When I was a schoolgirl I coped with some types of fear with
physical acts of courage, such as shouting and charging two boys who were
throwing rocks at a friend and me as we walked home from school. To an extent,
rage fueled my action that day: rage at the idea of stoning anyone, at the
helpless tears of my frightened friend and at the father of those boys, who
stood watching their actions without comment and then scoffed when I asked how
he could condone what the boys had done. Other types of fear, such as travel to
unknown places, opening an envelope (who knew what dire news it might convey?)
or telling someone that I felt threatened by their words or actions, left me
paralyzed, unable to see how I kept myself unhappy and isolated by giving those
fears free reign and by failing to express what I was feeling.
Working a protracted Step One in CoDA provided me with insight
into the tangled web of social, religious, familial and sexual strictures that
created my codependent patterns of interpreting the world. As I learned to
recognize those circumstances that trigger my avoidance of life's challenges, I
also learned that Step Three provides me with significant tools to face my
fears, one moment at a time. I use the phone to discuss problems with my
sponsor. I pray and meditate to seek my HP's guidance as I work to detach from
situations that used to baffle me. I benefit from the inventory of my defects
as well as my strengths that I assembled in working Step Four: that inventory
helps me to be kind to myself, to replace the constant, negative chatter that
governed my outlook before program with affirmations and prayer. Yes, Step Four
taught me that it is important to s ee my part in a situation, but it also
taught me that I am powerless to change the actions of another person. With
that realization I felt I was let off one huge codependent hook!
Working the Twelve Steps has given me the tools to brave travel to
distant places, to open my mail—even if it comes from the IRS—and to practice
speaking up or removing myself from a situation where I am uncomfortable. I no
longer wallow in resentment because I have stayed in a dangerous situation
rather than facing reality and seeking somewhere safer to live. Each of those
changes in my life has shown me that when I maintain constant contact with my
loving HP it is possible to shrug off the burden of fear and live a life that
is more joyous and free than the one I endured prior to coming to CoDA. These
days, when I go to bed smiling, I know that the serenity I am experiencing, the
lessening of the fearfulness that used to rule me, derives from making a
conscious decision, morning and evening and even moment to moment, to surrender
my will and my life to a power greater than myself.
Yolanda A – 4/25/18
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