Remember Me
forgot your password?

Reconciliation of Inner Conflicts - Part 3

Examples of Inner Conflicts

LOSE WEIGHT OR EAT WHAT AND AS MUCH AS I WANT?

Say one part of use wants to lose weight or create a healthier body and the other wants to eat whatever and whenever it likes.

Let us call part A, "health conscious" and part B, "pleasure seeking".

So we try to answer the above questions.

1. About what part ¨"A" - The Health Conscious one feels:

Some answers might be:

a. Shame or self-rejection because of extra weight. b. Self-rejection because of lack of discipline. c. Helplessness because cannot succeed. d. Fear of illness. e. Anger at those who remind him/her of his/her problem. f. Anger at the part of ourselves that refuses to be disciplined. g. Fear of what others think about us. h. Jealous of others because they have better appearance or more discipline than we do. i. Disillusioned or depression because we have tired so much without success.

2. Then we do the same for part "B", the Pleasure Seeker.

What feelings might it have when it does not get what it wants?

Some possibilities are:

a. Suppressed when it cannot eat as it likes. b. Anxiety when it does not get its "dose". c. Sadness because it does not have its source of happiness and comfort. d. Anger at those who suppress him/her. e. Self-destruction so that it can keep up eating. f. Fear of being controlled. g. Fear of not having pleasure - joy. h. Jealous towards those who can eat whatever they like. i. Depression because there is no joy without food.

A few more examples.

BE IN A CONSCIOUS LOVE RELATIONSHIP OR BE ALONE

1. The part, which wants to be in the relationship, may feel the following emotions when that need is not fulfilled.

a. Loneliness because there is no one to be intimate with. b. Frustration because of lack of intimate physical contact. c. Injustice because we are alone. d. Unhappy without the pleasure of a love partner. e. Alienated from the others, because they are together. f. Jealous towards those who have happy relationships.

2. The part, which prefers not to be committed to a love relationship, may feel the following when that need is intimidated.

a. Fear of losing our freedom b. Fear of being hurt. c. Fear of being abandoned. d. Fear that of the other knows us well, s/he will not want to be with us. e. Fear of being vulnerable.

STAY IN MY PRESENT JOB OR CHANGE IT

1. The part which wants to stay in our present job might feel the following emotions when it thinks about leaving

a. Insecurity whether we will make it financially. a. Fear that we will not find what we want. b. Fear that we might regret doing this. c. Fear of how others will perceive us if we do not succeed in our new effort. d. Fear of making a mistake

2. The part which would like to move on to another job might feel some of the following emotions when it thinks about staying indefinitely at our present job.

a. Boredom and lack of interest b. Suppression that we have to do something which does not fulfill us anymore. c. Injustice that we cannot do what we really want to do with out lives. d. Self-rejection because we do not have the "guts" to leave. e. Jealousy towards those who have jobs which they love. f. Anger with those who in some way are "preventing" us from leaving. When we work with inner conflicts in this way, we free each part of ourselves from our conflicting emotions and natural healthy solutions will flow effortlessly to the surface.

The information below might be useful.

THE SPIRITUAL AND MATERIAL EGO

These roles or personas, which develop subconsciously, create a variety of beliefs and subsequent needs and emotions. Most of our personas manage to cooperate enough so that we can function without serious inner turmoil, but there are times in our lives when we experience inner conflicts in which two or more parts of our being have conflicting needs.

Many of these conflicts have to do with the differing needs between our "spiritual" personas and our "material" personas. We place these words in quotation marks because all personas live in ignorance, and thus are all material. The so-called "spiritual" personas are trying to be spiritual, or in some cases, only to appear spiritual.

One part of ourselves wants to improve our character and lifestyle, and proceed spiritually, while the other might prefer to remain in the familiar, conditioned types of behavior and activities where it finds security, pleasure and affirmation. Let's call the first part the spiritual ego and the second the material ego. We want these two to meet, to open up to each other and become one.

We do not intend to imply that the spiritual ego is higher or more spiritual than the material ego. In some cases, the opposite may be true, as the spiritual ego might be simply seeking security, pleasure and affirmation in other ways. The spiritual ego may occasionally be even more afraid or attached to persons and situations than the material ego; however, this is not always the case.

CONFLICTS BETWEEN THE SPIRITUAL AND MATERIAL PERSONAS The spiritual ego feels the conflict most intensely (if we didn't desire spiritual growth or self-improvement we would not have a conflict), and usually creates feelings of self rejection, failure and guilt when we are unable to satisfy its need to feel that it is "spiritual" and "worthy."

Also, when we do not feel worthy, we do not feel safe. This occurs because many of us are programmed to believe whoever is not "good" or worthy in God's eyes is not safe, as he does not "deserve" God's love and protection. Making matters worse is the fact that we might also be programmed to feel we deserve punishment.

These are obviously not the highest reasons to want to improve ourselves. They are, in fact, rather selfish motives. If we want to change to ensure our safety, or so others will accept us, we are simply replacing the material ego with the spiritual ego. Nothing has really changed. In some cases, our need to fulfill these spiritual "requirements" for our self-acceptance has to do with our need to feel we are more spiritual than others. Thus, we simply replace the need for affirmation and superiority on a material level with the same need on the spiritual level.

It is important to realize that our self-worth is permanent and divine. We cannot be worth more or less in God's eyes. We are divine consciousness itself in the process of evolving our ability to express our divinity on the material planes. Our inherent spiritual value is not changed by our actions or spiritual growth. What is changed is our ability to express those values mentally, emotionally and physically. Trying to be a better person because we believe it will encourage God to love us more is also an insufficient motive for growth.

