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Dr David Lieberman: Revealing Transforming Relationships (Part 4)
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hello everyone and welcome to
transforming relationships as you'll
know we have a fancy new
background here i came over to the
office and you'll let me know if you
like this better or my
uh very charming colorful bookshelf
so thank you to hazak tarani time
uh and chickens for shabbos amazing
organizations that do everything they
can to help improve the lives
of everybody uh and certainly a big
shout out in yashakar
to rep david goldwasser who really is
the icker of this i'm just a warm-up act
so make sure you stay tuned for his
very fascinating penetrating insightful
look into perkiavos so
we're speaking about relationships
transforming relationships today we're
going to focus on something that
affects all of us and that is childhood
um
most of you out there have been children
unless you've been hatched i suppose or
you are a child
in which case it's probably past your
bedtime either way i'd like to share
with you some very practical ideas
in terms of what you can do to maybe
i don't know it's it's not too late to
have a happy childhood
well we'll call we'll say we'll start
with that and here's the thing though
even when we strive every which way to
be
good and to do good we can still find a
hole in our self-esteem
thanks to childhood if we did not
receive
love from our parents
as children or felt that our lives were
out of control due to
trauma domestic volatility we can
needlessly spend the rest of our lives
thirsting for love and acceptance and
everything we do is intended to bring us
to
that end but there is no end
because you can't fix what's not broken
we already haul we've already
we've always been whole and here's
what's very very important to understand
the love that parents give children
is determined by their own meaning the
parents limitations not those of the
children
it never occurs to us though as children
that maybe it has nothing to do with us
if a mother is capable of love she'll be
loving to all the children
even one who turns out to be a mass
murderer but if she lacks the
ability to love then even an innocent
well-mannered child
like yourself will be subject to her
hostility because she's incapable of
giving
now as adults it can still
you know we can still appreciate to some
degree
that our self-worth isn't contingent on
our parents acceptance of us
but it's still very very hard to do see
the eco concocted this equation
that how someone treats me is a
reflection of my self-worth
but it's not so we are not less because
someone can't love us
it's very important to understand this
how someone treats you is a reflection
of their self-esteem it speaks volumes
of their own emotional health
is their window into their character and
to their being
but it says nothing about you but knock
weinberg that's how i used to say you
give love and you give respect if you
don't have it what do you have to give
let's take an example if you saw someone
in a wheelchair
you wouldn't get mad at him because he
can't get up and walk
somebody who is emotionally handicapped
is equally challenged
does it make sense to resent the parent
for not being able to give something to
us
that he or she simply didn't have do we
want to hold on to anger because our
mother or father
was and maybe still is incapable of
giving us love
again people give love if they don't
have it
then they can't give it regardless of
how desperately this
their their their soul yearns to love
their own child
the question we want to ask ourselves is
what kind of person would i be today if
i were treated differently as a child
whoever that person is is who you really
are
now when it comes to relationships with
the parents it's a double whammy
because our
relationships with our parents very
often affect our relationships with
hashem our relationship with god
uh is is dramatically impacted for two
interlacing reasons
one is let's say you've got a poor or
call a complicated relationship with a
parent
because that injures our self-esteem
we then have difficulty feeling and
accepting hashem's love for us
because we don't feel worthy we feel
like somebody who is less
somebody who is unworthy of good so why
would i think the creator of the
universe would want to give me any good
so our love for him then inevitably
suffers
because our choices will further
entangle the ego and continue to squeeze
hashem
out of the equation i just
rephrase it like this is that i don't
love me because i was treated poorly
now i don't love me i'm not going to
want to invest in me i'm going to make
lousy choices
that pushes god further out of the
equation
okay now secondly is that a parent is
the first authority figure in a child's
life
so a child who was mistreated by a
parent
or even treated well but because of the
child sensitivities wasn't able and
there are children like this by the way
cast no aspersions on your parents or
don't feel guilty for yourself you can
give everything to your children's
parathetically
all the same five children turn out one
way six a different way
not because you weren't good not because
you weren't a kind parent
but because that child sensitivities
they will not allow for him or her
to absorb the love a different
conversations will have because there
are too many parents walking around
just with a lot of guilt for zero reason
okay
so a child was mistreated by a parent or
by anyone in authority for that matter
can have difficulty accepting
let alone trusting the ultimate
authority of hashem
the ten commandments we know are divided
into two categories right you've got the
first that contain
the man to god and then you've got the
man to man
revealingly the fifth commandment to
honor one's parents
is on the man to god's side of the
tablets this is because
we don't find it easy to love and to be
loved by the career of the universe
while we're holding on to anger towards
our parents
on many levels the relationship between
a child and a parent
symbolizes and often determines our
relationship with hashem
i tell parents this all the time when it
comes to davening and should you
you know with boys and teenagers and get
them out of this and i said your
relationship
with that your child has with hashem
