Tips for Choosing Your Support Group
Support groups come in
all sizes and flavors, in person and
online. Whether you're looking for a
divorce support group, a cancer support
group, depression, grief, or weight loss
support group, the elements for providing
you with substantive and positive emotional,
mental, physical or spiritual support are
still the same. There are two kinds of
support groups: positive and negative.
Positive:
A pro-active positive support group is
one that promotes learning about new
medicines, new procedures, new clinical
trials, new books, CD's et al about your
disorder. This group promotes going
forward, and helps facilitate your research
and personal empowerment as a blessing.
When you are introduced
to the group they do not spend endless hours
recounting the disease story about why you
are here. It's a fact that does not need to
be addressed again and again that you have a
disorder story. YOU live it, so why keep
going over it and over it and over it, to
activate all that negative energy? That's
WHY you joined that particular group.
The positive group
leader is not intimidated by your
unanswerable questions, but is inspired to
become more educated about your topic. Your
leader encourages you to ask current
unanswerable questions and challenges each
member to think beyond disease limiting
conditions and current horizons. They
promote all of the members to participate by
delegating various positive assignments for
everyone. If this is a local group, you take
"glad to be alive, share life" field trips
that have absolutely NOTHING to do with the
disorder, and EVERYTHING about feeling good
about yourself, seeing the world, laughing
and having a balanced life. This group
supports taking care of your appearance,
sharing new ideas, resources and adventures
about makeup, hair, wardrobe, personal
hygiene and physical rehabilitation and
exercise. This group wants you to care about
your personal appearance, so when you look
in the mirror and are seen by friends, you
look alive, and as healthy and refined as
possible for your condition. They
discourage maintaining a "sick" image.
Negative:
It should be a great
concern to be in a group that does nothing
but recount what was and all that is
unhealthy and unhappily going on in the life
of it's participants. Inevitably this will
negatively impact participant's minds and
spirits. This is often seen in online
Internet groups. Research tends to support
that recounting your horror story and
reading the countless venting of others,
does not support a positive attitude that
promotes physical healing and healthy
emotional and mental responses. This group
meets only to go over and over and over your
tale of diagnosis and personal devastation,
from your introduction "story" to your tale
of weekly woes. This is a disorder "victim"
group. It is commiseration of negative
energy at the highest level of disguise. No
matter how much you think that this group is
helping you, they are not. They exist to
talk about and share negative experiences
creating a "stuck" atmosphere. It’s bonding
by perpetual "downers."
You do not receive points on the other side
for being a victim of your diagnosis,
disease, or plight. You are in fact,
contributing to your own demise. Acceptance
is one thing, denial another. Being a
victim assists your problem in draining your
own life force energy. Having a problem and
addressing it with the "pity poor me"
approach is futile. It may elicit help for
a while, but the keyword here is for a
while. Give up the pity party. Fight!
Instead, use that time researching how to
restore and regenerate your life.
Do not use the fact that you are having a
terrible reaction to something in your
treatment as making you special or as your
identity. I have seen many cancer clients
who wanted attention, and used the negative
occurrences in their illness as a banner to
set them apart. This is not productive. It
frustrates your healthcare provider. They
are aware of the psychological reasons you
are using your negative reaction for
attention. Understanding that this is a
confusing and complicated time in your life,
try to take your identity from your positive
approach to life. Therefore, when you
healthcare provider does not emphasize or
respond to your negative identity crisis,
it’s a good sign. Their job is to assist
your health, not enable you.
Grieving is an area that takes a little more
time. HOWEVER, positive attitudes are
essential here also. Although you have lost
a loved one, living with a dead memory can
kill off your life force energy day to day
and breath by breath. I personally
understand this as my fiance was killed in a
sudden auto crash. I never had the chance to
say ANYTHING! However, it's better to
celebrate their life and remember all the
good. Then you keep all the "positive" alive
which is contributory to your healing. By
celebrating their life, you never have to
bury their memories. You can take them out
at any time, like a special gift and savor
all the wonderful thoughts and feelings.
Weight loss is just
that. It takes times. However, while
waiting, you can focus on the light at the
end of the scale, instead of the chocolate
bars and emotional traumas creating your
health issue. You CAN tell a health story
that presents your "learning opportunity" as
a learning opportunity to help heal the
others in your group, rather than a
commiseration band aid.
If your group is not
continually teaching you new and progressive
things, and supporting your positive
emotional, mental, spiritual and physical
and appearance growth, leave.
If your group doesn't
embrace having an open mind and awareness
without censorship other than that of your
personal intuition, leave!
UNTIL you take your knowledge gained from
any group and turn it into a positive
learning opportunity that you do something
about! you are not going forward. Unless
you choose to grow forward, you will remain
in the same condition that brought you into
the group in the first place.
Research continues to
affirm that being a part of a positive
support can add quality and quantity to your
life. Although the intent of most support
groups is to be contributory in helping it's
members, a negative group can ultimately do
more harm than good.
Feel free to reprint
this article in it's entirety.
Back
to Main Article Page
Contact Information:
Brent Atwater,
Alternative Medical Specialist
Medical Intuitive, Distance Energy Healing
ATL, GA Phone: 404.242.9022 USA
NC Phone: 910.692.5206 USA
Website:
http://www.brentatwater.com/
Email:
mailto:Brent@BrentAtwater.com
Disclaimer:
Brent Atwater is not a medical doctor or
associated with any branch of medicine.
Brent works in Alternative and Complementary Medicine (CAM).
She offers her opinions based on her
intuition, and her personal energy healing
work, which is not a substitute for medical
procedures or treatments. Always consult a
physician or trained health care
professional concerning any medical problem
or condition before undertaking any diet,
health related or lifestyle change programs.
There are no guarantees with the Energy
work.