Monday, September 2, 2013

Are you in a woman's small group?


Are you in a woman's small group; one where you encourage each other and have more than a few good laughs? Are you developing trust there?
I have such a group (we call ourselves the Velveteen Women). We've been meeting together for 12+ years. When you experience true, God-honoring relationships through groups, you want more. And while I have other groups that fit that criteria ( through my profession; Coaching Circles, and Celebrate Recovery ), I still can't stop thinking what other groups are possible.
There still can be some negative experiences in these groups, but we talk about our issues/differences and move to a better, deeper relationship. I am thankful for the women in my life who love Jesus and want more from their relationship with Him and each other than superficial Sunday School answers.
If you're looking for true, God-honoring relationships with women email me with your ideas for topics and issues we can develop a group around.
Question for you? What would you tell younger Christian women about the need for true relationships if you had a bunch of them together for a day?

 

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Claim Your Independence

Can a Codependent really be free? What does a codependent need independence from? Don’t get me started… there’s a lot to be set free from, especially if you’re new to recovery.

For many women codependents  - what they most need independence from is fear and limiting beliefs. They need freedom from the fear to fight for what they want and freedom from their denial and the “shoulds” in their life.

            What I offer you today are suggestions and ideas to help you Claim Your Independence and win the battle in your mind that tells you you’re stuck forever.

 7 Steps
       1. Decide who you are and be that person NOW.
                  Don’t rely on others observations of you. They haven’t/aren’t living your life.                   Define yourself with your values and be what you’ve defined. Seek, through scripture, 
                      what God says about who you are.

2. Surround yourself with people who validate you. 
           Spend your time with people who make you feel proud to be who you are. Choose                    to be with people who see, hear, and understand you.  If your family doesn’t “get                     you,” love and accept them anyway and be polite when you’re with them.
       3. Own the good things about you.
            Get to know and value what others see and value in you. 
            (How about asking some of them?)  
             That’s how you’ll grow what’s naturally good in you. You can’t share or give what you don’t
             truly own. Before I found my own independence, feeling free to be who I am was scary.
             Once I decided to be who I am, surround myself with people who “get me” (not everyone
             “gets me” still), and learn what I have to offer – I discovered that living free is possible
              and it feels good!
          4. Get to know what to fight for.
               What do you need that you do not yet have? Respect, validation, understanding, to be
               listened to, etc. ?
         5. Daily practice and attend to building your faith and belief in God’s power to
               help you Recovery.
          6. Find a group, seminar or coaching circle where you’ll have the opportunity to learn
               and build a team to support you.
     7. Get a coach to help you see things you may not be aware of and help you keep moving toward freedom.
As you celebrate today and all it means to our country, I invite you to consider and reflect on some of the things I’ve shared today and take this opportunity to declare that today is Your Independence Day too!
Which Step do you need to take?
Go ahead, celebrate today! Go ahead start to claim your independence today!
Take the time to acknowledge all the good things in your life, your country, your independence.
Please, let me know if this is helpful. Pass it on to a codependent friend. THANKS

 Register for The 3rd Annual Codependence Retreat, August 24, 2013
TerryLynn2005@comcast.net

Thursday, June 20, 2013

A Little Girl Lost
 
As a codependent I have worked very hard to understand my childhood. Have you? If you are codependent, understanding your childhood is one of the major items in your recovery. We all have within us a God- given hunger for love. I refer to this hunger as depletion in our “love tank.” Sometimes I have a woman client write a letter to herself describing her childhood love tank, its emptiness or level of love and nurturance she received.  In an exercise like this, the client will consider hurtful things in childhood that may have caused her codependency.

Here is what I've learned when I did that exercise. I hope it will inspire you to look at your childhood and understand it also.
I was part of a big family (6 siblings including my twin sister). I now understand that my primary unmet need was for focused attention. I was always “one of the twins”.

On top of that, I was the “quiet one” and never learned to speak up until I was a young adult.  I felt that my thoughts and feelings didn’t matter. Validation with empathy was missing.

            All of us want to be listened to and understood. We want to be appreciated for who we are individually. Now, when I compare my parents against some of the parents of my codependent clients, my parents were really good parents! They did the best they knew and all of my siblings are healthy and productive even though they probably have hurtful memories and hang-ups, but don’t we all! In your childhood were there unmet emotional needs that robbed you of significant nurturance?

Most people will have better lives and healthier relationships when they deal with unhappy issues from their childhood. One of the first steps in recovery is to identify the factors that prevented your love tank from being adequately filled. Eventually we can understand how our unconscious unmet needs of the past affect our present behavior.

I believe I have successfully conquered some of the symptoms and characteristics of an adult codependent; such as approval seeking, inability to be assertive and to express feelings. Yet, there are times when I fall back into one or more of these.

 Fortunately, I am so much better now.

 I am truly grown up and it feels good. Better late than never at 67!! 

Come to River Haven’s 3rd annual Codependent retreat, August 24th and do the work of understanding your childhood. Register at Terrylynn2005@comcast.net

Saturday, May 4, 2013

The Lessons I'm Learning from the Velveteen Rabbit

I'm finding many women are like me, they find it difficult to admit they lack self acceptance. It's hard to accept yourself when you don't know who you are and don't think you are valuable enough to be loved the way you are.
The answer I found is in the classic Children's tale, The Velveteen Rabbit: "Real isn't how you are made, it's a thing that happens to you when a child loves you for a long, long time."
Whenever we encounter and receive unconditional love from someone it can't help but bring us personal freedom and acceptance. This freedom allows us to become our true selves; free to express ourselves without fear of rejection, judgment or ridicule. Also, this new freedom allows us to give the same unconditional love to others.
As Christians, we need safe relationships to learn and keep experiencing unconditional love and acceptance. We need to ask ourselves, "What are you doing with the love God has freely given to you"? Are we rejecting it because we don't feel valuable enough? We need reminders of what God's love is all about.
So, I offer groups (Coaching Circles, therapy groups) so women can explore in unconditional, safe environments, who they are, find self-acceptance, succeed at being themselves, and find the confidence and freedom to be who God created them to be.
Interested in the next Coaching Circle? Contact me at terrylynn2005@comcast.net
I am enjoying the journey on the road to REAL and helping other women get on the journey with me.

Here are some resources I have found helpful in the search to "Find the Real Me":
The Velveteen Rabbit, Margery Williams
The Velveteen Woman, Brenda Waggonner
The Real Me, Being the girl God sees, Natalie Grant
How to Succeed at being Yourself, Joyce Meyer
Building a Compassionate Relationship with Yourself, Kim Fredrickson
Lessons I'm learning from the Velveteen Rabbit