will not likely be better than
relationship he has with you
so before you do anything make sure you
ask yourself is this improving my
relationship with my child or injuring
it
okay a lot to talk about the
relationships by the way
so by honoring our parents or at least
not hating and acknowledging
that they have their own baggage and
their own stuff and they too are
suffering
themselves we cultivate and appreciate
an appreciation for and an understanding
of
how much our parents love us or perhaps
long to
despite their limitations this in this
awareness
enhances our relationship with hashem
because it helps us to recognize
that there are no limitations to
hashem's total unconditional love for us
see our parents are limited which is why
we too are limited
and when we acknowledge the fact that
our
parents treatment of us has nothing to
do with us but again reflects everything
about them
we did nothing to deserve uh whatever
improper or unwell or unproductive or
unhealthy treatment we got
it was our parents limitations not ours
it frees us
to have a greater sense of self-esteem
and in doing so now we can redefine our
relationship with hashem
there's more to it than that but just i
don't make the mistake of thinking
that's all we need
an emotionally healthy person will not
have considerable
rather emotionally unhealthy person
who has considerable unresolved anger
toward a parent
it's highly probable that he'll have
difficulty enjoying let alone
having really deep meaningful
relationships
with hashem or quite frankly with
other people to a large extent because
while this anger exists
uh it's very very damaging to our own
self-esteem and again a person who
doesn't love themselves is a hard time
giving and receiving love
this is something we spoke about or
we'll speak about at some point
so if i don't love me because i'm
working around a lot of stuff i have a
hard time establishing
that healthy relationship with other
people it doesn't make it impossible
and doesn't mean that everyone who had a
difficult childhood is incapable
absolutely positively not what i am
saying is the degree to which we
generally love ourselves more
is the degree to which we can give and
receive love i mean that much makes
sense
so anyone who feels anger toward a
parent must make it a priority to move
past it or better to reframe the
negative feelings into more accurate and
positive
feelings so let's spend a few minutes
now just on refrain
reframing the past i missed my shabbos
snap so
okay so reframing the past a
shift in our perspective
in how we see
a shift in perspective now allows for us
to undo our perception of the past by
reframing it
and it permanently alters how we see
ourselves in our world
something we spoke to spoke about um
something we didn't speak about but
something that's important is
that context gives rise to meaning and
meaning
changes how we see something so by
reframing the past and putting it into a
different context
we change what it means instantly and
automatically
changes our relationship with it i know
that just sounds very convoluted so i'm
going to give a very banal
example from everyday life how often
does a book's
ending make or break the book do we find
it less enjoyable
because of a silly ending well sort of
we read it and enjoy it
but the ending changes the enjoyment of
what we just read
and two an exciting twist at the end
shines a new light
on the entirety of the story we replay
in our minds the scenes we
thought meant one thing and ah now we
see something else entirely and so on
everything changes it's difficult for us
to grasp
the concept that reality isn't linear
and that a shift in perspective now can
create retroactive changes in our
attitude
in our thoughts and our feelings but
le marshall let's imagine an elderly
woman
after believing that she was happily
married for 60 years is told on her
deathbed
that her recently departed husband never
really loved her
that her parents had paid him 10 million
dollars to marry her and on top of that
uh
you know he had a whole different life
for a different city and so on can we
say that she was
happy her entire life and that only the
last 30 seconds were a little schwa
did the birthdays the celebrations the
walks conversations laughters and
memories
do they all disappear no they're
there but her memory
how they've changed her past is now
different
if after she heard this revelation
someone were to ask this woman how was
your life how would she answer
would she easily say a wonderful more
likely she would say awful sad
heartbreaking
see the characters and events are still
locked in time but we can get a glimpse
of the now or rather how the now
is impacted by
rewind we get a glimpse of how the past
can be impacted
by how we see things now see rabbi
goldwater is a lot more smooth
everything just comes
out so much more smoothly
there you go i gotta i gotta get some
tips from him okay
now this is not to say that we should
try to convince ourselves
that our past carries no meaning it's
not we're saying at all we are simply
saying that we should allow for the
possibility
that the meaning we assign to events
might not be true
and how we feel about ourselves today
based on a damaged relationship or
trauma
is an accurately formed conclusion and
we don't have to hate ourselves because
someone in our life
can't love us we don't have to harm
ourselves
because someone else harmed us we are
not unlovable because someone else
is incapable of loving us
the quality of our relationships is
based on our ability to give it and to
receive
today and by reframing our past
relationships and asking ourselves
maybe i attached an erroneous meaning
the fact that i was not treated well as
a child
what does it really mean about me it
means nothing
once again how somebody treats you
speaks volumes to that person but says
nothing about you and your self-worth
you are not less because someone cannot
love you when you own that
you'll enjoy different quality
relationships today
and a different quality emotional health
and reflection about past relationships
with that i wish you a beautiful week i
know that's a lot maybe there's a way to
to re-listen to this certainly not too
many options to redo it
anyway have an amazing week mirzasham
see you back here next time multichavis