Category Archives: Resolving Inner Conflict

The Conflict of Values

There are occasions when sudden news seems to have the effect of suspending my progress, in my desire to be present.

My wife told me this week, that our daughter is moving out to live with her boyfriend.

Although I did not react in a negative way  to this news, nonetheless it has affected my peace of mind.

The problem I am learning to overcome, is that the world that my adult children know, is very different to the one I had imagined it would be.

As part of my journey to accept my own reality in the world, which I suppressed for many years, I have also had to overcome my tendency to control and interfere in there lives.

It seemed so easy when they are young children.  They were happy to get up each Sunday and go to Mass with you – in fact they loved it.

They were happy to say that they are a Catholic and you feel secure that your values and ideas of living a life of faith, in a secular world are being transferred to them, as easy as copying data down onto a floppy.

My dreams consisted of handing on my faith to my children. I wanted to see them marry and then have children (in that order) and then in their turn pass on their faith to my grandchildren.

I observe that those in other faiths than my own, seem to be making a better job of it that I seem to have done.

The pull of the world has been too strong for my children to resist and for me to hold back.

Worse than that, as the tension built up between my adolescent children’s desires to express themselves, and my tendency to control and restrict that freedom, I have suffered the loss of their love and respect and now although I am outwardly calm, I weep and mourn their loss – it feels like a grief.

I have learned through my development of self to be with the pain – not to pretend it is not there, but to be with it, to pray over it, to feel it in my body, to think about it and to let my silent tears be a reminder of my capacity to care.

I know that what I am experiencing is a conflict of values, not a judgement on me in my role as a father.

My daughter loves her boyfriend and wants to live with him.

I love my daughter and I want her to be happy.

I can see that our values are different, but they do not have to be in conflict.

I am determined that I will do all I can to assist my daughter and her boyfriend in their chosen way of being together and I will do it gladly and I will do it with love.

My next blog will be: Is it a present or a gift?

William Defoe

Cousin

I am learning through my development, that there are definite connections between the issues that I am trying to accept which can be best described as cousins.

A cousin is a relation, who shares the same familial roots, but one who is now part of a different branch of the family to our own.

Applying this logic of family relationships, I have begun to apply the same logic to my emotional relationships.

I have recently made a connection, on my journey to love self, between my suppressed gay sexuality, and its cousin, which is my need to be liked.

The root of this relationship is in my feelings of anxiety about the suppressed truth of my same sex attraction, and a constant feeling that the world could not like me, because it did not know me.

In recent years, I have emerged from the suppression of my truth in two profound ways – firstly in telling my wife and close circle about it and secondly investing in my own self development to accept it as an integral part of who I am.

I am now more conscious of the branch containing its cousin – my need to be liked.

It feels to me like it is casting a shadow over my ability to thrive in the present moment, because if my happiness is dependent on the good opinion of others e.g my wife, my boss, my family, my friends, then I am continually on the look out for signals that they accept me and love me which is exhausting and unrealistic for them and for me.

I am actively trying to avert my thoughts from the anticipation of feedback or praise or comforting looks or hugs, to being able to assess my own performance at work, or in the home, and in the absence of any message to the contrary, being satisfied with that.

It has felt like, what I imagine it feels like, to overcome an addiction – the hit of the nicotine, drugs or alcohol, are for me manifest in the praise or the thanks or the positive feedback, which I have needed to get me through each day.

I am learning that the joy of being accepted in my truth, is being matched by the joy of being able to live each day, being present, and comfortable with my own assessment of the contribution I make in the world.

My next blog will be: The Conflict of Values

William Defoe

 

Self(ish)

Over the last three years I have been pre-occupied with trying to gain a better understanding of self.

I have been trying to reconcile aspects of myself, which were in a state of internal conflict and dilemma for many years.

I sometimes feel that this intense focus on reconciling the various aspects of my truth within me is an act of self(ish)ness.

I have had to respond to my inner critic by reminding it, that at the point I sought help to resolve my difficulties, my life had become untenable.

