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SEPARATING FROM PRIMARY SELVES
ONE SECRET OF GRACEFUL AGING
by
Sidra L. Stone Ph.D.
I remember my first pair of really special shoes. They were perfectly
delicious - a buttery, chocolate colored suede - and whenever
I wore them, all was wonderful. But now, more than sixty years
later, I wouldn't expect to be walking around in the same shoes
or in any shoes that resembled them. They would not longer fit
my circumstances - to say nothing of the fact that they would
no longer fit my feet.
And neither would the personality - or primary selves - that
worked for me at that time still be appropriate. Our primary selves
drive our psychological cars - their rules and expectations determine
how we live our lives. Why should any of us expect the primary
selves that we developed early in life to still work for us? Why
should they still fit our lives any more than the shoes we wore
or the cars we drove?
One of the secrets of aging is to know this very important fact
of life. The primary selves that worked for you in earlier times
are no longer appropriate. The older you get - no matter what
you do to avoid it - your strength and stamina will eventually
diminish and your body and your rational mind will become less
flexible.
Primary selves that depended upon limitless energy, good health,
a strong body, agility, power, speed, beauty, youth, instant recall
and totally up-to-date knowledge - or on being indispensable to
others - face real challenges! There are also some selves - like
some shoes - that simply do not fit properly in the later stages
of life.
Let's look at some common primary selves and see what his might
look like.
Susie was a "Good Girl". She learned how to follow
the rules, to do whatever she was told, not to make a fuss, not
to demand any attention, or be a bother to anyone. But now she
is older and it is important that she gets some attention. Susie
needs to tell her doctor about a lump she's found in her breast,
but when the doctor asks her how she's doing, this "Good
Girl" primary self automatically tells the doctor "everything
is just fine". She can no longer carry her heavy suitcase
but her Good Girl does not wish to ask for help because that would
make her a bother to others. If she waits for someone to notice
that she needs help, Susie might wait forever as people hurry
by. I know a woman who waited to call "911" until after
9:00 AM so that she wouldn't bother them. She had fallen the night
before and had lain on the floor for six hours waiting until her
Good Girl felt it was the "proper" time to call.
It's time for Susie to integrate a self that she has disowned
for her entire life - the part of her that can ask for what she
needs even if this might inconvenience others. Her mother had
been so self-centered and demanding that Susie vowed never to
behave in that way. So for Susie and all the Good Girls of the
world, the later years are a time to learn to care for themselves
rather than others and to ask for - and accept - help when it
is needed.
Susie's sister, Dorothy was her opposite. Her primary self was
a rebel. Her way of dealing with a demanding mother was to fight.
Whatever she was supposed to do, she did the opposite. This Rebel
self had great ideas - she thought outside the box and was very
amusing and quite attractive to others.
As she gets older, Dorothy's rebellious primary self begins to
present problems: she automatically resists all requirements.
She refuses to do what is necessary to protect her health. She
is grossly overweight and has multiple medical challenges. Unlike
Susie, Dorothy's primary self glories in the discomfort she causes
those around her and takes pride in her resistance to the suggestions
of others.
Dorothy could use some of Susie's Good Girl at this point in
her life. She could use a little of the Good Girl's self-discipline
and respect for the rules. It would help her to deal with her
current health challenges if she could seek out the wisdom of
others and follow their guidance.
Dan was a Responsible Father. When his own father died, Dan was
only 9 years old, but he was now the man of the house. He took
great pride in his new role and fulfilled it beautifully. He was
the Responsible Father to his mother and to his siblings; later
in life he was Responsible Father to his wife and his own children.
He was even Responsible Father at work. In fact, it was the Responsible
Father who had lived Dan's life.
Now nobody in his family needs him in the same way as before.
The Responsible Father is out of a job. If Dan stays identified
with this Responsible Father, he has two ways to proceed. One
is to feel unnecessary, and unwanted - he may even begin to think
that there is no longer any reason to live. A second way for the
Responsible Father to proceed is to continue to do as before -
he can find new areas in which to be responsible even though it
is no longer natural and may require an inordinate amount of effort
at this time of life.
