{"id":517,"date":"2010-09-20T10:19:41","date_gmt":"2010-09-20T10:19:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.beliefnet.com\/intentchopra\/2010\/09\/how-to-dispel-the-darkness-par.html"},"modified":"2010-09-20T10:19:41","modified_gmt":"2010-09-20T10:19:41","slug":"how-to-dispel-the-darkness-par","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/intentchopra\/2010\/09\/how-to-dispel-the-darkness-par.html","title":{"rendered":"How to Dispel the Darkness  (Part 1)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>When people face a dark hour, as all of us have to, what is the best way to move out of it?  The kinds of darkness haven&#8217;t changed over the centuries, but our response has. The greatest change is that medicine has replaced religion as a way to explain what is happening. We speak of depression and anxiety as disorders, not as curses or as signs of sin. In the aftermath of trauma we don&#8217;t ask why God wanted t punish us; we cope with post-traumatic stress disorder through therapy, either talking to a professional or taking a pill. Thus the doctor has replaced the priest as first choice for dispelling the darkness when it descends.<br \/>\nThe medical model is free of judgment; it removes blame from anyone who is afraid or depressed, who suddenly loses faith in themselves or wants to give up out of sheer hopelessness. This is all to the good. Yet there was something valuable in the spiritual model that we can&#8217;t afford to lose: the notion of the divided self. In the world&#8217;s wisdom traditions, darkness is inescapable, because Nature contains both creation and destruction. That includes our own nature. Everyone contains creative impulses and destructive impulses inside themselves.  Being self-aware, we watch both at work, and since the destructive side &#8211; aging, sickness, fear, and depression &#8211; causes suffering, we yearn to escape it. Every society has a dispeller of darkness who is responsible for keeping the dark forces at bay. In the past the role was taken by priests, shamans, and gurus (the word &#8220;guru&#8221; means dispeller of darkness in Sanskrit).<br \/>\nDoctors can serve as modern replacements in order to alleviate immediate mental pain, but when it comes to wisdom or long-term change, they are relatively helpless. Even in an age of countless therapies and practitioners who train for years in psychology, real change depends on the sufferer himself: studies show that 75% of people who achieve significant improvement with their psychological problems did it on their own.  The divided self isn&#8217;t going away, nor is the darkness it brings. So each of us must take responsibility for dispelling your own darkness, and that begins by seeing what is effective and what isn&#8217;t.<br \/>\nThe paradox of suffering<br \/>\nSuffering is universal, and yet pain isn&#8217;t a good motivator for change. One can undergo years of darkness without finding a way out. If you stand back, it would seem paradoxical even to ask someone to deal with the destructive forces inside themselves. How can the divided self be both the sickness and the healer? No problem is more difficult to solve, which is why most people find it hard even to start. They feel too overshadowed by their problems. When fear, depression, anger, regret, helplessness, loneliness, or despair comes calling, it takes over the mind too easily; like a familiar guest, it knows just how to settle in and make itself comfortable. It does no good to blame yourself or wring your hands. It&#8217;s not your fault that negativity can gain such a strong hold. The divided self makes it inevitable, because life is constructed out of opposites, and the contest between light and darkness, evolution and entropy, growth and decay, good and evil, God and the Devil &#8211; pick any pair of opposites you prefer &#8211; keeps nature in balance and provides the dynamism for the cosmos itself.<br \/>\nBut you can&#8217;t make the symptom the solution, which is what countless people do. They try to use the divided self to cure its own negativity. This happens in three ways:<br \/>\nPassivity: The vast majority of people do nothing. They wait for things to get better. They seek distraction (studies have shown that when they face psychological difficulties, 65% of respondents report that the main thing they do is watch more television). They indulge in wishful thinking and hope that someone else will rescue them or at the very least offer reassurance.  If given a choice to see a therapist or doctor, they procrastinate as long as possible.  To an outsider, it&#8217;s obvious that passivity is self-defeating. The person has taken refuge inside the &#8220;good&#8221; half of themselves, waiting out the &#8220;bad&#8221; side until it goes away.  And since time does heal some wounds &#8211; or puts a bandage over them, at least &#8212; wishing and waiting provides an illusion of comfort. Actual healing, however, doesn&#8217;t take place.<br \/>\nYou can tell if you are resorting to passivity when any of the following responses has turned into a pattern:<br \/>\nAsking for constant reassurance<br \/>\nPleading for help but never getting enough<br \/>\nPutting up with difficulties until they reach the breaking point<br \/>\nFantasizing that you will be rescued<br \/>\nDepending on someone stronger to tell you what to do<br \/>\nIgnoring good advice after you seek it<br \/>\nPresenting the weak side of yourself because you think that&#8217;s the only way you will get any attention<br \/>\nFeeling confused and dull when faced with problems<br \/>\nWaking up to feelings of fear or panic<br \/>\nSeeing only the worst when you look into the future<br \/>\nFailing to stand up for yourself<br \/>\nSeeing yourself as a perennial victim<br \/>\nPursuing distractions rather than relating in a real way<br \/>\nWasting time for days on end<br \/>\nSelf-discipline:  Realizing that they can&#8217;t simply react passively, some people will try to control their negative side. In fact, all mature adults achieve some measure of impulse control. They deal with anger and anxiety by shutting it out or facing it down. There is practicality in finding a measure of self-discipline. Your behavior will be more socially acceptable, for example. But when impulses are tamped down, hidden, repressed, secreted away, or denied access, the darkness doesn&#8217;t go away. The energies of the shadow, as Jung called this aspect of the psyche, are part of us. They can&#8217;t be manipulated forever. Eventually they will find a way to express themselves, with painful results. Physical illness is associated with repressed emotions, yet we don&#8217;t have to turn to medical studies to tell us that the longer you repress your negativity, the more numb your emotions become in general. Those who cannot feel pain also cannot laugh or love. There was wisdom in the Buddha&#8217;s teaching that pain and pleasure are woven together; pursuing the goal of pleasure that is devoid of pain leads to a dead end.  