My marriage was at risk, my children were alienated from me and I from them.

I felt isolated within my family (parents/siblings) because they did not know the cause of my emotional pain.

This investment in self, has enabled me to focus my life in the present moment, so that I am not crushed by events in the past that I cannot change, nor am I continually anxious about events that are yet to happen  – which may never happen – and are in respect of others outside my control.

By living in the present, with a focus on self, I have broadened my capacity to accept what I had previously felt were totally incompatible aspects of who I am – for example being gay and married, being Catholic and gay, living with an intense same sex attraction.

I have been able to find a way of being calm, being less reactive, being able to accept the choices that my adult children make and most dramatically, letting go of my need to control aspects of their lives.

I have been able to access love and support from my wife, children, parents and siblings which I had not previously felt worthy of in my state of anxiety and isolation and pain, and I had pushed them away.

I have come to understand that my inward focus on self, is reflected back as if through a mirror, to those who come into contact with me.

Being able to accept and love myself, and stop thinking of myself continually as a failure, has made me more accessible to them, and they to me.

My journey goes on at the pace of time, and there are times that I mess up and fall into old ways, or forget my methods of dealing with things which cause upset to me and those close to me.

I have to remind myself that I am flesh and blood, not a deity or a robot and I will never be perfect, nor do I aim to be.

Being self(ish) means I have to have compassion for myself and others and be prepared to move on from adversity, taking the learning, and reflecting for a few moments in each day, to acknowledge how far I have come.

My next blog will be: Cousin

William Defoe

 

Parfum

Among my selection of gifts from my loved ones at Christmas was a bottle of Parfum!

It was only yesterday that the irony of it’s name “Obsession for Men” occurred to me.

I embrace the irony, and I have no fear!

Now if that is not development in action, I don’t know what is!

But take the word “Obsession”  – this is an interesting concept which requires some attention from me.

This word talks to me of being in a state of continuous circle on a narrow theme which perhaps is causing me, or others close to me, emotional pain.

This word speaks to me of suppression of my potential to be present in everything.

I am learning, through my journey to know self, that it is sometimes good for me to focus intensely on various aspects of self, and my impact with others in various situations, however, I have also learned to hold loosely onto the intensity.

A loose hold, means for me that I am not obsessed, I am simply being curious, and I am not being held prisoner by my thoughts.

I am exploring the landscape of my mind and whenever I feel suffocated by my interest in something (ranging from the world news to my adult children’s lifestyle choices), I push out the boundaries of my mind, to be more expansive,so as not to stifle my opportunity today, to be present.

I think this parfum has gone to my head!

My next blog will be: Self(ish)!

William Defoe

Staying Positive

I came across a quote from Marilyn Ferguson over Christmas:

“Fear is that little dark room where negatives are developed”

I am curious about this statement, because I have been accompanied by fear all of my life.

As a child, I lacked confidence and struggled to integrate through play and sports, particularly with boys of my own age.

I can feel, even today, the fear that I felt as a child, that somehow I was separate, somehow I was different, and my capacity to thrive in how it was to how I wanted it to be allowed within me, the negatives to develop.

Through my adolescence, although I did find and make lifelong friendships with my male school friends, I was fearful of my capacity to cope with the future.

My marriage to my wife was a period of time when I was full of hope and deep love, because I loved deeply and felt I was loved deeply too.

My children brought joy, but also responsibilities with which, through each stage of their development, I struggled to be an adequate father.

I felt driven beyond my capacity to succeed, and it was during their young lives, that I came into full knowledge of my gay sexuality.

This reality caused me immense suffering and anxiety as I struggled to cope with full force of my attraction to my own sex, and the conflict this brought within me, in respect of my dearest wish to be a good and loving husband and father.

Into the dark space in my mind, poured in fear for over twenty years until I found the courage to explain my truth to my wife and seek help for my troubled soul.

I now have within me the capacity to recognise the light and the dark and accept them as being partners in my journey of self.

