If there is one thought pattern guaranteed to make us feel unhappy it is victimhood. When we feel persecuted or deliberately wronged, the obvious conclusion to draw is that this other person is against us for whatever reason.
It's painful and it's uncomfortable. And it is very easy to stay trapped in our story of victim. Feeling that the other person should behave better. Do or say or demonstrate a different thing. Be more generous, or honest, or honourable or patient or compassionate or responsible or whatever it is we lack. All our focus is on what the other person should stop doing to us, in order that we can feel okay. We want an end to our pain and for that to happen the other person needs to stop being against us. When we feel someone is against us it feels very real, and very hurtful. That feeling of being attacked is, sadly, something that very few get through life without experiencing at some point on some level.
I read an interesting concept recently in one of Jack Canfield's books (the Chicken Soup For The Soul guy), that we should take 100 per cent responsibility for everything that happens to us. Not 56 per cent responsibility. Not 93 per cent responsibility, but 100 per cent. For everything.
"That's a bit harsh, Jack," I thought, "there are always circumstances beyond our control." Taking 100 per cent responsibility for some things feels like placing the blame on myself for something bad that I 100 per cent didn't do and 100 per cent didn't want. How is THAT helpful?!" I pondered some more . . . and I think get it.
When we take 100 per cent responsibility for EVERYTHING that happens in our life, we drop any victim mindset by default. The tables turn completely - it's no longer about blame or shame, it's about learning. So, that business partner who ripped you off in an unsavoury manner? You can't take responsibility for their unethical actions, but you can take 100 per cent responsibility for not having tied the contracts up more tightly at the outset. It's a valuable lesson that's empowering and puts you in a stronger position never to repeat the experience. You can't take responsibility for your rapacious ex-husband mercilessly exploiting the law to feather his own nest at your expense. But you can take 100 per cent responsibility for your expectation that he would behave better or more honourably. You can own that the pain you feel is the gap between your elevated expectations of his character and reality. You can learn from that to expect much less of the man, therefore the pain is lowered as he is merely doing exactly what you would expect.