Do you find it difficult to make a Radical Forgiveness reframe? Many people do. It's not easy to get the idea grounded in reality that everything is unfolding according to a Divine plan and that there's nothing to forgive. This is especially so when you are in the middle of some crisis. Thank God we don't have to do more than express some willingness to see it as perfect! And thank Spirit for giving us the tools with which to do just that.
When we reframe a situation we basically exchange one set of assumptions rooted in the World of Humanity (as in the victim story), for another set rooted in the unseen and essentially mysterious World of Spirit. It matters not whether the reframe is "true;" rather it is how we frame it with assumptions anchored in the World of Spirit that constitutes the test as to whether it is indeed a Radical Forgiveness reframe or not.
It is very common for people, even seasoned Radical Forgiveness coaches and graduates, to express their reframes in terms of having received a ‘gift,’ a ‘lesson’ or even a ‘healing’ that remain, to all intents and purposes, firmly anchored in the World of Humanity, even though they are dressed up in spiritual language. They nevertheless fail the test.
During a conversation with a very good friend of mine who was herself a holocaust survivor, she told me about an exhibition in the Holocaust Museum in Auschwitz, Germany, that featured a huge pile of children’s shoes. All of them had been taken from the children before they were gassed. As you would expect, the exhibit has an extremely visceral and profound effect on anyone who confronts it.
As a student of Radical Forgiveness she made an attempt to reframe it, primarily so she could come to terms with it herself and integrate it somehow into her own personal history of having been part of that terrible experience. She said that perhaps the reframe was that the ‘gift’ (there’s that word again — always a trap), was that the souls of the children ‘volunteered’ to die in this way so that people who saw the pile of shoes would ensure that, since children are always the victims of war, they would never create war again. In that sense, there was a Divine purpose in what happened.
In that statement were indeed two assumptions rooted in the World of Spirit. One was that there is no death and souls choose when and how to make their transition both in and out of human form. The second was that there was Divine purpose even in this situation. It counts, perhaps, as a partial reframe to that extent. But making it about “stopping wars” snapped it right back into the World of Humanity. It therefore failed the test. It was not a true Radical Forgiveness reframe.
Even if such a result was to occur, which it never would because it doesn't get to the root of why humans kill each other, it would simply be an "effect," not a reframe. It would be simple cause and effect, which only operates in the World of Humanity, not in the World of Spirit.
Another example is saying that Jesus volunteered to die in order to teach us to be good and to love each other. He did teach that of course, but I don't believe that it was the purpose of his crucifixion. My reframe of that drama was “to show that death is not real and that life is present before we take on a body and it continues afterwards. Therefore, no one dies. Therefore death is not to be feared and life is to be lived free of that fear.”
My reframe of the shoes story, even though I haven't seen the exhibit, and it might well be different afterwards, might run something like this: "That the soul's who inhabited those children's bodies incarnated with a specific mission to be killed in a particularly gruesome manner to teach us that we are all One, that separation is not real, that death is not real and that when we senselessly kill a seemingly innocent child, we kill ourselves. And that we are all children of God; the One ‘Sonship.’"
It might also be part of a larger reframe which I have spoken of publicly in the past and have held seminars on; that the soul lesson inherent in the Holocaust was about our letting go of 'victim consciousness' which the Jewish people volunteered to exhibit to the extreme. It was also about the error of 'specialness' that the Germans volunteered to demonstrate to an equal extreme. The only meaningful opposite of victimhood and specialness is Oneness. The drama continues - the lessons still to be learned.
In anticipation of someone asserting that the reframe inherent in Jill’s Story (Chapter One in my book Radical Forgiveness, Making Room for the Miracle), fails the test because I made it about saving my sister’s marriage and ‘healing’ her core-negative belief that her father didn’t love her, let me say this. If it were just about that, it would fail the test. What it was really about though, and Jill really did get this, was that her own spiritual intelligence created the whole scenario as an opportunity to learn that she was loved, that she was whole and complete with or without a man, and that she was entirely responsible for her life and that only Spirit is real. The rest was simply an illusion — a victim story based in the World of Humanity which she was able to release.
I hope this helps you in the process of doing a Radical Forgiveness worksheet, in particular with Step number 18. Having said all this though, it really doesn’t matter what you write on the worksheet. Your intention to do it is enough. You cannot screw it up! Would God care if you failed the reframe test? I don’t think so.
Blessings,
Colin
P.S. I invite you to post a reply letting us know how you might have successfully reframed some event or circumstance in your life. This would be very helpful to a lot of people. Thanks.
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
6 comments:
I am wondering if "reframing" can actually get to the root cause. I, at this point, do not believe that it can. A paradigm shift is required.
If the root cause of everything is to know we are all One, that we are all loved, all complete and all perfect as we are, then the defination of 'reframing' is to do nothing but get to the root cause.
Your statement: "...'victim consciousness' was something the Jewish people volunteered (my emphasis) to exhibit to the extreme (my emphasis again)" presupposes Holocaust survivors and the Jewish people overall had a choice whether or not to express their systematic victimization and anihilation. And not only did they "choose" to do so in your opinion, but also in your opinion, they did so to the "extreme" (your word). That judgmental adjective [extreme] further exemplifies your audacity in quantifying proper and acceptable as well as improper and unacceptable levels or degrees of expression and feelings.
"Extreme" (in this context and subject) teeters precariously close to sympathizing with those who would either deny or excuse this stain on history. If "Radical Forgiveness" means that in the presence of visual reminders to this horror one can/should find justification or a 'root cause' (**i.e. shoes piled to remind us we are all One in this tragedy**), then I submit "Radical Forgiveness" is woefully deficient in recognizing what even Jesus himself allowed for the very real existence of Pure Unadulterated Evil. Evil even beyond the parameters of Pure Unadulterated Good. If it is radical forgiveness to unite us, in this context, it's NOT to unite us to forgive or accept a reason. It's to accept and understand that there is NO reason for evils such as this. No prescient warning to future generations. (If so, it obviously has failed miserably.) No, the only unison found here is the united acceptance of the reality - not the concept - of Pure Unadulterated Evil. It existed, exists and will continue to exist in this world and, Mr. Tipping, that Evil is more than just a little immune to being 'radically forgiven."
One minor question: What exactly are your credentials other than writing yet another self-help book based on your personal philosophy?
Linda, are you Jewish by any chance?
I had been very angry, hurt, resentful, etc,. about my husband's infidelities, for 25 years, now.
After reading up to Step 11, I realized that God KNEW that this would happen to me, anyway!
I've gotten to the point that I'm glad that the infidelities happened.
I am now a stronger person, and that I am helping another couple cope with infidelity, in their marriage.
I even told my husband that I was glad that it happened to us.
Now, I'm not so angry, etc... and since I've started the online worksheets, 2 days ago, I've dropped 4 pounds.
I can't wait to tell others about the Radical Forgiveness program, so that they can be set free!
Good point, though sometimes it's hard to arrive to definite conclusions
Post a Comment