Duty is an old-fashioned word that many people no-longer use. It seems to have become the preserve of military families. But I remember conversations in my family when I was growing up about duty, our duty to our parents. It was a loaded word, drenched in meaning and nuance.  It demanded certain behaviours from us. 
Duty demanded that we did not question our parents' authority, even if their decisions were crazy, unhealthy, or simply not right for us. Many of us grew up completely unaware that we had choices. We grew up believing that even though it caused us pain we had to do what our parents dictated. For many, the easiest solution was to leave Ireland. Once abroad, people could make all sorts of choices that the parents at home could do nothing about. 

But in truth, we always have choices. We may fear the consequences. We may not like the consequences. We may feel the price is too high.  But we always have choices.

Really knowing that we have choices and exploring all the options open to us changes everything. I remember once meeting a mother whose child had a severe physical disability. Her life was demanding 24/7. Peace shone from her. I asked her how she came to be so peaceful and happy. She answered "I rarely forget that the life I live is of my own choosing. I choose to care for my child myself. Nobody is holding a gun to my head. This is my choice!"

 

Stories

01/05/2012

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Muriel Rutledger said "The universe is made up of stories not of atoms." 
This is so true. Our first stories are family stories. These stories inform our identity and our choices too. Have you ever heard a family story which began "people like us never/always..."? Or maybe you've heard the one that begins "you take after your uncle/aunt .."

There are all kinds of stories. There are the stories we have been told and the stories we tell ourselves. Some of them inspire us and some of them wound us. Some stories build our faith in ourselves and make us strong. Other stories steal our energy or write us off before we even begin.


In my work as a Coach, I always pay close attention to the story a new client tells me at our first meeting. There are always hidden layers and threads, beliefs inherited from their families of origin and beliefs they have come to themselves. Sometimes a speaker has told a story so often that they don't hear themselves anymore. Others have never felt heard in their whole lives. Some stories were true once but are no longer true now.

 
I remember once working with a young woman who told me through her tears "nobody loves me". As we dug down through the layers she found that she was deeply loved by her family but she had never felt understood by them. This new insight opened up a whole range of choices for her. She found that she could really receive the love of her family and feel free to receive understanding from her close friends.