Here is a great question from one of my clients.
As many of you know, once you start engaging in personal development work, be it getting some coaching, going to therapy, or finding a spiritual path, many of your closest friends and family members might feel very uncomfortable with the “new you.”
Here’s a great example that some of you might appreciate, followed up with some useful tips.
Here’s my client’s question:
Last night I had dinner with my bro. We got on the topic of “what the f*ck am I doing?” with all my time, going to spiritual talks etc.
My bro gave me a piece about, “You need to be clear with your friends what you’re doing since you are so out of touch, you need to be clear with Mom and Dad. People need you/ want you back. No one understands what is going on with you”. I was patient for a while, and then I got angry and heated. I started defending myself, fired up.
How have you dealt with friends and family who didn’t understand what you were doing during personal development work? I offered my bro an answer from one of your blogs – “it may look selfish, but I’m trying to work on myself to be a better person”. My bro said “what problems do you have – we were blessed growing up. What are you angry about? You shouldn’t be so angry. Don’t feel bad” Of course, this only stoked the flames even higher.
I’m feeling angry, pissed, locked up and helpless. If you have any thoughts to share I’d appreciate.
So what is going on here?
This is a classic example of how other people are threatened by a man’s personal growth and evolution.
I remember this process vividly for myself. As I dove deep into my own personal development work and spiritual practice I heard comments like this: “We like the old Jay better than the new Jay.” or “Yeah bro, we were thinking about having an intervention with you,” as If I was an alcoholic or something.
In systems theory, when one aspect of any system changes, it disrupts the entire system or the homeostasis of the system.
As you change and evolve, the system, which is your old friends and family members, feels a threat and does it’s best to keep you in your old role. This happens largely unconsciously on their end. This can be one painful aspect of differentiating from your family.
If they were able to talk about it and had some skills, they might say things such as, “When you change and grow, I get scared because I no longer know how to be with you or relate to you.” or “When I can’t place you into the role I’ve always known you in, I feel threatened, scared, and uncomfortable.” or “I feel safe and secure knowing who I think you are and when you show me signs of something different, I feel very uncomfortable and I start to question myself.”
So, what to do?
Whether or not you understand them and their process is irrelevant.
You must make staying with yourself and your experience and much higher priority than getting their approval or having them understand you. It can be really tempting to try and change them or make them get it. But chances are they will never get it, or get you.
(Talk to gay men and women. Generally speaking, they know this landscape well. Specifically reach out to fearless gay people who have already faced the gauntlet of judgments/ridicule from others in their coming out process).
Here are a few pointers.
1. Let go. Let go of wanting them to understand you and accept that they won’t. If you get lucky and they do, celebrate it.
2. Feel your Feelings. Feel what arises in you around your family/friends not understanding or getting you. There may be a lot of anger, resentment, or deep grief and loss knowing that those whom love you the most understand and support you the least.
3. Feel part 2. Feel your aloneness and the pain around that.
4. Notice your need. Notice the part of you that still wants to be liked and accepted. Meet that need yourself and stop looking outside yourself for validation.
5. Get a new community. Surround yourself with folks that do see you, understand you, and support your evolution. If I wanted to stay in the old me, I would hang around old friends that continue to box me in to who I used to be. If however, I want to grow, I must find folks who are growing also. Get a badass men’s group going.
6. Set a boundary. Take some space away from those old friends/family members while you sort things out. Be direct with them and let them know you are going away for a while. Do this as consciously as possible. If you need to stop returning phone calls because it feels too hard, give yourself permission to do that for while until you get clear on how to communicate with them.
7. Make a request. If you family/friends blame you or tell you “Don’t feel angry etc…” request that they not tell you how to feel. In the above example, my client’s brother was very invalidating. Hear him out, then make a request.
8. Be direct and tell them how you feel. Stay with yourself without judging them. For example, my client could say, “I’m feeling angry, pissed, locked up and helpless. I feel completely unseen and unsupported by you right now.”
