Stop The Struggle
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About this ebook
We all have pivot points in our lives, where events are so overwhelming, they get pushed into our subconscious mind, only to reveal themselves later as a fear, phobia, anger, addiction, depression and lack of confidence, amongst other things.
Derek O'Neill
An internationally acclaimed psychotherapist, motivational speaker, author, and humanitarian - Derek O'Neill is fondly referred to as the Celtic Sage. An Irish-born spiritual teacher who inspires and uplifts people from all walks of life, offering guidance to influential world leaders, businesses, celebrities, athletes and everyday people alike. Distilled from his life work, martial arts career and study with wise yogis and Indian and Tibetan masters, Derek translates ancient wisdom into modern day teachings to address the biggest challenges facing humanity today. Through his books, workshops, speaking engagements and humanitarian work, Derek empowers others to increase their Spiritual Quotient and activate their highest potential, so they can bring harmony, happiness, and success back into their personal and professional lives. Inspired by his world travels, he formed SQ Foundation, a charitable organization focused on helping communities in need. In recognition of his work, Derek was honored as Humanitarian of the Year and named International Celebrity Ambassador for Variety International Children's Charity. He is founder and CEO of SQ Worldwide LP, a multifaceted wellness company committed to teaching individuals and corporations how to use untapped potential to transform themselves and the world around them. With his late wife Linda, he founded Creacon Wellness Retreat in Wexford, Ireland, a center for personal reflection, wellbeing, relaxation and self-exploration.
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Stop The Struggle - Derek O'Neill
STOP THE
STRUGGLE
LIVE FULLY, BE HAPPY
Derek O’Neill
Stop The Struggle Is A Memoir Of Teaching, Learning And Self-Understanding That Will Change Your Life (If You Let It)
Copyright © 2020
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this work in any form whatsoever (audio, visual, electronic, etc.). Such reproduction is expressly forbidden without permission in writing from Derek O’Neill, except for brief passages in connection with a review. It is not the intent of the author to offer advice in any form, whether it is spiritual, psychological, medical, or other. If you are in need of special assistance or advice, please consult with a proper professional. The information within this book is offered as an avenue to inspiration and awareness. This book does not claim to possess all the answers, nor to heal or counsel. If you choose to apply the principles within this book to your life, that is your constitutional right.
Front Cover Design: © 2020 by Derek O’Neill
Cover photographs by Dreamstime and Unsplash
For information about permission to reproduce excerpts from this book write to:
Derek O’Neill 244 5th Avenue, Suite D-264 New York, NY 10001
E-Mail: info@derekoneill.com | www.derekoneill.com
You may order this book directly from the author’s website.
ISBN: 978-1-936470-98-3
Chapter 1
The Pain That Molds Us
It is essential for you to encourage the positive emotions as dominating forces of your mind, and to discourage – and eliminate – negative emotions.
Napoleon Hill
Lesson: Finding Your Emotional Pivot Points
My mother seemingly resented me. And it wasn’t my fault. I was an innocent fetus in the womb when events happened that changed the emotional climate of our home.
It was when my pregnant mother returned home early from work one day to the sound of desperate rustling upstairs in their bedroom. At first, she may have thought it was a burglar, but some instinct drove her up the stairs anyway. She opened the door to their bedroom and found her husband and her best friend scrambling to put on their clothes. Desperate apologies were made, tears of anger were shed, promises made. I heard all about it over the years from my siblings. I also heard that from that day on, my mother was never the same.
Within days she began drinking alcohol, all day, every day. This came as a shock to my brothers and sisters. They said she drank very little before catching our father with another woman. But now heavy drinking became her main interest. It was as though she wanted to drink her problems away. Looking back, I think my mother wanted to be free of my father and she saw another baby as holding her in an unwanted marriage. I believe she not only wanted to drink me to death, but also herself. She was in severe pain and wanted it to end.
From that day forward my parents never slept in the same bedroom again. Our house was a silent war zone. My deceived mother acted almost as though her husband was dead. And my father became an angry man, blowing up at the most unexpected of times.
My older brothers and sisters defined life around the house as being before the event
and after the event.
Before the event,
all was normal, said one of my older brothers. Life was light and mom and dad were happy with their children and with each other. After the event,
the family became a study in dysfunction. It was as though a sort of Dark Ages of emotional intelligence settled on the O’Neill household.
You can pretty much guess what happened after that. When formidable people in our lives don’t give us enough attention, the struggle begins. We no longer believe that we are worthy of their love or understanding, and we feel a void that needs to be filled. And we fill it. Sometimes anger does the trick, or drugs and alcohol, or food, or promiscuity, or hate. That’s almost always the way it works.
I feel confident in saying that if you don’t have a void that needs to be filled, then someone close to you has one. And I will go even further in saying that these voids are the result of pivot points, powerful events involving formidable people that can determine how we see ourselves and how we react to the world around us. Pivot points can be either demoralizing or moralizing; as when you meet a person of authority in your childhood who makes you feel good about yourself and gives you confidence that lasts a lifetime. As I have learned, there is goodness and grace all around us; we need only develop the ability to experience it.
