Tools
for Handling Control Issues
Accepting Powerlessness
Content:
What is powerlessness?
Powerlessness
is the:
Sensation
of being out of control with no apparent solution to help you to regain control.
Complete
lack of control, authority, or status to affect how others will treat or act
towards you.
Lack
of capability to affect the realities of life out of your control like:
-
how
others act towards you
-
if
you will get a job you want
-
If
you will be
accepted to a school you desire to attend
-
what
the weather will be
-
if
an accident will occur
-
if
an act of God will affect you or others, etc.
Lack
of ability
-
to
affect or change the compulsive or addictive behaviors of others which
affect you negatively.
-
to
make others exactly what you want them to be.
-
to
change past events which have had a negative impact in your current life.
-
to
insure that all of your dreams and fantasies for the way you want life to be
will come true in reality.
-
to
completely change things you have attempted repeatedly to change with no
success.
Presence
of impulsive, addictive, compulsive, and obsessive behaviors in you which
Lack
of strength, competence, or skills to overcome realities in life that have no
current apparent solution, such as
-
the
cure for AIDS and cancer
-
complete
recovery from cerebral palsy
-
bringing
back to life a loved one who has died, etc.
Recognition
that there are for you
-
people,
-
problems,
and
-
things
that are

What are the negative consequences of not accepting
personal powerlessness?
If
you do not accept powerlessness over the uncontrollables and unchangeables in
your life, then you could:
Begin
to frustrate yourself in your attempts to gain control and to fix the
non-fixable.
Become
extremely rigid and dogmatic in your handling of life's problems
believing that there is "only one way'' to do things, the "perfect''
way.
Deny
the enormity of the things which you do not have power to change and
become locked into "fantasy'' or "magical'' thinking that given
enough time, energy, and resources you can succeed in changing them.
Become
so full of self-pride as to believe that
only you can be the "savior'' for the ills or problems you are facing.
Become
so self-preoccupied that you become incapable
of reaching out to ask for others' help and support in facing these problems
which are beyond your power and control.
Deny
the existence of a Higher Power in your life upon whom you can call for
help and assistance.
Lose
your faith in the capability of human beings to help out a fellow human
who is in need of help and support.
Become
so frustrated and depressed in trying to solve the unsolvable problems
that you find your temper, anger, and rage igniting and flaring up
spontaneously, inappropriately, and disproportionately.
Feel
so defeated by the non-fixable realities of life that you come
to believe yourself an inadequate person.
Forget
that you are a human being and as such open to failures and mistakes and
not the ``perfect being'' who is omnipotent and infallible in all things.
Cling
onto the people whom you cannot control or change until they one day
walk out on you frustrated by your incessant efforts to change, correct, or
reform them.
Lose
perspective of your own limits and not be self-protective of your
energy, resources, and spirit in your incessant effort to solve the unsolvable.
Increase
in a sense of low self-esteem because you
are incapable of making everything right and perfect with all people, places,
and things in your life.

How is accepting powerlessness a control issue?
Accepting
powerlessness is a control issue because:
It
gives you the ability to retain the ``locus of control'' in your hands
because you have the right to accept or reject, to reach out or to pull in from
others' offers of help.
You
are capable of seeking help and support from others to fortify your
efforts in this regard, by recognizing that you have addictive, impulsive,
compulsive, or obsessive behavioral patterns which you are "powerless'' to
control or fix on your own, .
You
recognize the need of the strength and assistance of a Higher Power with
whom you can share the solving of your overpowering problems, by letting go of
the "pride'' of survivorship that says that "only you'' can solve your
own problems, no matter how big they are,
In
so doing you give credibility and validity to the belief that there are issues
in your life that no matter how long and how much you control them you will
never gain full power over because they inevitably will happen. Such
items as death, taxes, weather, climatic changes, acts of God, are just a few of
those things you will never be able to control and thus you are powerless to
change.
It
is a first step in accepting help for any problems which are stronger
than you and are resistant to efforts to correct.
It
is the inviting of others into your life to support your need to correct a
problem. It is a behavior similar to "helplessness''
but yet qualitatively different because helplessness is really a guise for
maintaining control over others whereas
It
is an honest appraisal of how much control or power you have
over problems, situations, people, places, or things.
In
recognizing that there is a Higher Power who has a role in your life,
you are able to put into a healthy perspective how much energy, resources,
personal investment, emotional and physical effort and time you need to
contribute to the partnership with your Higher Power to face those problems over
which you by yourself are powerless.
You
don't like to admit you can't control something on your own and yet
unless you do so you will continue to knock your head against a brick wall.

