William Bloom celebrates the blessings of discomfort

WB
Posted by William Bloom
18 May, 2017

This year I was part of a significant breakthrough when Ofqual, the government body, accredited the first UK qualification in spirituality. Yes, this is a success, but it was a process that took me right out of my comfort zone.

Throughout my life I have been disturbed, nervy and irritable when I have had to order my thinking so as to fit into other people’s boxes. I am okay with simple forms, but I am not okay with anything longer or more complex. Ask me to place a strategic business plan into a sequence of boxes in which you have to distinguish, for example, between ‘aims’, ‘purposes’ and ‘outcomes’, and I react like a nervous horse being saddled for the first time. My vision blurs and I get a headache. I also have a challenge looking at databases and excel sheets.

For decades, therefore, I have avoided this kind of paperwork, but for the Ofqual accreditation I was faced with months of it. It was a recipe for angry depression.

I knew I had to do something about this and self-manage my process. So for the first time in decades, before beginning work, I used ceremony. Before opening my computer I lit a candle, put on background music, meditated and said a prayer asking for help. This soothed me and I was then able to do
the form-filling without freaking out.

This went on for months as versions of the course application and policies were edited and revised. Slowly, gradually, I became comfortable with the process. After a while I no longer needed the ceremony and could just sit quietly with the paperwork, even enjoying it. During this period I also had a moment of uncomfortable personal insight. I have a background in special educational needs and I realised that I had a cognitive challenge related to my learning style. My brain is not wired easily to manage visually boxed information. It’s a very minor form of dyslexia. The insight was uncomfortable because I then looked back at my life and noticed how often I had disrespected people who are comfortable with boxed information, detailed specifications and databases. I had at times, under the guise of humour, even been rude and disruptive. Now many years on and after reflection I can understand that my negative behaviour was a defence mechanism protecting me because I could not do that kind of work myself. Argh!

I squirmed because I well knew that this kind of behaviour is typical of people with undiagnosed learning difficulties. As well as managing their learning challenge, they also have to manage their psychological backstory and compensatory defensiveness. I knew about all this in others but had not seen it in myself.

Fortunately, I could take all of this into my daily practice of meditation, compassionate awareness and healing. And, of course, I have prayed for forgiveness. We all have our histories and challenges. Being open about them can really support us in the highest possible way.

Several moons on I now celebrate the divine economy of it all.

It is a package. The Ofqual qualification has landed. An aspect of the new spirituality is grounded in the mainstream. I embrace administrative paperwork. My defensive negative behaviour has been brought into the light and healed. These are good outcomes. More love, more awareness.

But is there a more general and useful lesson that can be gleaned from my process? I think there is.

Most of us know that whenever we are emotionally reactive we are meeting an opportunity for personal growth. But this growth requires intelligent care. We need to step back, take responsibility and put into action practical strategies for self-management, healing and transformation.

At the same time there is a mysterious and benevolent flow to life, so it is crucial too that we ask for and are open to receiving help. If it healed my wayward attitude to bureaucratic paperwork, it can heal anything.

If you want to know more about the Diploma in Spirituality and Wellness, please go to: www.spiritualcompanions.org/courses/overview/#. 

www.williambloom.com

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