Desiring to become a clearer channel for divine energies of love, peace, harmony, justice and happiness is a much better motive. Seeking to purify ourselves so we can experience that Divine Consciousness in every being and event that we encounter, is a useful motive. Seeking to remove all mental, emotional and physical obstacles so that we can cultivate pure love, simplicity and selflessness is also useful.

Such motives are free from the game of who is spiritual and who is not, or who is more spiritual, or who is good and who is bad, and whom God loves and whom God does not love. They are based on the presumption that God is a much higher type of consciousness, and thus is incapable of not loving anyone no matter what that person might ever do. This seems only logical since the Divine Being has asked us, mere humans, to love even our enemies and those who ignore and harm us. Is it possible then that It is incapable of doing so?

This type of thinking also removes us from the game of spiritual pride in which we feel that we are higher, more important, or more favored by God than others. It also frees us from feeling we are lower, less important or less favored by God than others.

The material ego, on the other hand, tends to react in such situations to the rejection and pressure it receives from the spiritual ego by rebelling and sabotaging its various efforts toward discipline, self-control and self-improvement. Thus, the more we pressure ourselves, the more our material ego reacts and rebels. In such cases, we experience instability in our spiritual or self-improvement efforts. In these cases, we usually play the roles of parent and child with our own selves. The parent in us rejects the child in us for not being a "good child," and the child then reacts so as to undermine the parents' effort toward control.

In order to move more effectively toward our goal of spiritual transformation, these inner conflicts must be dealt with in a more mature manner. Rather than communicating within ourselves as child and parent, it would be more useful to develop a mature adult to adult system of conversation or dialogue.

Robert Elias Najemy
Robert E. Najemy, author of 25 books and life coach with 30 years of experience, has trained over 300 life coaches and now does so over the Internet. Become a life coach. Over 600 free article and lectures at http://www.HolisticHarmony.com/
Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Coaching Articles
  • More from Robert Elias Najemy

Is What You've Been Holding Back Holding YOU Back?

By: Reggie Odom | 02/12/2009
Expressing your Greatness is what you are here to do. At the core this means being authentic, being true to all that you are. It is also at the heart of real success. Are you holding back from stepping into your greatness?

Get Your Girlfriend Back

By: Jo Carreg | 01/12/2009
There are many decisions in life which one comes to regret. Breaking up with your girlfriend is perhaps one of them.

Your Six Special Self-Marketing Tools

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
"Reinvention is the new black," said my friend Melissa. The fact that we were having this thought-provoking chat real-time over Facebook provides more evidence that we are certainly living in a time when everything's being reinvented--even conversations between friends.

The Ten People You Need At Work

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
If our workplace was a book, it'd be filled with intriguing, fascinating characters. Sure, we meet our share of evil villains. But we also connect with folks who are ready to support us in all different ways--including some ways you may not expect. These are the people you need at work.

Questions to Quelch Conflict

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
Times of extreme change--such as those we're living in now--create extreme opportunity. They also create extreme conflict. Opportunity we love; conflict, well, not so much.

Motion of Emotion

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
I have a milestone birthday fast approaching. I used to get emotional about birthdays, but not anymore. Maybe it helped to hear my grandmother Muz (who lived to be 91, and who I miss every day) tell me "Birthdays are better than the alternative."

How to Stay Sunny When the Sun Isn't Shining

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
As the seasons change from summer to autumn, there's an attitude change in the air, too. Some of it is good stuff, as we get re-focused on our goals and on wrapping up this year with success on our terms. But sometimes fall comes with that same sad squawking sound that the geese make--the feeling like something is ending rather than beginning.

How to Be More Like My Dad

By: Darcy Eikenberg | 01/12/2009
After sharing advice my dad gave me with one of my coaching clients, the client sighed and said, "I wish I could be more like your dad."

The Trapped Bird

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 11/07/2006 | Motivational
One day a bird flew into a room in our house. (It could have just as easily been your house). We wanted to help it to get free. But it was afraid of us.

Magnetize your Mind

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 10/07/2006 | Motivational
The mind does not have its own shape. It takes on the shape of its contents, of our thoughts, beliefs, feelings, needs, desires, habits, expectations etc.

A Fire in the Basement

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 10/07/2006 | Self Help
Some of us prefer to hide our problems from ourselves and others. Because it is too painful to deal with them, we lock them up in our subconscious mind and pretend that these problems or feelings do not exist and that all is fine.

Our Spiritual Light

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 09/07/2006 | Motivational
And, suddenly, there it is. The Self-Creating Light which manifests itself out of the darkness, out of the unmanifest. It comes forth shining alone in the darkness. From emptiness has come forth the ONE, the absolute.

Accepting Ourselves and Others

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 08/07/2006 | Coaching
Love is the ultimate healing energy. We lack giving and receiving love.

Self-Acceptance and Self-Improvement

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 08/07/2006 | Coaching
Some fear that if we accept ourselves as we are, that we will have no motive to improve ourselves.

Create Happiness with a Positive Life Outlook

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 08/07/2006 | Coaching
The mind is the molder of our personal and communal world. Every event we perceive through our senses is analyzed, evaluated and registered in the mind as pleasant, unpleasant or neutral.

The Power of Wisdom

By: Robert Elias Najemy | 07/07/2006 | Religion
A person who choses to understand that realities behind the phenomena. To understand the laws that are causing our reality.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.33, 6, w2)