John Pistorius
Just out of high school, at the age of eighteen, I
believed my life was right on track. I was following in my dad’s
footsteps and planned to enlist in the military after the holidays.
Then, as a passenger in a fiery auto crash New Years Eve 1976-77, my
destination was forever changed.
Instead of boot camp, I found myself in a hospital. I was too busted up
to realize the stark contrast that the new evidence presented to my
goals and beliefs. I believed back surgery to fuse vertebrae together
dashed any hope that I had for getting into the military. It changed my
ideas about the amount of pain a person can tolerate, and ended my
relationship with my girlfriend.
By age twenty, in 1978, I was learning to renovate old homes with few
clues about what I was going to do with my life. Four thugs gave me
direction when they beat me unconscious and sent me to the hospital with
my face broken. After surgery and a month of hospitalization, I returned
to my ‘life.’ I was deeply affected and withdrew into the arms of a
woman who would later become my wife.
In 1980, after spending the entire day with me, my best friend, age 21,
was killed minutes after leaving my home. I was called to the scene to
identify his mangled, lifeless body. Massive head trauma and blood loss
swept him away in the blink of an eye.
In 1983, at age twenty-five, I was married with children and my goals
were set. My career was developing. I saw a bright future in buying and
renovating old homes in the South Side of Pittsburgh. And then again, in
an instant, my life was forever altered when I was hit by a car driven
by a man who was drunk.
Why share this?
I
don’t want sympathy or pity. Don’t even go there. I’m telling you these
things to substantiate my claim of understanding the process of
overcoming pained states of mind.
Each of these incidents caused a great deal of Cognitive Dissonance. Not
that I understood it then. Nevertheless, in retrospect, I can understand
it now. Each time, I was forced to view my life from a different
perspective. New evidence boldly contradicted my current belief or
outlook, thereby causing a pained state of mind. The challenge was to
overcome the obstructions to my ability to live life peacefully. It was
my choice. I was able to overcome the visible evidence that gave me
grounds for believing the existence or presence of something else by
directing my thought energy away from my inabilities and onto my
abilities.
I could have stopped living when my life was changed by these events.
Instead, I adapted. Part of my ability to adjust came from my adoption
of confident, constructive thinking techniques. I thought my way out of
these battles. The difference between my ideas, beliefs and opinions and
new evidence that confronted my beliefs was the barrier that I
rigorously fought.
Ok, I realized that I was not going to have a military career. So I
started working in construction. I watered my attitude and thinking with
my ability to learn new things. Then, after the thugs jumped me, I
decided to settle down, marry, and raise a family and I went back into
construction. After my best friend’s death, I realized the line between
life and death was much finer than I had ever imagined, and I became
almost reclusive. After the drunk driver running me down, I started
buying and renovating homes using my limited knowledge of construction
and seeking information from others.
Goals-Beliefs-Choices
I
believed that I was on track with my goals. Each time I faced new
evidence that gave me grounds for believing something contrary to my
accepted position, I chose to accept or reject the new information.
When
the orthopedic surgeon told me that my spinal injury was not going to
permit me to be in construction, I chose to disagree with him. Instead,
I worked to strengthen the muscles that support the spine. The
construction work strengthened my back.
Plastic surgery repaired the damaged bone in my face that resulted from
the attack in 1978. So the predictions of ugliness and deformity were
overcome by excellent surgeons. That was all it took to overcome that
batch of new evidence.
Cognitive retraining and the deliberate planting of statements which
affirmed my abilities were the fertilizer to my positive attitude. This
combination of professional assistance, attitude adjustment and thought
planting amounted to digging in, planting, fertilizing and watering my
thought garden. And it propelled me forward with resolve after the car
ran me down in 1983. It didn’t happen overnight. The process of
overcoming the stark contrast in my thinking was one that fluctuated,
sometimes dramatically.
More Dissonance
And then, in 1986, just when I thought that I was right on track, my
wife decided that she would be happier with someone else. She claimed
that the 1983 accident had changed me beyond her recognition. I wasn’t
the guy that she married. She claimed that her husband died and she was
left with someone who looked like him but didn’t act like him. This was
the same year that my parents bought their pet shop.