What is the irrational thinking that leads to denial
of powerlessness?
Here are some examples of irrational thinking that leads you to deny
powerlessness over the out of control people, places, things, and personal
behaviors in your life:
-
You
must be able to have control over everything in your life.
-
It
is a sign of weakness to admit your inability to control or change things.
-
You
should be able to solve your own problems on your own.
-
What
would people think if you reached out for help to deal with the aspects of
your life which are out of control?
-
You
should be able to work things out on your own, once you realize what the
problem is.
-
There
is no problem too great that it can't be solved.
-
God
never gives you a problem too great that you can't handle it on your own.
-
You
are a real "wimp'' or "wuss'' if you can't deal with it on your
own.
-
People
are able to handle everything in life. That is why they were given
intelligence, creativity and imagination.
-
It
is a sign of moral weakness if you are not able to get your impulsive,
addictive, compulsive, or obsessive behaviors under control.
-
You
are a "bad person'' if you are powerless to change your behaviors on
your own.
-
You
are not supposed to ask for help from others when you are dealing with your
weak character flaws.
-
When
you ask for help, you always become dependent on others to solve your
problems for you.
-
Certain
behaviors have a genetic basis and it is best to ignore them so that they
don't occur in your life.
-
Ignore
your problems and they will go away.
-
An
impulse is an easy thing to get under control.
-
You
are morally weak if you have an addictive behavior problem.
-
The
only way to change sick behaviors is to work at it on your own.
-
If
you don't face your problems, they don't exist for the moment.
-
Admitting
you are a human being when facing problems is admitting defeat.
-
You
should be able to handle every challenge in your life on your own.