9. Set another boundary. If your family/friends continue to invalidate you because they lack the skills to dive into what is really going on for them, let them know that you are no longer willing to be spoken to that way and you need a break from the relationship for a while. Put a timeframe on it.
10. Own your shame. If you feel shame or embarrassed by your new growth kick, own that. It’s normal. Know that there is also a part of you that doesn’t want you to grow or change. Stay in relationship with that part of yourself.
11. Be fearless. If all else fails, be true to yourself and your path. F*ck everyone else. It’s time to stop giving a shit what others think of you. We don’t have time to “convince” anyone of what we are up to.
When you work on yourself in a genuine way, plan on pissing others off. Plan on losing friends. Plan on the worst. And, if you get support, welcome it.
Roll up your sleeves and change anyway. Continue to be fearless and follow what you know will serve you and the greater good.
See also Isn’t personal growth just selfish?
8 Comments
Jeffrey Platts
January 29, 2010Great post Jay. I can definitely relate. As much as it might sound like a superficial thing to do, sometimes you just have to look at your friends and see which ones are actually in resonance with the path you want to be on. With family, you can't necessarily ditch them, but you can shift the level and quality of interactions with them. Who knows, maybe you'll even be an inspirational example to them! 🙂
Peter007
January 29, 2010“How to you dealt with friends and family who didn’t understand your personal development work?” Oprah said it best. ITS SELF-FUL…..NOT SELF-FISH. Until I'm head & whole with myself, I'm no good with others. I took advice #11 for the most part during my growth 😉
Graham Phoenix
January 31, 2010This is so important, Jay. I am going through and my partner is going through. It is particularly poignant with me as I try to keep contact with my sons. The most important thing is to let go, as you say. As far as a new peer group is concerned I like the idea that you are the average of the 5 people you spend most time with, think about it. But sometimes you need to look at yourself from your family's model of the world and see what you can do to make things better from them. This can be uncomfortable but very rewarding.
Jay
February 8, 2010Great post! As a gay guy I can tell you that what you said is true.
(Talk to gay men and women. Generally speaking, they know this landscape well. Specifically reach out to fearless gay people who have already faced the gauntlet of judgments/ridicule from others in their coming out process).
Coming out to my family was a rocky situation, but it forced me to have some serious conversations where I expressed myself, gave them room to feel their feeling, but then made it clear that this is who I am and they could either accept and we would have a healthy relationship or they could choose to constantly express their disappointment, misgivings, etc. and we would have a truncated relationship. Not to make it sound easy, but for my own sanity I had to accept that they might not accept me as I was. Thankfully, with time they came to again see me as their son and not let their fear destroy our relationship. My relationship with them is much stronger particularly with my father, a surprising and welcomed end to a grueling process of self-acceptance.
Jayson
February 13, 2010Thanks for your wisdom Graham
Jayson
February 13, 2010Jay,
You are a great example of how having the courage to be yourself gets great results if you stick with your truth. Your old man came around and what a gift you gave him by just being you! Rock on!
satijul
May 2, 2010Interesting that exactly this same thing happened when I (a 57 year old woman) started to take myself seriously to change in major ways. The family uproar has been painful, but at the core of it all is that they care in the only ways they know how. I hold them in my heart, and love them, and then tell them about my new adventures — and then they get happy and we agree we really do care for each other, no matter what. No FU. Just WTF, how fabulous! We don't have to all be in the same place to be communicating at a human level. Thanks for a great (manly) post.
satijul
May 3, 2010Interesting that exactly this same thing happened when I (a 57 year old woman) started to take myself seriously to change in major ways. The family uproar has been painful, but at the core of it all is that they care in the only ways they know how. I hold them in my heart, and love them, and then tell them about my new adventures — and then they get happy and we agree we really do care for each other, no matter what. No FU. Just WTF, how fabulous! We don't have to all be in the same place to be communicating at a human level. Thanks for a great (manly) post.
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