ABOUT MORE... EXPRESS IT or REPRESS IT! HEALING HAPPENS
Express
It or Repress It! Healing Happens
An essay chronicling a journey of healing
By Doug Johnson
Express It or Repress It!
Repressed Expression Leads to Violence, Disease and Depression.
Expressed Repression Leads to Wholeness, Healing and the
Soul’s
Liberation.
I’m a big fan of expression. Not only have I found it
to be fundamental to living a healthy and happy life, but I found it to be the
cornerstone of my own healing. You can’t heal what you can’t
express. Expression is the vessel within which the aspects of ourselves
that are in need of healing are able to travel from the unconscious into the
subconscious and can then permeate consciousness where true healing is possible.
Throughout the course of our lives we repress, conceal,
excommunicate, disenfranchise, fail to honor and attempt to completely snuff
out different aspects of ourselves in order that our basic needs may be
met. These repressed aspects of ourselves don’t die or completely
disappear. Instead, they fester inside of us, often wreaking havoc in our
lives to get our attention. They can make us ill, whether emotionally,
mentally, physically, and/or spiritually. They can manipulate and destroy
any aspects of our exterior lives. We go on being “strong” just as we’ve
been taught, trying to remain unaffected and forever ignoring our interior
lives. We become addicted to any assortment of unhealthy and healthy things to keep ourselves from feeling what is going on inside of us.
Meanwhile, the repressed aspects of ourselves continue their
mission of emancipation, hoping to become one with us once again. Their
means are very clever indeed. These repressed aspects bring us into
situations that will reflect and illuminate their state of repression;
draw us to causes, legitimate or not, that reflect their cause; and cast
our judgment at those whose actions somehow mirror our actions toward them.
Western society, with it’s dependence upon all things left-brained
and it’s constant debasing of all things right-brained, has rendered us so
incapable of understanding our interior lives that we are left to blame any and
all of our pain and misfortunes on external factors. We routinely buy
into the belief that other people, events and circumstances have victimized us.
I suffered from depression off and on for many years.
At nine years old, I became cognizant of my pain and started trying to
alleviate my pain by various means. By the time I was a senior in high
school I realized that none of those means, among them athletics, playing
music, religion, girls, and doing well in school had helped.
It was then that I took a psychology class and was convinced
that psychology held the answers for me. Over the next ten years, despite
seeing a professional psychologist and reading several psychology and self-help
books, my depression had only worsened.
Soon after I turned 27, my depression staged a powerful,
all-out offensive front taking me to new depths and immobilizing me
there. I was having a very hard time functioning and had become a hostage
to a mind I no longer had control of. My sister urged me to try
professional therapy again, but after ten years of unsuccessfully turning to
psychology for answers, I held little doubt that a professional therapist could
help. Then again, the thought of continuing to live the way I had been
living was absolutely unacceptable, as was death. I finally vowed to do
whatever I had to do in order to truly heal.
I set aside all of my goals and began what was to become a
three-year journey – the journey of the dark (k)night. It was a dreadful
but amazing time in my life. It was absolutely the toughest thing I had
or have ever done in my life. Not surprisingly, it was also the most
profoundly impacting event of my life, rivaled only by becoming a father.
I can not imagine having lived the last 16 years of my life still suffering
from the pain and depression I was suffering when I began the journey.
The first six months were very tough, but eventually things
began to click, and synchronicity began routinely showing its face right on
cue. I don’t subscribe to any definitions or character portraits of God
these days, but it has been my experience that there is an all-knowing,
magical, mystical energy that affects life. I call this God. On my
healing journey, my experience was that God would not heal me (despite my
begging and my pleas), but that God would show me what I needed to do to
heal myself.
Over this three-year journey, I was lead to some incredible
people and sources of information that were instrumental to my healing.
An open mind and a discerning heart were requisite. The people ranged
from a traditional licensed psychologist to people on the fringes of the
healing arts and many in between. The sources of information ranged from
books, lyrics, lectures, radio shows, overhearing a few words from a nearby
conversation, a transient’s off-the-cuff remarks, to a voice that spoke to me
one night for three hours while meditating.