I am curious when I am fearful about what my inner voice is trying to guide me through, or protect me from, and I am noticing that once I have acknowledged the source of the fear, I am in a better place to nod to it, but push ahead

So you could say, that I am emerging from the dark room where the negatives are developed, into my own place of light and shade by staying positive.

My next blog will be: Parfum

William Defoe

 

 

Reading Resolution

At the start of my recent journey to know and love self, so that I could be a calmer being, in my interactions with those I love, I prepared and sent an appraisal of my current outlook on life to my coach.

That document is for me a baseline, from where I can from time to time, assess my progress as I develop a clearer sense of self.

On my journey so far, I can point within me to an acceptance of my sexuality where at baseline I utterly rejected it. This is a profound shift.

I have become more reflective and become acquainted with the judge – “my inner critic” who tries to protect me by attempting to keep me in a state of fear.

I am not so reactive to the world around me, I am better able to hold my tongue, think things through and live with the questions over a sustained period of time.

I am conscious that being present involves living a life of light and shade and making the world seem bigger so that my issues seem smaller.

I have recently started to run, after months of procrastination and I have become very aware of the profound effects that physical exercise has on my mental health.

I have formed networks of friends to support my journey to help reduce my sense of isolation.

I have ended my dependency of the television and particularly the news which controlled my free space which prevented my capacity to be available to reflect and to be available to those I love.

I have healed the wounds of broken relationships with my children whom had become frustrated with my behavior (angry outbursts/controlling expectations) and they have acknowledged to me that change.

I have released myself from trying to live a life of expectation of how it will be, and have moved to a place of conversations, narratives and stories and most of all, being curious at the choices that I, and those that are dear to me, make in their lives.

I have read and studied a variety of coaching material – my favourite being Parker Palmer’s “A Hidden Wholeness” and “Let Your Life speak” which caused me to weep for days – but the release from suffering within me was wonderful.

I am coming to terms with my need to be liked – an ongoing journey to help me live more fully in the present.

My nemesis is my capacity to read literature.

I read a great deal of material every working day, but I have not shifted from my baseline in respect of my capacity to read for relaxation.

As 2016 starts, I am making a Reading Resolution to at least try and find some space to read.

I may succeed, and I may not succeed – the excitement for me is in the aspiration, rather than being in the fear of failure which could not be further from my mind.

My next blog will be: Staying Positive

William Defoe

 

Carols at Christmas

For many years as an adolescent, and for most of my adult life, I have saturated myself with popular Christmas music and the more traditional carols in the home and on my music system in the car from the start of advent.

I recall my mother saying to me when I sensed a loss of excitement and enjoyment of the music at Christmas time, that in her words “I had exhausted my appetite for it before Christmas had even begun”

I have noticed a change in my behaviour this year in respect of my exposure to listening to Carols at Christmas.

I did not really focus on Christmas until the weekend preceding it, when I actively began to seek those pleasures associated with the excitement of the Christmas season.

I have noticed that for the first time ever, i am still playing the Carols at Christmas in my car during the season of Christmas because I was not saturated with it before Christmas started.

This speaks to me of what it is like to be present.

I am present in the Christmas season at the appropriate time, rather than in advance of it.

This has helped with my levels of satisfaction, so that I have not had a feeling of intense excitement and anticipation before Christmas, leading to a sense of disappointment throughout it, and more than likely after it.

I am quite sure that when all the Christmas decorations come down on the Epiphany, I will be able to appreciate that I have enjoyed the season, but I will not be crushed by its having come to its natural end.

Carols at Christmas has enabled me to feel present, and it feels great!

Fast away the old year passes, fa la la la, fa la la la

Hail the new, ye lads and lasses, fa la la la, fa la la la

Happy New Year – I wish you all every blessing in the present moment of each day of 2016.

My next blog will be: Reading Resolution

William Defoe

 

The Joy of Intimacy

I have lived for most of my adult life with the knowledge of a reality of self which is different to the self hood which I share with the world in respect of my same sex attraction.

