How To Benefit from Inner Conflict
Intensifying inner conflict–intentionally as a technique–can be used to stimulate awareness and transformation. Try this:
Pit an old way of life you’re addicted to against a new way of life you long for but are scared of. Instead of trying to get rid of your fear and anxiety with some other technique, come into the diamond center of self-observation and VIEW your conflict in detail. View it with the understanding that you are bigger than the parts that are in conflict. View it with curiosity and wonder.
If you are not on the verge of a big life change you can still benefit from inner conflict:
Craft some creative tension by focusing on both sides of an inner conflict, however small. If you can generate stronger conflict your Inner Work will be more potent. Bring hidden conflict into the light of your awareness, without letting your stories about it interfere with neutral observation.
Do not waste your conflict and dissipate its energy. Use it for transformation.
Conflict Intensification Exercise (broken down more explicitly):
- Pick a conflict.
- Bring your conflict under the microscope of focused attention.
- Track the sensations that occur in your body when you focus first on one side or part of the conflict and then the other/s. Sensations speak volumes. Attend to their messages. Which thoughts or feelings cause certain parts of your body to get tense, tight, or painful, or change your breath or posture?
- Stay in impartial observation with at least a third of your attention. Do not turn away from or shut down conflicting parts. Give them each a voice. Listen to what they say when you allow them to speak, and write it down if this helps.
- Ask yourself questions that clarify who you are and what you are trying to become, observing your sensations as you explore.
- Let each inner voice express through your body, one at a time, as if it had your body to itself.
- Attend to and memorize what it feels like when one side or part of your conflict is running your body. Sensation will assist you to recognize what is going on later, when conflict occurs on its own.
- Live in the questions that come up. You are not trying to solve anything, but exploring who you are and what you do.
Resolution is not the aim here, but will arise on its own at some point. The aims of this exercise are self-awareness, learning to sense, release of resistance, and learning to recognize feeling states. Intensifying inner conflict helps to strengthen your capacity for impartial observation, building your core strength, clarity, and integrity.
Example: Suppose you have some conflict between your desire for approval or acknowledgment and a part of you that needs authentic expression. These parts hold different values. Bring each part into sharp focus, one by one. Get to know them without allowing the other part to interfere. When you feel a sense of clarity about exactly how these parts work within you, relax the conflict by embracing both parts within your comprehensive Whole.
Example Questions: Who will I be and what will I be doing over time if I allow my need for approval to guide my life direction?
Who will I be and what will I be doing in life if I allow authenticity and inner knowing to direct my actions?
What do I desire and what am I resisting?
The struggle between your urge to remain unaware and your urge to wake up is fundamental. It is not useful to judge your parts by seeing some as good and others as bad. Learn to embrace and accept each part as a gift of awareness.
Note: If you tend to get stuck in either/or dilemmas, seek to discover and observe more than two sets of values and voices. Seek multiple options.
Using conflict for Inner Work goes a long way toward building an unshakable habit of self-observation.
What have you found valuable in going through inner conflict?
How have you used conflict to create awareness or transformation?