There were a few experiences in my healing journey that were
monumental. The first was giving up my victimhood. Most of the
world’s major philosophies and religions, including Christianity, sight the
principle of “free will”. According to this principle, everything in our
lives is of our own will. How could that be? Who in their right
mind would choose to experience the situations that cause us great pain and
suffering? No one it seems. But this principle comes from the realm
of the eternal, the spiritual – not the realm of the mind.
When I first heard the principle of free will I was twelve
years old. I had come down with a bad cold the day I was to go on a
fishing trip with my cousin and uncle. My father saw how upset I was that I would miss the trip and explained
the principle of free will. Yes, he told
me that I got sick because I wanted to! That really pissed me off and as soon as he got his butt out of my room
I began gathering evidence to prove that the principle of free will was a crock
of shit.
My anger began to grow. By the time I was ready to formally address the jury in my head with my
overwhelming evidence I was furious. Then it hit me…In my gut, I knew that on some level this principle was
true.
It was another fourteen years before I was able to embrace
the principle of free will. I soon became aware not only of how often I
played the victim, but of how much easier it was to be the victim…or so I
thought!
About a year later, I had an experience that helped me
realize the truth of the principle of free will on a deeper level. While
working with a gifted massage therapist who used several different methods to
induce self-awareness, I found myself transported back to a bizarre but
blissful, spiritual place. I was talking to God or a spirit-guide about
some of the lessons I wanted to learn in life. Somehow I knew I was
revisiting a place I had been to before coming into this life. The
massage therapist called this “the place of planning”. I told the guide
that I wanted to learn how to unconditionally love someone that has caused me
great pain. Another spirit came over and volunteered to be the someone
who would cause me great pain.
An incredible thing then occurred. A tingly pain had
resided in my gut since I was nine years old. It was usually unnoticeable
but under certain circumstances it would become moderately painful. As
soon as I had thanked the spirit who volunteered to cause me great pain, I felt
that pain lift out of my gut and out of my body and float away. My body
felt as if it were twisted and as if my legs were in the air, apparently due to
the energy in my body that for 19 years had to circumvent this blockage now
being able to flow straight through.
I felt a shift throughout all the levels of my being.
The truth of this healing resonated through my entirety. This was
definitely a monumental moment not only in my healing journey but in my
life. The hopelessness I had been harboring after years and years of
unsuccessfully searching for healing suddenly disappeared.
This deeper understanding of the principle of free will
would pave the way for my experiencing several deep, true and tangible healings
over the next two years. Realizing my free will and accepting
responsibility for it was incredibly empowering. The truth of it set me
free.
After this healing experience, I was extremely blissful for
several days. In fact, I thought and hoped I had found the healing I had
been long searching for and could now get back to my normal life and goals
etc. What I didn’t know was there was a legion of repressed, injured,
festering aspects of myself that were now lining up to settle things with me.
It’s similar to a big event at a sports arena: As the
event finished, somehow all of the exits were locked shut and all of the
spectators were trapped. For years they remained stuck, all working in
different parts of the now dark building trying to find or make their way
out. Then one day a door briefly opened, allowing one spectator to get
out before it quickly closed. The flash of light from the open door
briefly illuminated the entire arena, and all of the spectators then rushed
toward that door in hopes it would soon open again.
Sure enough, about five days later I began to feel strangely
agitated – the agitation I now know to be the first sign of an old, repressed
aspect of myself making its way into the subconscious, where with some help it
will then pierce consciousness. I was very disappointed and befuddled
that I wasn’t totally healed yet.
Reluctantly, and, frankly, with no other options, I
re-committed to my healing journey, vowing to stay on it until it was
over. I continued to find people who had been where I was trying to go –
who could actually teach experientially what I needed to learn about healing.