But the sad fact is that negative events in a person’s life carry far more emotional weight than the positive. I am not sure why this is true, but I do notice in both my patients, and the general public, that people focus far more on negative events than positive. And those negative events – even seemingly small ones – carry a much greater ability to damage a person, than larger positive events do to heal them.
That said, the pivot points that came from my parents were consistently negative. I won’t violate the confidentiality of my siblings by dealing with their pivot points. And I won’t tell you all of mine because it would take up too many pages. But I will say that three of the four oldest siblings had wonderful years growing up. My oldest brother, John, was the apple of my parents’ eyes, as many oldest children are. The second oldest was Brian, whose sad life will be covered in a later chapter. And then there was Jean, who has two children. The same is true of Mary, who looks at me with bemusement when I talk about the horrors of my childhood. They were the first four children and were several years older and quite distant from the batch I came from, that included an older brother Des and a younger one, Paul.
The younger three of us were the ones who suffered from the war between our parents. Civilian casualties,
was how my younger brother described us. He was right. We suffered the brunt of the war. Whether they were engaged in outright battle or psychological warfare with one another, there was always some kind of spillover of bad emotions onto us, events that were damaging pivot points that we all remember to this day. In our own way, and using the belief systems we individually built up, i.e. many different versions of the same story, that does not matter as we all have to choose to deal or not. An example would be us sitting at the dinner table with my mother saying, Ask your father to pass the salt
, and my father answering, Tell your mother she has arms still
.
It was not easy to watch my mother dislike herself. She expressed her resentment of me at every opportunity it seemed, revealing it in her facial expressions every time she looked at me, and in her voice when she spoke to me. Yet there was a secret of how much she really loved me underneath this. And I was to find out later that this was a kind of test to see if I would abandon her as well. When I was around my mother I struggled with feelings of self-worth. Around her I was always a bad person who reminded her of her husband’s transgressions, which was painful since I loved my mother dearly.
My earliest memories are of my mother yelling at me and slapping me. Her violence became worse as I aged, and, at a very early age, it reached a more violent turning point. I was walking through the kitchen as she was doing dishes, and for some unexplained reason I picked up her bottle of vodka and moved it to the living room. I don’t remember why I did this, but when I came back through the kitchen on my way out of the house, she was working herself into a rage because she was unable to find her precious drink.
I moved it to the living room,
I said nervously.
With no warning she took the plate she was holding and whacked me on the head. The room went black for a moment as pieces of the plate showered to the ground.
Being hit by the plate didn’t hurt that much, but my heart was broken. I looked at mom and had no sense that she felt an act of abuse or humiliation had taken place. She looked at me for a moment with dead eyes, and when I didn’t move she went back to washing dishes.
Don’t do that again,
she said. Leave my things alone.
I left the house holding my head, but I should have been holding my heart. My sense of self-worth plummeted, although – surprisingly – my desire to make my mother love me rose. I even went so far as to go into the woods near our home and pick her a bouquet of wildflowers.
This desire to make her love me culminated in deep fear that I was going to lose her. And it was that fear that led to experiences of extreme empathy, even seemingly psychic moments, that drove us further apart. I was aware she was drinking herself to death.
One Saturday morning, for example, I was watching cartoons on television when I envisioned my mother being killed in a bus crash. The vision took only seconds, but it showed me in vivid images – the bus hurtling down the hill, ending up on its side, with my mother and the other passengers being thrown through the windows and being horribly cut. The vision was relevant to that night because every Saturday my mother took a bus down Christ Church Hill into Dublin City Center to join her friends for drinks. These Saturday nights were important to mom because she said, That is where my real family is.
It was a horrible vision and one I could not overcome. I kept seeing the bus rolling over, like the driver had lost his brakes and could do nothing to slow down and navigate a sharp curve. I spent the day plotting to keep her off the 6:50 bus to city center. I had to save her life.
I concocted a plan. Late in the afternoon I began complaining about cramps. I told her I felt sick and that she needed to stay home and care for me. That approach didn’t work at all. She was already drunk – in preparation for that evening when she would get even drunker – and her only advice to me was to go outside and play.
As the day wore on, I realized that pretending to be ill wouldn’t be enough. I changed my tact completely. I watched the clock and listened to mom as she put on her makeup and did her hair. When I heard the hiss of hairspray, which was the signal that she was almost ready to leave, I ran up the stairs and stormed into her bedroom.
I’m sick and tired of having nobody in this house who cares about me,
I shouted. I’m going to kill myself.
I ran into the bathroom, opened my father’s Wilkinson’s Sword razor, pretending I was going to slit my wrists. Locking the bathroom door behind me, after they saw me, I sat on the floor with my back behind the door and my feet against the toilet bowl, and a big fuss broke out. Finally, the door was pushed open and I was dragged out. My mother’s hand was first in the room, its open palm smacking hard against my cheek. Mission successful, she had missed the bus, I had kept her home. What was a sharp slap in exchange for saving the life of my mother?
