Now that I think of it, the 2 dysfunctions can be treated by the same change - deciding one is OK,
I feel this is very true.
What I have found is that what we believe or think is what controls our emotions and behaviors. There is unavoidable pain in any sort of loss but there is pain that we bring into it just because we have decided something is or isn’t. That’s why anyone can benefit from looking at how you have formed some of your perceptions and deciding if those perceptions are serving us. Foo/historical information is not an excuse for any behavior but part of the awareness needed to change our minds.
It brings to mind the great words
of the Dalai Lama - "pain is inevitable, suffering is optional"
And I think that same duality applies to abandonment:
It is painful to be abandoned by others, but we add to our own suffering when we abandon ourselves. When we allow another person to dictate our worth, our masculinity, femininity, etc.
So no I don’t think you can cure fear of abandonment by not fearing self abandonment, because as OIN pointed out we don’t fear self abandonment it’s more something we just tend to do. But we can make the fear less by knowing we can rely on ourselves.
I really appreciate all the morsels of wisdom that helped me clarify why this statement resonates, even if I didn’t have a lot of clarity around why.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:12 PM, Friday, April 26th]