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Understanding
Your Core Issue
Part
One:
Van Shares His Story
by
Van K. Tharp, Ph.D.
After
many years of doing coaching work with people, studying human
psychology and behavior, as well as doing much work on my own self
exploration, I long ago concluded that everyone has a core issue
inside of them—one issue that rules the subconscious more so than
any other. Because
people are so afraid of that one core issue popping up, they tend to
hide it deep within themselves. Most
hope it never surfaces and will do anything to keep from
experiencing it. So it goes unresolved and continues to run
thoughts, emotions and actions from deep within ourselves.
It’s
important for each of us to remember we are not our emotions.
Instead, our emotions are energy flowing through us.
And what you resist tends to persist, even if it is buried
deep inside.
I’ve
been busy this summer doing a new kind of self exploration that has
led me on an extraordinary journey in dealing with my very core
issue. This has been a powerful experience for me, and I’d like to
share some of it with you.
So
let’s jump right into a little of Van’s early childhood history.
Childhood
History
Six
months after I was born, my father left for the Philippines.
He was involved in reconstruction after the war, but I was
too young to understand that.
All I knew was that suddenly, I didn’t have a father.
My mother told me that I was so upset that I wouldn’t eat
and it took a lot of work on their part to get food into me.
As
I gradually got over my father leaving, my grandfather became my
father-figure.
When I was two years old, my father returned.
Then my family moved to Japan—without my grandfather.
Thus, I was now losing my grandfather.
And for most of my childhood, I always thought of my
Grandfather’s house as my home.
In
Japan, I became particularly close to a Japanese housekeeper that we
called Mitzi.
She was like a mother to me and to this date one of my
treasures is a picture of Mitzi and I together.
But
at five years old, I left Japan and I never saw Mitzi again. It
felt like my heart broke.
Gratefully, I went on to have my core family with me for the
rest of my childhood.
Nevertheless, I think the psychological damage from the
losses was done at that point.
I
don’t have any charge on any of these individual happenings
because I’ve done many, many years of clearing work on my issues
neutralizing them. However, my one core issue was still there, even
after all the work I’d done.
Let
me share another thing that happened.
My mother died of cancer in 1993 at the age of 85.
She’d lived a good life and I was at peace with her. I was
actually happy that she had made her transition and could now join
the rest of our family (my father died in 1977 and my sister died in
1988). What
I didn’t expect was a reaction that I had going through my
mother’s things.
What
I found among my mother’s things was a letter from Mitzi’s
husband, written in 1958, trying so desperately to reach us.
When I read that letter, I became about as emotional as I can
ever remember being.
It was my mother’s funeral, but I was crying over Mitzi.
Mitzi
had eventually married a U.S. soldier and moved to the U.S.
My family was living in England, so we never saw her.
But my understanding is that my sister said something to
upset her that caused a rift between our families. Furthermore,
I’d been told that Mitzi had died a few years later of a brain
tumor before my family returned from England.
So
what does all this have to do with my core issue?
Well, my core issue has been a very deep sense of loneliness
and emptiness inside. I’ve
only felt it a few times, but when it came up it was so bad that I
never wanted to feel it again.
In fact, I tend to believe that my whole life has been about
doing whatever was necessary not to feel that feeling.
I wouldn’t get too close to people because they might leave
me, and I’d distract myself with work or escape activities. I’ve
always felt like that emptiness was around someplace that I had to
hide from it.
And
Then
Something Happened!
In
June, I was in Florida doing a preparation course for my Oneness
course in Fiji.
We were doing an exercise on strengthening your inner
guidance. We
were asked to imagine the qualities we wanted our inner guidance to
have so that our relationship would become very, very strong and
wonderful and we were given blessings to help us produce that. I
decided that I wanted an internal guidance that was very, very
joyful.
We
were doing an exercise in which we concentrated on the qualities we
wanted, asking the universe to give them to us.
And while we were doing that we were getting “hands on”
oneness blessings. I
had three of them.
The first two felt very masculine, strong, and comforting.
But that wasn’t what I was looking for.
However, the third blessing given transferred a very gentle
feminine energy into me.
And when I felt it, an immense joy came over me.
And suddenly, the word “Mitzi” came into my heart.
That
evening, I felt this utter sense of completeness inside of me.
And I knew that it was now part of me and that I could never
feel that dreaded sense of emptiness again.
I realized that feeling of emptiness was just an illusion.
It was just a feeling that I identified with and resisted.
Now, I have a new feeling of being whole and complete inside
of myself, like I will never have to look outside myself again for
that sense of fulfillment.
That feeling is within me and it is always available.
At
that point I felt very, very happy. And my internal guidance (which
feels like it is Mitzi) says that this is only the beginning of
something much more magnificent to come.
Next
week I’ll share an amazing twist in this story. My
memories of Mitzi triggered an amazing series of events, and I look
forward to sharing more with you.
Understanding
Your Core Issue
Part
Two:
An Amazing Twist to Van's Story
by
Van K. Tharp, Ph.D.