Psychic moment or not, there was a bus crash that night I was told. The 6:50 bus was going down Christ Church Hill when it was hit by another vehicle and pushed off the road. Several passengers were injured and when my mother heard about the accident, she never spoke about it. I felt a psychic moment had saved my mother. I also believed that the vision I had was caused by the amount of love I had for her. I still believe that.
This vision became a stabilizing block for me in the years ahead. The idea of seeing an accident before it happened, and saving a loved one as a result, connected me with a higher power. I realized that pure love was a conduit to a sixth sense. It would be years later before I would be given the techniques to access that sixth sense at will. Briefly, these techniques include mindfulness, meditation, walking and being in nature with the plants, trees and animals. These forms of meditation use nature’s five elements to balance our energy – earth, wind, fire, water and ether. But as a young man desperate for love and attention, it gave me great hope to have firsthand awareness of a higher power.
This vision also allowed me to understand that my mother had lost her connection with a higher power. She no longer had hope. My father’s unforgivable act of infidelity was a sort of fatal pivot point for her. His act had changed her so much that she had lost touch with all that was good in her life. She retreated into her internal world making us all feel abandoned. She should have tried to make amends with my father, or had the courage to leave him (an act that would have taken true courage in Catholic Ireland in the 1960s). Instead she became an alcoholic and drank, and drank, and drank, so much that she sometimes forgot why she drank. Perhaps that was the point.
My father, however, never forgot why she drank. Although he never spoke about his act of infidelity it was clearly on his mind at all times. And that led to numerous negative pivot points taking place between us over the years.
Dad’s negative pivot points usually involved powerful expressions of anger that came at unexplained times, not at everyone, but, definitely, at me. For example, we were affixing an appliance to the kitchen counter when he dropped a screw on the floor. As he scanned the floor for it my arms tired and the appliance shifted. By the time he found the screw, the holes to the countertop were no longer lined up. All Dad would have had to do was line up the holes and put in the screws. But anger overwhelmed him and instead his response was to rip the appliance from the counter and smash it on the floor.
Damn you!
he shouted as I ran for cover.
That moment is, unfortunately, the strongest image I have of my father.
As you can see, the most powerful people in my life – my parents – provided some of the most negative and damaging pivot points in my life. That may be the same for you. It may even be far worse than what happened to me. When I talk to patients about negative pivot points, and tell them about my own, they oftentimes list negative pivot points that make mine sound like a good day at play school. Patients will tell me about being beaten bloody by their fathers, or having their mothers abuse them over the most meaningless things. I’ve even had patients who were locked in closets by their parents for forgetting to take out the trash. One of my patients was locked in a trunk by her father for reasons so meaningless I can’t even remember, but I remember my reaction to hearing it.
Sharing these negative pivot points will often result in anger and bitterness, as patients recount incidents that have led them to seek therapy. Sometimes these negative events have happened decades earlier, yet when patients recall them, they flush with anger or break out in tears. Some even become fearful. It’s as though the event took place yesterday and they are afraid to go home for fear that this powerful person will be waiting for them. This does not surprise me. Remember, it is these negative pivot points that have led them to lose their sense of self-worth. It is also these negative pivot points that lead them to express the same behavior with those around them. The sins of the father are visited upon the sons,
is an old saying that is true of both genders. Because negative pivot points represent our strongest memories of the formidable people in our lives; they remain close to the surface and are often the first reflex to emerge at times of stress.
A patient I treated, for example, was a very gentle soul except when it came to dealing with her children. When she spoke to them, she usually did it in a rage, sometimes getting physically aggressive. After several hypnotherapy sessions she uncovered memories of her father, who rarely listened to her unless she demanded it in a loud voice. Sometimes she became so demanding of his attention that he would slap her. The odd thing was that she enjoyed the attention.
Better to be slapped and listened to, than not be listened to at all,
she said.
Now as a parent, she found herself doing the same thing her father had done to her. This behavior became her reference point, her negative pivot point.
Negative pivot points are not just reflexive actions, but behaviors we exhibit on a day-to-day basis until they become part of our personalities. So, an angry father begets an angry son, a resentful mother begets a resentful daughter. And so on. No matter what causes these negative pivot points, the result is almost always one or more of such traits as: anger, fear, addiction, shame, or the desire for status, money, love, or acceptance. When these traits become toxic, they contain a void that absorbs a person’s life force. They become your own negative pivot points that can affect your work life, your relationships, and even future generations. That’s how powerful these negative pivot points are. A positive pivot point is one in which an act of kindness is directed to you.
When my patients understand the concept of negative pivot points, they usually want to talk about them. Generally, this is a good idea. Talking is one of the great forms of spiritual and emotional release because it brings issues into the light where they can be examined and made less toxic. But there is also a downside to talking about issues, especially negative ones. Over talking negative pivot points can allow them to be rationalized away, or even make them worse. The reality is, what you focus on you manifest more of.
There are people who talk and talk about their negative pivot points but never seem to do anything about them. Sometimes, they speak almost joyfully about the negative pivot points in their lives. It’s as though these negative pivot points are seen as important aspects of their identity and not behaviors to overcome. They forget that once they are aware of their negative pivot points,