Throughout the following six years, using some very intelligent lawyers,
she dismantled my income, my real estate and my self-confidence. I was
able to overcome so much adversity before, but somehow this was the
toughest battle of my lifetime. In retrospect, I believe it was because
divorce opposed my core values. My parents have been married for almost
fifty years. When we married, I thought that I was going to be married
to her for the rest of my life. Then, in short order, I was facing very
real circumstances which refuted my core belief.
She was so angry about losing her husband in that accident. She wanted
to punish me for taking his life and his place in hers. Therefore, no
matter what I conceded to, she kept pushing for more. This was a stark
contrast to the mild-mannered woman that she projected herself to be.
Mosquitoes are friendlier.
My ex-wife was relentless in her punishment. Almost like the thugs, who
years earlier had kicked me when I was down, she just kept pursuing me.
It was as if she demanded that I fight back. Yet I did not have the will
to fight. Even if I had possessed the desire, I was without funds. I
only wanted it to end. I was so tired of her attacks. How could I
overcome this opponent? She knew my weaknesses and was adept at sharing
them with her lawyers. Together, they were relentless. The stress
reduced my ability to function in my defense.
Chains of Thought
All through my life, when I thought about my future, I had disconcerting
thoughts which were partially influenced by well-meaning people who told
me that I would ‘always be’ something or other. Those ‘all’ or
‘absolute’ statements had an effect on me because I trusted the people
who made them. They were the experts.
Doctors told me that I would always ‘be’ something or other. Surgeons
told me that I would ‘never’ do certain things. Because of cognitive
impairments, therapists told me that I must remember that I would
‘always’ be slower. I had no evidence to refute their claims, yet, their
ideas did not fit into my beliefs about me. As new evidence emerged that
was contrary to their statements, I was challenged. I rebelled against
their ideas, yet was still plagued by the nagging that they presented.
The thoughts that they had planted confronted me and required energy to
refute them, and that was a waste of resources. So I started seeking
relief from every source possible.
New Tools Developed to Excavate Dissonance
During the six years of the divorce battle, I sought techniques and
strategies to overcome these nagging negative thoughts which were
stealing my effectiveness. I built an arsenal of tools as soldiers to
overcome these formidable thought opponents of mine. And the war took on
new meaning and direction. New people entered my life. Some of them were
trained to help me fight the ideas that were beating me. I did not
always win every battle, but my win-loss ratio improved. With every win,
my confidence improved. And I came to realize that I really could
accomplish this task of changing my opinions and beliefs. My mental
acceptance and views on particular ideas, thoughts and subjects began to
be transformed.
I learned to be the governor of my thoughts. Often, my convictions were
overturned and I was pardoned. With each release, I was inspired to free
my mind from additional obstructions to clear thinking.
I
learned to not be anxious about tomorrow and I’m still learning to have
peace by living in the moment. This moment is all that we really have,
none other. It is the eternal moment, when you finally come into harmony
with reality. It is the only place where we have any control over the
only thing that we have real control over, our attitude.
Each time a tragedy occurred I fought back. I’ve repeatedly lived
through the process and have developed a deep understanding about
overcoming the pained state of mind called Cognitive Dissonance. I
learned by experience that it is possible to overcome Cognitive
Dissonance by uprooting and burning the weed thoughts and shooting down
and burying the thought soldiers that defend them. I learned to plant
deliberate, precise thoughts to fight the battle from within my
subconscious mind. And I taught myself how to water and fertilize those
ideas with others that reinforced their growth.
Armed with a legion of new evidence, I was confronted with a challenge
that extended beyond the surface. The deep-seated beliefs which I was
not yet able to erase were lingering in the dark recesses of my thought
garden. Like hidden monsters, they would come forward to fight at any
moment to defend core beliefs. They had to be overcome, yet they proved
to be elusive. Nevertheless, I came to realize that they belonged to me
too. That was a real turning point. These were my thoughts even if I had
accepted them from others.
Next time: Tools to overpower the monsters and Self-Command.
|
No
man is free who is not master of himself.
-epictetus |
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