I was about 17 months into my healing journey by this
time. My depression was largely gone, but I continued going through a
very intense period of fully experiencing and expressing my pain. As long
as I continued to do this, my depression declined to storm my brain and
manipulate its chemistry.
I’m always disappointed when I see “create wealth”, “live
the life you want” and certain self-help books whose success is dependent upon
the reader thinking a certain way. These books all say “You have to
change your thinking!” but either give no means or an ineffective page or two
on just how to change your thinking. Changing your thinking is one of the
toughest challenges in life! But your thinking is also the one thing in
life you have absolute domain over.
The mind thinks the way it does for a reason. The
unconscious uses thinking to draw attention to what one is in need of giving
attention to. Thinking is very stubborn. It will not change until oneself
has changed. If one wants to change his or her own thinking, one must
first make the changes one’s thinking is trying to get him or her to make.
My depression was largely due to a backlog of emotions I had
failed to express. Surprisingly, some of these repressed emotions were of
a positive nature, such as joy and love. The biggest culprits for me,
however, were sorrow and grief. I had learned at a young age that crying
was wrong. So, to the best of my ability, I didn’t cry. The funny
thing is, I was always sad. Even when I was happy, I was always a bit
sad. I couldn’t figure out why I was sad or what I was sad about, I just
was. I felt guilty about it, for not only was it wrong to feel sad, but I
had no legitimate reason to feel sad! On top of that, my sadness was a
burden on my parents. This was great for
my self-esteem.
During the first few months of my healing journey, the
floodgates gave way. I experienced episodes of intense crying that would
last for several hours. While I didn’t know what I was grieving, somehow
I knew I needed to grieve.
The unbearable state of my life and the urging of my sister
pushed me to begin working with a licensed psychologist. Unfortunately,
the state of my mind was rendering impossible my following the strategy my
psychologist had laid out for me. She realized how out of control my
thinking had become and suggested I go on some kind of medication that would
stabilize my thinking and enable me to make some progress. I was very
resistant to this. I wanted to find real, permanent answers to my
depression and not have to rely on drugs to make me feel better.
But my mind was a mess. It would endlessly and
adamantly obsess over the same situations again and again...and again.
The lack of control I had over my thinking was mind-boggling. One night I
timed myself to see how long I could think about something other than the current
situation I kept obsessing about. I timed myself several times, each time
thinking about something fun like surfing, playing music, and even Disneyland. The longest I could go was eight
seconds! In eight seconds or less, my thinking would segue from what I wanted to think about to what my mind wanted me to think about.
My sleep was also in ruins. No matter what time I got
in bed, I couldn’t fall asleep until 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. No matter how
exhausted I was, my mind was buzzing, hyper-alert, re-imagining the situation I
had been obsessing about over and over again. Once I fell asleep, I would
wake up three to four hours later as if a bomb had gone off. Immediately
I’d realize I was still obsessing about the same situation. I would then
realize that I really didn’t fall asleep. I just sort of dozed off while
my mind continued rehashing the situation over and over and over again.
After a couple months of making no noteworthy progress with
my psychologist, I agreed to try the meds – Prozac to be exact. I’m very
glad I did. Once I got through the tortuous process of coming on to
Prozac, my mind stabilized. My psychologist and the psychiatrist we
worked with (for the meds) were great. They found the just the right
dosage that was high enough to stabilized my mind and my sleep pattern, but low
enough that I still felt my pain and grief.
I was on Prozac off and on for one year. I grieved and
grieved and grieved. Despite my still not knowing what I was grieving, it
became clear to me that this grieving was an essential part of my
healing. My reluctance to the grieving process disappeared now that I
knew the Prozac would keep me from getting sucked into the endless swirl of
depression.
I was extremely lucky to have a support system throughout
all of this. Countless times I cried in the arms of any one of my family
members. Even though I was still holding some of them accountable for my
pain, they were graciously there for me. A support system is imperative
for anyone going through the healing process.
