can if we choose, get
closer to our own inner demons, not who we are but relevant to
our self-esteem. We can get closer to those feelings about
believing we are “unworthy”, “a bad person”, “not good enough”,
“at fault”, “ashamed”, “rotten to the core”, “a failure”,
“guilty as sin”. They are myths which we utterly believe in,
adopted when we were small and unable to rationalise but pushed
out of awareness, and yet we allow them to govern our lives.
Whole belief systems, ways of being and ways of dealing with
the world and other people are founded on this stuff. Flushing
out these limiting awarenesses enables us to feel and think
differently about ourselves and thus how we deal with
others.
The beauty of the self is none of the above. Our essential
selves are full of peace, fun, laughter, joy, love and inner
contentment. Deep meditators discovered that thousands of years
ago. By cutting ourselves off from our awareness of who we
really are through the vicissitudes of life, we lack access to
our essential ability to enjoy and live life to the full and
achieve our real potential. How often have you found that a
negative inner feeling and conversation have resulted in you
not believing in yourself and therefore not achieving some
cherished goal? Real self-awareness work enables you to see the
ego for what it is, a product of a limited vision of the self
and of what you can achieve. Real self-awareness work brings
you into contact with a sensing, awareness and appreciation and
a far greater, wholesome and fulfilling way of living. And the
person who can find it is you, if you chose to have a look.
© John Gloster-Smith, 2008.
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