How to learn to admit powerlessness
When
you are troubled by personal behaviors or by uncontrollable and unchangeable
people, places, things, and situations in your life, you can follow these steps
so as to admit your powerlessness over them to enable you to get help from
others to deal with them.
First Identify what behavior, person, place, thing, or situation is causing
you problems and making your life unmanageable.
Second: Identify what it is about this problem that makes you feel powerless.
Third: Identify what irrational beliefs keeps you from admitting being
powerless over the problem.
Fourth: Replace this irrational thinking with healthy, rational, more
realistic thinking about powerlessness such as the following positive self-affirmations.
-
I
am a human being and deserve support from others in my efforts to address
problems over which I currently feel powerless.
-
I
deserve support and help to address these problems for my self-growth.
-
It
is human to feel powerless since only God is all powerful and omnipotent.
-
I
will get closer to recovery from my problems once I admit my inability to
solve them on my own.
-
It
is OK to feel powerlessness over my problems as long as I reach out to my
Higher Power and others for assistance and support.
-
I
can solve problems that come my way as long as I am willing to admit my
inability to solve them on my own and seek help to deal with them
-
I
gain more in life by letting go of control over those things that are out of
my power to control.
-
I
gain serenity in life by admitting what I am powerless to change and
control.
-
I
am a human and not God and that's OK.
-
Help
is only given to those who ask for it.
-
I
can reach out for help when I am powerless to solve a problem on my own.
-
I
will seek help from my Higher Power and others when I feel powerless to
solve a problem on my own.
Fifth: Once you have affirmed your right to admit powerlessness over the
problem, then reach out to others to seek their support and assistance.
Sixth: Simultaneous with reaching out for help from others to deal
with the problem, seek your Higher Power's assistance by the following:
-
Handing
over the uncontrollable and unchangeable elements of the problem to your
Higher Power.
-
Asking
your Higher Power for the strength, wisdom, and courage to deal with the
controllable and changeable elements of the problem.
Seventh: Once you gain help and support from others and your Higher Power,
conscientiously and assiduously take steps to address the changeable elements
which you have the power and ability to change.
Eighth: Recognize that progress will be slow and erratic at first in
changing personal behaviors of an impulsive, addictive, compulsive, or obsessive
nature. Give yourself enough time to change, taking one day at a time.
Ninth: Admit to yourself that, in changing personal behaviors or habits,
relapse into the old behaviors is a fact of life. Give yourself permission to be
a human and to experience a relapse into old behavior and then get back onto the
wagon of recovery. Don't end your efforts to change if you should experience a
slippage into old patterns or habits of acting. Do not seek perfection in
recovery. Admit that you are not a "perfect being'' and that you don't have
to recover perfectly all at one time.
Tenth: Monitor your progress in solving your problem and handling
relapses of old behaviors. Try not to take on more than you can handle by
remembering:
-
Take
one thing at a time.
-
Step
by step.
-
Easy
does it.
-
First
things first.
-
Day
by day.
-
Hour
by hour.
-
Minute
by minute.
-
Progress
is slow but steady.
-
You
are the determiner of pace.
-
You
are in charge of your destiny.
-
Rome
wasn't built in a day.
-
It
took a long time to get you into this and it will take a long time to get
out.
Eleventh: If you are again overwhelmed by your efforts to solve
this problem, admit your powerlessness and gain support and assistance to
persist and not give up your efforts.
Twelfth: If you are not experiencing success in solving
this problem, the chances are you have not fully admitted your powerlessness to
change, control, or solve it on your own. Return to the first step and begin
over again.

Steps to admitting powerlessness
Step
1: In order to admit powerlessness, you first need to recognize what is
causing your life to be unmanageable. Consider this following list:
Things that cause one's life to become unmanageable
because the person is powerless over them:
-
People
-
Places
-
Things
-
Situations
-
Personal
behaviors:
-
Impulsive
behaviors a thing you do right away with no pre-thought
or hesitation.
-
Addictive
behaviors a thing you do with no thought at all
which is a habit and out of control.
-
Compulsive
behaviors a thing you do with little thought,
over and over again and it is hard to control.
-
Obsessive
behaviors a thing you do over and over again
because you don't believe it is perfectly done unless it is
corrected and modified over and over again.
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In
your journal for each of the categories listed above consider these
questions:
A.
What is problematical about it?
B.
Why is it problematical for you?
C.
Why is it causing your life to be unmanageable?
D.
What efforts have you used in the past or are you currently trying to
use to correct it?
E.
Why have your efforts to solve, change or control failed to this point?
F.
How do you feel about your lack of success at solving, controlling, or
changing it?
G.
Whose help, assistance, or support have you enlisted to solve it?
H.
To what extent is it an uncontrollable or unchangeable element in your
life?
I.
To what extent is it a controllable or changeable element in your life?
J.
Why have you not let go of the unchangeable or uncontrollable elements
of it before this time?
Step
2: Once you identify your problems, then identify in your journal
the thinking which still keeps you from admitting you are powerless to solve
each one of these on your own.
Step
3: In your journal develop a set of new self-talk or self-affirmations
to give you permission to admit your powerlessness over each of these problems.
Step
4: In your journal identify for each problem a person from whom to seek
support, assistance, and help to address it.
Step
5: In your journal identify how you would seek your Higher Power's
assistance for each problem.
Step
6: Seek help from others for each problem. Let go or hand over the
uncontrollable and unchangeable problems to your Higher Power and seek
assistance from your Higher Power for the controllable and changeable elements.
Step
7: Monitor your progress in addressing these problems. If you are having
little or no success, you probably have not fully admitted powerlessness over
solving them on your own, so return to Step 1 and begin again.

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