Last
week I discussed my personal core issue of loneliness. As I said,
everyone has a core issue inside of them; one issue that rules the
subconscious more so than any other. I believe that most people have
something similar to what I described with respect to core issues.
In fact, A Course in Miracles says it is part of the human
condition, part of the way we’ve created ourselves. However, we
will learn this week that these core issues are merely beliefs that
limit us, and I will show you first hand how getting rid of my core
issue opened me up to a miracle.
We
basically all feel a deep sense of loneliness, emptiness, lack of
wholeness, or something similar because we feel separated from God.
Some people want to connect with a soul mate to feel complete, while
others want the whole world to love them and approve of them to feel
complete.
It’s
this feeling of lack that is the basis for self-sabotage because it
makes you think that you are much less than you are – that you are
not worthwhile and that you cannot have abundance or success or joy
or happiness. But that is only because you identify with the
thoughts and feelings that pass through you that we call the ego.
Let
me quote from A Course in Miracles:
What
if you looked within and saw no sin? This “fearful” question is
one the ego never asks. And you who ask it now are threatening the
ego’s whole defensive system too seriously for it to bother to
pretend it is your friend. Text,
page 424.
But
your thoughts, beliefs, feelings and subpersonalities are only you
acting from what Eckhart Tolle calls object consciousness because
you think you are them. And if that’s who you believe you are,
then you’ll create a very limited world to live in and have your
life experiences. But there is another way:
For
on the voice you choose to hear, and on the sights you choose to
see, depends entirely your whole belief in what you are.
Text, page 425.
It’s
interesting because I had been exposed to all of this material by
the time I became a full time trading coach in 1986. However, I was
still working on accepting concepts such as “I create everything
that happens to me.” That was very hard for me to accept
initially. When I’d read passages like the one above that I just
quoted from A Course in Miracles, it made no sense at all.
But that’s because I had not experienced it. I had not lived it.
I
am NOT my thoughts and feelings. Instead, I am the awareness of my
thoughts and feelings. It totally makes sense to me now because I
have had an experience of the wholeness that comes from that
realization. That realization is a part of me now, but I also
realize I have a long way to go.
Several
years ago, I could never have written these types of articles that
I’ve written on my experience. First, I hadn’t had the
experiences. But most importantly, I’d have been too concerned
about your reactions to everything I’ve said.
However,
I certainly know that I’m not your thoughts and reactions, just as
I also know that I’m not my reactions to your thoughts and
reactions and also that you are not those thoughts and reactions. My
point is to help you realize that. When you do so you will have no
limits to as what you can be, do, or have -- as a trader, as an
investor, or as a human being.
Amazing
Outcome
Remember
the amazing twist I mentioned in last week’s article? After
experiencing such a feeling of peace while working on my issues in
Florida and remembering my experience with Mitzi, I had a strong
urge to look at that letter from Mitzi’s husband again. I had not
read it in many years. I had kept it in a family tree album. I
pulled it out and reread it after all these years. This time, it
seemed like a different letter when I read it and all the emotion
was gone. I learned that Mitzi was just a nickname. Her full name
was spelled out in the letter as well as her name after she married
the American. It also mentioned her daughter, Diana, who was born in
1958.
I’d
remembered her daughter and years ago had the urge to look her up. I
didn’t because I assumed that it might be sad for both of us
because we both probably would just have very distant memories of
Mitzi – whom we both considered a mother.
However,
this time the Mitzi voice, which had become my internal guidance,
said, “Look her up.” So I did. You can find almost anyone on the
internet these days and I paid $2.95 for a people search. I got her
name, address and phone number. But that report also had something
else that blew me away. It had a list of Diana’s relatives and one
of the relatives listed was Mitzi’s full married name, who it said
was 80 years old. I immediately did another search and came up with
her phone number and address. Mitzi is still alive!! The information
about how she had died from a brain tumor wasn’t what happened.
She did have a brain tumor but she did not die from it. She is alive
and well, living on the west coast.
I
contacted her immediately and Mitzi was as excited to hear from me
as I was to hear her voice. So as far as I’m concerned, I have a
Mom who is still alive, which is a tremendous blessing. I arranged
to visit with her upon my return from Fiji a few weeks ago, and it
was wonderful reunion.
I
have much more to say about this and hope to share more with you
later.
I
can’t imagine a much bigger miracle than finding out that a person
I believed had passed away is still alive, and that I would have the
opportunity to meet with her again after more than 50+ years apart. —
Van Tharp
Articles
reprinted from Tharp's
Thoughts, Issues 385 and 386
Back
to Tharp's Thoughts Newsletter, Issue 462 February 17, 2010
About
Van Tharp: Trading coach, and author, Dr. Van K. Tharp is
widely recognized for his best-selling book Trade Your Way to
Financial Freedom and his outstanding Peak Performance Home
Study program - a highly regarded classic that is suitable for all
levels of traders and investors. You can learn more about Van
Tharp at www.iitm.com.
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