Life is like a factory. A conveyor belt continually
transports potentially damaging issues to the processing area. If these
issues are not processed a backlog begins to accumulate. Unfortunately,
western society does not give us the tools to process our issues. Instead
of teaching us to bravely face our issues, it teaches us to “be brave” and not face our issues – to “be strong” and ignore our issues.
When these issues are processed properly in the first place,
chiefly by learning what they are trying to teach us and by properly and
totally expressing the emotions these issues trigger, they cease to
exist. But if left unprocessed, they fester internally and permeate every
moment of one’s existence from thereon with their essences. If one
decides or is “forced” to go back and rescue these long-repressed aspects of
oneself, expression is the first order of duty.
When these repressed aspects begin to bubble up from the
unconscious, the pain and agitation is very nebulous. Merely expressing
this pain, however, rolls out the welcome matt. The pain will eventually
use this matt as it steps into consciousness. Once it makes its way into
consciousness, the origins of the pain will begin to become clear.
I used to fall in love with sad women. At the
beginning of my healing journey, the situation my mind was so adamantly
obsessing about was yet another pseudo-relationship with a sad woman. On
the chance I would actually get involved with a stable, happy woman I couldn’t
handle it. I’d immediately be off to find a sad woman. These sad
women always took a liking to me at first. But soon thereafter they would
cut off any and all meaningful communication with me and start going out with
someone else. They usually wouldn’t even tell me they were no longer
interested in me. In the ensuing days and even weeks that would go by
before I would find out that they were no longer interested in me I’d be left
hanging, still thinking the relationship was going to happen.
So let’s see here. I had an expansive backlog of
repressed sorrow and grief. I needed to heal the division and become one
again with my repressed sorrow and grief. Meanwhile I kept getting into pseudo
relationships with sad women, yearning to become one with them.
Hmmm. I came into life as we all do with the natural inclination to
express sorrow, but then one day I began repressing my sorrow to the best of my
ability in order to maintain my parent’s love and approval. Meanwhile,
the women I was attracted to always liked me at first, but would soon give me
the silent treatment as they cut me off and sought the love and approval of
another guy. Hmmm. My repressed sorrow and grief for years vainly
hoped to someday gain my attention and acknowledgment. Meanwhile I, for
years, vainly hoped to someday gain the attention and acknowledgment of the sad
woman. Is it possible this relationship pattern was trying to tell me
something?
The symbolisms that often appear in our exterior lives can
be incredibly poignant. The sad woman pattern was a pattern of mine for
years. I look back and wonder “How could I not have seen this?” The
pain, torture and embarrassment I would have saved myself!
Again, the mind thinks the way it does for a reason.
The worst thing one can do is try to force it to change, because it
won’t. Instead, find a healthy way to honor it. Encourage it.
Seek to understand its message, its mandate. When this mandate is
understood, carry it out. The mind’s thinking will then change.
When the purpose of the mind’s negative thinking is realized, the mind will go
back to thinking in more harmonious ways…at least until it embarks on a new
mission to draw our attention to another issue within us!
During my year of being off and on Prozac, I began doing
Iyengar Yoga, a form of Hatha Yoga extremely adept at stretching and releasing
isolated muscle groups. This yoga practice went perfectly with my
grieving. Every time I thought I was nearing the end of my grieving
process, my yoga practice would get a bit deeper, and up would come a whole new
batch of grieving.
For eight years prior to my starting yoga, I had a lower
back problem. My lower back would go out once every one or two months,
putting me in bed for one to three days. Chiropractors and doctors were
of no help other than providing some temporary symptom relief. After six
months of practicing Iyengar Yoga with a highly qualified instructor coupled
with my fully expressing all of the emotions my body had pent up and was now
releasing – especially the emotions that had been pent up in my hamstrings – my
lower back was healed.
I was 17 months into my healing journey when I recommitted
to staying on the journey until its completion. This was shortly after my
“place of planning” experience, when I realized I had a lot more healing
– an arena-full - to undergo. I had been off Prozac for a few
months. I was no longer seeing the licensed psychologist I had worked
with, but I continued to utilize her strategy of eating well, exercising,
journaling and writing with my left hand (I’m right handed), and “pulling
weeds”.