Looking at this from a growth orientation, we see that now Dan
has the opportunity to separate from this Responsible Father and
to begin to reclaim the selves that he needed to disown earlier
in life. He has the chance to discover what it is in life that
would give him pleasure. He has a chance to explore his own creativity,
to take up golf or snorkeling, to read the historical novels that
he'd never had time for, to study a foreign language, or perhaps
take a romantic cruise with his wife.
Angie's mother always seemed to be busy and, by the time she
was only three years old, Angie knew that the most important thing
in life was to be productive, to never waste a minute of precious
time. So, in order to be loved and appreciated in her house, she
developed a primary self of Pusher.
Much to her mother's delight, Angie became a world class Pusher.
When she was younger, this was a source of great pride - she could
get more done than anyone else she knew and this made her special
to her family, her friends, and her associates. Most important,
it made Angie special to herself.
But now Angie is older, her mother has been dead for many years
and the stress of a constant busyness is beginning to wear her
down. Now it's hard for her to keep abreast with the Pusher's
demands. So Angie spends a good deal of time worrying about her
advancing age and her inability to get things done. In the eyes
of her Pusher, she is no longer a worthwhile person. According
to her Pusher, she is now incompetent, no better than the others
who - in the eyes of the Pusher - aren't as productive as they
should be.
If she wants to enjoy the remainder of her life, Angie needs
to take over the wheel of her psychological car from her Pusher.
It's time to take back her judgments of the "lazy good-for-nothings"
of the world, integrate her Beach Bum, learn to relax and start
taking an afternoon nap without guilt.
Gary's father was a perfectionist and very judgmental of anyone
who didn't match up to his expectations. Nothing ever seemed to
please him and his family never knew when he would burst into
a tirade about their inadequacies. So Gary developed an Inner
Critic that tried to protect him from his father's devastating
criticism. His Inner Critic tried to get there first - to criticize
Gary before anyone else did so that he could correct his mistakes
thereby avoiding the pain and humiliation of a very public judgment.
Gary's Inner Critic enforces the major rule of his Perfectionist:
"No mistakes! Thou shalt be perfect in every way."
Now Gary is older, he can take this opportunity to make his own
rules. How about: "You don't have to be perfect. Just do
what you can do." If he keeps the rule of perfection as the
foundation of his life and the Inner Critic remains one of his
primary selves, life will be a total nightmare. There is nothing
more devastating than an oversized Inner Critic as you age. Each
time Gary would forget a name or an appointment, each time he
would look in a mirror, each time he would try to stop the aging
process and get more control over his life, the Inner Critic would
pounce on him. He needs to integrate other selves that will balance
the Inner Critic - perhaps a spiritual self, an unconditionally
loving grandmother, a nurturing mother, or a protective father.
Each of our primary selves brings us something special. Each
has its own area of expertise, a certain kind of knowledge. We
need this. We don't want to lose their gifts. But we need something
more, more than any single self can bring to us. Our primary selves
bring us knowledge but the Aware Ego process, as it embraces opposites,
brings us wisdom, a wisdom that comes from living life completely
in all its complexity and carrying the paradoxes and contradictions.
As we grow older, we can make use of our changing circumstances
to move away from the primary selves of our youth. The selves
are basically inflexible, and the older we get, the more inflexible
they become. Their solution to all vulnerability, and to any new
challenge, is to do more of the same, more of what they do. So
a Pusher's solution is to do more, a Responsible Parent searches
for more responsibilities to assume, and a Rebel finds more rules
and requirements to rebel against. But the Aware Ego process is
just that - a process - and as such it is changing, fluid and
flexible.
As we lose the flexibility of our bodies and our minds, we can
introduce more flexibility into our lives through the psyche and
the soul. We can use this precious time to separate from our primary
selves and bring back into our lives the many selves that - over
the years - were left behind. We can live our lives increasingly
in the flow of an Aware Ego process and we can make this a time
for "coming home"!
To apply this in your own life, think about these questions:
1. What are your primary selves or - to put
it another way - who is driving your psychological car?
2. Why do you think you developed these particular
primary selves?
3. How did these selves work for you? What rewards
did they earn or what dangers did they avoid?
4. How might these selves not work so well any
longer?
5. Or, if they are still working, how might they
not work as well in the future?
6. If you were to introduce just a tiny bit of
the disowned self (which carries the opposite qualities) into
your life what might it bring you?
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