I know it can be difficult—truly challenging, even—to accept that our interpretations of experience are not objective fact. It can be hard to let go of them, as our capital-R Reality. But they are, actually, little, local realities, unique to each of us. Perhaps this idea is new for you, but I assure you there is nothing new about understanding reality as individual, as unique, rather than shared. Many psychologists and spiritual leaders, alike, both historical and modern, write and speak about how we each interpret the activity around us through our individual filters. Law enforcement professionals cope with the reality that every eye witness to a crime has an individual and unique description of events. There is even a prominent child development and education model, known as Constructivism, founded on the premise that each child constructs a large proportion of his knowledge, particularly his social knowledge.
And all of these theories and approaches arise from a hard science: neuro-science, the study of the physical brain.
Our human brains are unique in the animal kingdom, for the presence of a
neo-cortex. The primary job of this largest part of our three-part brain is to interpret sensory input. The neo-cortex is a story
teller! Data come streaming in through the eyes, ears, and other sensory organs, and
the neo-cortex figures out what those data mean. As if that level of individuality
weren’t enough, the neo-cortex is also uniquely created in each individual, a
result of early experiences. The variety and nature of the sensory input from
birth to five years of age literally build 90% of individual brains’ architectures.
The network of neural connections that exist now in your neo-cortex was built,
link by link, in the first three years of your life.
Around the age of 2-1/2 to 3 years, a window of opportunity opens, in
which we may have begun to recognize that our stories are unique to us. This is
our chance to emerge from the egocentrism of the toddler years, and learn that
nobody else has our thoughts, feelings, dreams and desires. If your adult
caregivers helped you to mine the Childhood Treasure of Independence, then you
became aware that, in many ways, you are unique. You learned that others could
not know what you felt, thought, or wanted, unless you spoke these internal
truths aloud. Or maybe you didn’t learn that.
That we don’t all get to take full advantage of this window of
opportunity is evident in our adult behavior. The classic and erroneous
statement, “If you really loved me, you’d know how I feel,” is clear evidence
of lingering toddler-vision. Inability of a small group of co-workers to decide
where to go for lunch is another example. “Oh, I don’t care; wherever you want
to go is fine.” Life abounds with examples of ways in which many of us still
act as if we believe others know what we know, feel what we feel, and want for us what we want for ourselves. That
is toddler-vision, in a nutshell.
Your story, my story; each and both will always be true…to the
individual who tells it to herself. Let us suppose that you and I, together,
witness a loud dispute between two others whom we both know and love. My story
is that I have witnessed a bitter, damaging power-play that diminished one of
the two and revealed the abusive nature of the other. Your story is that you
have just seen healthy conflict resolution and a strong relationship in action.
Who is correct? Which of these interpretations of observed reality is “right”
or “true?” Both. Neither. Truly, does it matter?
At first glance, you may hear these words, “your realities—the ‘facts’
as you know them—are unique to you,” as a message that they are “just stories,” as if that eliminates or
reduces their validity. That is not true. Each of us does, literally, author
unique dramas, moral tales, and comedies of meaning about our experiences AND
those stories are true. They are valid for us, and they absolutely shape who we
think we are and how we behave. You can
create stories that nourish the learning edges of your personal growth. You can
also create stories that are a source of pain, tear down your confidence, and
taint your relationships.
Your stories are powerful. My stories are powerful. They absolutely
define how each of us sees the world. Therefore, they guide how we each
interface with the world, and, finally, how we feel about what we think is going on. And that might be the hardest
aspect of this situation to accept: our
feelings don’t result from the objective, observable facts of life around us,
but from our stories about those facts, our unique interpretations.
When I truly “got it” that meaning is not inherent in experience, I
became a new version of myself. This was revelation, a foundation-shaking
paradigm shift. Yet, I was also boomeranged back to a younger version of
myself, back in the 70s, mentally sporting my “Question Reality” button on
denim overalls. As in “The Work” of Byron Katie (Who Are You without Your Stories?), I now give myself permission to
question every thought and feeling I have, to become aware of whether they
serve my well-being or growth, or perhaps to reject them as soul-dissolving or relationship-killing
poisons. I recognize my power to choose
my thoughts and, in doing so, to choose my emotional state, which is so
closely tied to my thoughts that it occurs nearly simultaneously. When my
thoughts (interpretation of data) and their related emotions occur together
often enough, I wind up deeply steeped in a story that is nearly impervious to
change.
Here’s a story of this dynamic in my life. I once went through an experience of having someone “hating on me” for a long span of months. Then I learned that the story she was telling herself was that I am “just like”
her mother, whom she “can’t stand.” Of course this is a story; I can’t be “just
like” anyone else. This woman's filter only let in the data that were echoes of her mother,
part me and part projection of her Mother Story, so she actually never saw all they ways I’m not at all like her mother. If my
whole self were cut up into puzzle pieces, she was only able to see a few of them.
My stories about her made it equally impossible to see who she really was.
“She lives her life as a victim.” “She’s passive aggressive.” “She’s threatened
by my self-assurance and personal power.” We were locked into
these views of each other. It absolutely didn't matter what either of us did
or said. The filters through which we saw each other were so
securely in place that we could only see those stories. Any sensory data that
contradicted them was simply filtered out. I could only see/hear what affirmed my
stories of her and she could only see/hear what affirmed hers of me. These stories were
completely shaping our interactions and relationship.
Here’s the real problem: I didn’t
like how I felt. I’d like to think that those feelings were caused by her
directing all that hate and anger toward me. But the truth is that my emotions
came from the stories I told myself about her, including "she's been hating on me for months." Were those stories true? Maybe.
Does it matter? Yes, because there was only one solution to my
unhappiness. I could only change my own behavior, my thoughts, my stories; I
couldn't change her stories and feelings. But I could choose different thoughts about her, interpreting data into a new story
that let me be loving, compassionate, and, well, happier…no matter her story
about me.
My new stories: 1) She’s doing
the best she can with the tools she has. 2) It is so hard and painful to live
life controlled by that much anger. 3) From my own experience of anger, I know
it as a defense against fear, the real controller. 4) I have empathy for
someone controlled by fear; I’ve been there.
Are these new stories true? Maybe. They’re certainly just as true as my old stories, so why not choose these?
Are these new stories true? Maybe. They’re certainly just as true as my old stories, so why not choose these?
Does the switch matter to her? Maybe and maybe not…but I changed my
story for my own benefit. My heart runs a river of peace now, instead of a
river of poison. And that matters to me; it deeply
matters. Because these thoughts and feelings absolutely shape who I think I am
and how I behave. I can create
stories that nourish the learning edges of my personal growth. And so can you.
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