The journey soon connected me to several different people in
the healing arts who were incorporating into their practices an awareness of
the different steps involved in the healing process. What once was a
scary, frustrating and foreign process was soon to become a conscious, efficient,
effective and even somewhat routine process.
One incredibly empowering characteristic of the healing
process is that it happens within, completely independent of anyone else.
The healing takes place regardless of the actions or lack of actions of those
being held accountable. Receiving apologies from and getting closure with
those being held accountable has no bearing on true healing.
Have you ever complained of something that happened to you
in the past, and had someone say to you something like “It’s not happening to
you now. Get over it! Why are you still complaining about
it?” That’s a semi-valid question. It’s not the negative incident that is still causing us pain. It’s how we continue to react to it .in our
present lives. The pain is due to the
adjustments and changes we made and continue to implement within ourselves in
response to the incident.
This became clear to me during the second true healing
episode I experienced. Having read several books by this time on family dynamics,
I had a good understanding of the dynamics present in my family during my
childhood. While having this knowledge was very important, it did nothing
to lessen the pain I was attributing to my childhood years. I had even
had productive conversations with each of my parents about my childhood and the
issues I was holding my parents accountable for. While these
conversations did bring us closer and resolved several issues, they did nothing
to lessen the pain.
One day, I began to feel the nebulous agitation that usually
accompanies a painful, repressed aspect of myself making its way from the
unconscious to the subconscious in its hopes for conscious resolution and
reconnection. Over the next few days I did what I had to, emotionally and
physically, to express this fuzzy, vague pain. It slowly became more
defined until it became a tangible entity I could see and feel.
I began to talk with this entity, but typical for this
stage, it wouldn’t respond. After years and years of my repressing this
entity, why would it trust me? But I continued talking to it,
making known my earnest desire to hear what it had to tell me.
Eventually, it started talking. It was my repressed sorrow and grief,
expressing how furious it was that I had chosen to repress it. As I had
by this time been faithfully expressing my backlog of repressed sorrow and
grief for about two years, it occurred to me I had finally reached the bottom
of the backlog pile. (Of course, there were many other backlogs of different
emotions and other issues I would soon deal with.)
I explained to my grief and sorrow that my parents did not
like me crying. It said “Parents? What the hell are parents?!
No! You decided to shut us up!” “No. You don’t
understand. My parents wouldn’t let me
cry!” I said. It replied “No! You don’t understand. You
chose not to cry!”
Then it hit me. These interior aspects of myself had
no concern for or understanding of anything outside of myself. To the
residents of the inner world, the external world is but a bizarre abstraction
at best. The only thing my repressed sorrow and grief understood was that
I, the ultimate ruler of my inner world, had chosen to repress them.
The truth of this reverberated through my core. I had
failed myself. I had failed to honor and express a vital part of
myself. I broke down, accepted responsibility for my actions, and began
apologizing profusely and with all of my sincerity. I begged and begged
for forgiveness. Once my sorrow and grief believed my sincerity, it said
it would forgive me on the condition I would always be true to my sorrow and
grief, expressing them whenever they needed to be expressed.
As I agreed to this, I felt my sorrow and grief and become
one with me as the division between us disappeared. An incredibly
blissful and harmonic shift occurred on all levels of my being, my physical
body, my emotional body, my mind and my spirit. The truth of this was
absolute.
The bliss lasted for about, well, three or four days, when a
new, different agitation then began resonating within me. The process was
starting anew.
I went through this process many times over the next year,
reclaiming many of the parts of myself I had sacrificed. Some of these
had been repressed since childhood, but many of them weren’t repressed until my
teens and twenties. Among them were not only repressed emotions, but
aspects of myself I repressed due to my need to be accepted by friends, peers,
women, teachers, relatives and society in general.