Even though in recent years, I have experienced the profound relief of sharing my truth with my wife, and some close acquaintances, there is a lingering sense within me of suppressed truth/frustration.

Sharing my feelings in this blog is a wonderful opportunity for me to experience a release from that continued sense of isolation.

I have been reflecting over the Christmas holiday on the Joy of Intimacy.

This is that openness in a relationship (marriage/partnership) , which is manifest through physical and emotional closeness and sexual fulfillment, but also something for me which is a bit more abstract in its effect on me.

By this I mean, those intimate messages and knowing glances across a room or opportunistic touches which would be wholly inappropriate in any other circumstance, with any other person in the world.

I have decided to share something here which I was going to hold back, but here I go:-

I sometimes on a morning as I get out of bed, drop my shorts and ask my wife – “does my bum look big in this?” before whipping them back up and exiting the room.

The Joy of Intimacy for me is the giggles I leave behind, reverberating around my mind with a huge smile on my face, or the swift slap on my posterior if she manages to get to me on time!

I think the Joy of Intimacy is close to being in the world in fullness of truth.

It is that deep openness of nothing being held back.

It is that deep joy of making someone laugh.

It is that deep gratitude of being loved.

My next blog will be: Carols at Christmas

William Defoe

 

 

Being Recognised

On Christmas Eve at the end of the Children’s Mass, the priest called out a parishioner who has worked tirelessly in preparing children s liturgy and preparation for first holy communion for many years and told her that she had been awarded the benemerenti.

The benemerenti is recognition from the Pope for services to the church and this comes about as a result of people nominating a particular individual and the request being approved by the local diocese.

I was pleased to see this lady receive her award, and it is was well deserved, but I also felt a sense of anxiety that other worthy parishioners had been overlooked.

I think my anxiety is misplaced!

Being Recognised by our community is no doubt a wonderful accolade – particularly when  it is unexpected and surprising and others have been collaborating behind the scenes to bring your gifts to wider notice, but this does not in any way intentionally de-value the contribution of others.

I think that the way to view this is to feel the joy of the recipient and to share in the honour as a community  – it is the community being recognised in its broader sense.

I think Being Recognised is the work of self for the most part.

I have been coming to terms, as part of my ongoing journey to love self, of my hitherto insatiable need for affirmation that I am doing well at work. I am working in this period of development on actively doing all I can to suppress the search for it, and just quietly notice the unsolicited feedback which I receive in a variety of ways.

I am onto the work of self, to quietly notice and recognise my own contribution in the world, at work, at home and in my parish and community and if I can acknowledge to self, my own contribution to the lives of others, then that should be all the recognition that I need.

My next blog will be: The Joy of Intimacy

William Defoe

 

Being Polite

I have what I would describe as an innate politeness – I cannot seem to help Being Polite.

In recent times, I have made this necessity on my part to be polite a key focus of my development of self.

Being Polite has become for me a source of concern – and here is why?

There is an aspect of Being Polite, which lacks truth or put another way suppresses my truth.

Being Polite is sometimes akin to saying one thing whilst at the same time thinking another thing, and I am on to it in certain interactions which I enter into.

This new focus for me of noticing when I am saying one thing and thinking another is challenging work.

It requires me to be present in my interactions, and conscious in the moment of the contradiction, so that I can note it down and at a later point begin to dissect the substance of the issue, which I am hiding from myself or the other party.

Why am I not bringing my truth? – there are occasions when I happen to think that I am being strong, for example when I am consciously suppressing my real desire to speak a truth which will cause unnecessary hurt, or inflame a tense situation.

I am conscious that there are times when it is a strength to defer the truth until a more appropriate setting can be arranged for it to be said, heard and discussed.

So, the focus of my development is to notice when I am unconsciously speaking something or conveying a demeanor which is not a truth and asking myself …  why?

These answers will be a focus of a future post, but for now I wanted to share with you this concept of how Being Polite as a potential source of damage to self-esteem and conflict in relationships at home, at work and in our parishes and communities which we all would do well to understand.

My next blog will be: Being Recognised

William Defoe