People who use self-discipline probably wouldn&#8217;t describe this as their goal; it doesn&#8217;t feel pleasant to have to control yourself. But they are trying to force darkness out of sight, which is much the same thing.<br \/>\nYou can tell if you are resorting to self-discipline when any of the following responses has turned into a pattern:<br \/>\nWorking all the time<br \/>\nNot affording more than a few moments of relaxation<br \/>\nOrdering your day with rituals that you hate to have disturbed<br \/>\nGrowing impatient with other people&#8217;s shortcomings (as you see them)<br \/>\nTurning exercise into a fetish<br \/>\nFocusing on perfection<br \/>\nInsisting on strict morality and enforcing it at home<br \/>\nGiving up on spontaneity or disliking it in others as frivolous<br \/>\nRejecting the childlike; demanding mature, responsible behavior form yourself and others<br \/>\nMicro-managing, directing criticism at others over tiny details<br \/>\nClamping down in the face of stress<br \/>\nRarely showing emotion when anyone else is around<br \/>\nSettling for a loveless existence in order not to take risks<br \/>\nJudging against emotions in general<br \/>\nOvercoming:  The third option is to build up your positive side so strongly that negativity is too weak to defeat it. If the good can overcome the bad, you become a winner compared to all those people who give in to negativity. We hear from competitive sportsmen how they use their fear to achieve higher levels of performance. &#8220;Feel the fear but do it anyway&#8221; became a familiar slogan for a while.  At its simplest, this tactic comes down to an insistent belief that there is no gain without pain. At its most sophisticated, there&#8217;s a belief in stoicism, the philosophy that confronts suffering by accepting it as inevitable but building a better self through that realization. The flaw with overcoming is that you can never truly overcome yourself.  Everything you defeat is part of you, and therefore you are sacrificing aspects of your own nature (such as tenderness, vulnerability, compassion, and self-acceptance) that aren&#8217;t useful to a winner but are necessary if you want to be a complete person.<br \/>\nYou can tell if you are resorting to overcoming when any of the following responses has turned into a pattern:<br \/>\nDividing people into winners and losers<br \/>\nTurning everything into a competition<br \/>\nFocusing on your self-image, hating it when someone makes you look bad<br \/>\nRefusing to give up until you get your way<br \/>\nBoasting of your accomplishments while diminishing the accomplishments of others<br \/>\nWorrying about status, rivals, and power struggles<br \/>\nFighting for position, even when it doesn&#8217;t matter<br \/>\nBeing the strongest or most appealing person in a group<br \/>\nOver-achieving; insisting on achievement from your children<br \/>\nSeeing your children as a reflection of yourself, especially as the world views you<br \/>\nSeeing weakness as your enemy<br \/>\nFearing that you will fall from the top<br \/>\nFighting to be as good as possible<br \/>\nSeeing every situation in a positive light, with no tolerance for negativity in yourself or others<br \/>\nSecretly believing that only losers are afraid or depressed<br \/>\nExcessive hero worship; admiration for strong authorities who keep the peace (at whatever cost)<br \/>\nAs you can see, a wide range of human behavior falls under these three categories. You can spend your whole life using the means of passivity, self-discipline, and overcoming. Depending on which strategy you prefer will often determine your occupation (the police and military honor discipline; doctors overcome disease; athletes overcome pain).  There is no doubt that the divided self forces each of us into a response. Yet the problem still remains: How can we dispel the darkness when it is part of our own nature?<br \/>\n(To be cont.)<br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.intent.com\/deepakchopra\/blog\"> <img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Deepak Chopra on Intent.com\" src=\"https:\/\/www.intent.com\/sites\/intent.com\/sites\/134\/badges\/dc.gif\" style='border:0px;margin:0px;padding:0px' \/> <\/a><br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.deepakchopra.com\">deepakchopra.com<\/a><br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/twitter.com\/DeepakChopra\">Follow Deepak on Twitter<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When people face a dark hour, as all of us have to, what is the best way to move out of it? The kinds of darkness haven&#8217;t changed over the centuries, but our response has. The greatest change is that medicine has replaced religion as a way to explain what is happening. We speak of&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":125,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-517","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-consciousness"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v23.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>How to Dispel the Darkness (Part 1) - Deepak Chopra and Intent<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.beliefnet.com\/columnists\/intentchopra\/2010\/09\/how-to-dispel-the-darkness-par.html\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"How to Dispel the Darkness (Part 1) - Deepak Chopra and Intent\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"When people face a dark hour, as all of us have to, what is the best way to move out of it? 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