These episodes of true, ultimate healing would always occur
when I became one with the aspect of myself I had chosen to repress. The
process leading up to this unification was usually the same: A nebulous
agitation from within; my expressing this agitation; the agitation focusing
into a tangible entity; my proving my desire to hear what the entity had to
tell me; the entity talking to me and my listening to it; my apologizing and
asking for forgiveness; the entity telling its conditions for forgiveness; my
sincerely agreeing to adhere to the conditions; and blissful unification.
This series of healing experiences brought my understanding
of the principle of free will once again to a deeper level. The pains
inflicted on us by other people and external circumstances pass on their own,
but the pain we inflict on ourselves in response to these situation does not go
away until we make the proper amends within ourselves.
More than 15 years have passed since my journey of the dark
(k)night basically ended. Just as life goes on, the factory is still
open, the conveyor belt is still running, and the events and resulting issues
that need to be processed are ongoing. Finding healthy ways to honestly
and fully express these issues prevents them from leaving any long-lasting
pains.
Occasionally a long-repressed aspect of myself that I failed
to get to while going through the backlogs shows up. When I sense this
happening, I immediately throw out the red carpet to welcome a long, lost part
of myself back home. I usually get through the entire process with ease
and efficiency, but not always. There are always those lessons that seem
to require great lengths of time to be taught correctly.
While my life isn't perfect these days, it is
exponentially better than it was before I went on the journey. I still
have issues, some I ‘m aware of and some I’m not, but they no longer enslave me
the way they used to. My healing journey was by far the most challenging
thing I have done in my life. I’m ever thankful for the positive impacts
it has sewn over the remainder of my life.
I was inspired to write this by the many people I have
encountered while on the journey and since then who are suffering as I once
was. My experience encourages me to pass on these suggestions to those
suffering:
Get professional help. Don't be ashamed or afraid of it. If you don't have the money there are probably programs in your area that can help. Again, don't be ashamed or afraid of asking.
Express
yourself. Find safe and healthy ways to express your feelings...It is fundamental to healing. Expression is the bridge to consciousness. The more you can express something the more likely you'll be able to heal it.
Reach
out to others. A support system is critical to healing. You
must talk to people. Yes, you’ll freak some people out, but
eventually you will connect with those who will be a part of your
healing’s foundation.
Reach
in to yourself. Delve into your interior world. Learn the language of the unconscious. Write down your noteworthy dreams. Interact with the characters and objects in your dreams. Broadcast a
message to the aspects of yourself you are not in harmony with and tell them
that you want to make amends. As you establish your sincerity and
trustworthiness, these aspects will begin to talk with you.
Give
up your victimhood. Giving up your victimhood is very hard, scary
even, but as long as you believe you’re a victim, you’ll continue to be
one. In addition, you’ll continue to draw victimizing situations
into your life that will give you satisfactory reason to believe you
really are a victim. Stop giving your personal power away.
Fully and completely accept the principle of free will into your life. Even if the principle of free will is
not true embracing it WILL empower you to heal. Would you rather be happy or would you
rather be right?
Don’t
wait around for God to heal you – it probably won’t happen. Instead,
listen for and follow God’s advice and direction as to what you need to do
to heal yourself. God talks in an
infinite variety of ways that you are capable of hearing and
understanding. Just be open to it.
Inform
yourself. Read books, listen to programs, and go to lectures about
healing.
Learn
the language of the unconscious. Read books by masters of the
subject such as Joseph Campbell and Robert Johnson.
Pay
attention to your thinking and your life. Look for the symbolic
messages that the repressed aspects of yourself are sending you via your
mind, your health, your judgments, the causes you’re drawn to, your
fantasies and dreams, and your exterior life’s situations and
relationships.
Be open minded.
And remember:
Your
world won’t change until you do. Changing your world is usually
futile. Changing yourself is always fruitful, and your world usually follows suit.
Most importantly: Healing Happens!
If you find anything in this essay beneficial please share a link to it with anyone or on any platform you'd like. Thank you.