Band Aids Don't Fix Bullet Holes*

“I hear you, Ma’am,” Samir** (name changed) said respectfully, “Band-aids don’t fix bullet holes.”

“What a profound statement that is. Tell me more of what that means to you,” I nudged him gently.

“It’s a lyric from a song…” he continued.

Band-aids don’t fix bullet holes.

What an impact that line had on me.

Samir had been struggling for the past 25 years. Struggling with life, with multiple losses, of loved ones to death in his formative years, of relationships; deceit in business, failed dreams, a hopeless future, and a seemingly-inevitable scepticism and cynicism towards life.

When he came to consult me, he had a long term history of also struggling with crippling panic attacks and clinical depression, had been to a few psychiatrists and psychologists, read many a self-help book but had constantly struggled with a sense of failure, rejection, loss of self-esteem. And his brutal past continued to haunt him.

“I’m tired, I am just so exhausted. Life continues to be relentless and I don’t have the energy to fight back. I’ve been to so many therapists and still, I feel broken.”

“I’ve been told to do yoga, meditation, write out my feelings, but it just hasn’t worked for me.”

And that’s when I told him those are band-aid solutions that are attempting to heal deep wounds.

His words probably expressed my perspective better than anything I’ve ever used in my practice in all these years. Picture the futility of it. Instead of extracting and removing the bullet that is causing the wound in the first place and making it fester and metastasize, a band-aid would not even stop the blood flow.

How, then, can one expect symptomatic measures like yoga and meditation (good in their own ways and definite complements to therapy) to get to the core of the problem and resolve it?

To free the mind of the demons, the emotional baggage, the self-loathing, the thoughts that come and nag, pinch, hurt, and hit, and make you feel the anguish and the pain with such intensity that it takes the life force out of you, one needs to dig deeper.

“Meditation and writing brought them to the surface, but then I didn’t know what to do with all that came up? It’s like all the muck and the dirt has come up and no one told me how to clean it up!” I’ve heard this lament so often.

No wonder everything looked dull, bleak, and hopeless to Samir. To his credit, he committed to my methods.

“I trust you, Dr. Divya,” he said.

“Also trust the process,” I told him.

We unearthed a series of life experiences that were laced with guilt, regret, failures, mistakes, which he had held onto. He beat himself up for them, and this led him deeper into that hole he admitted to having dug for himself.

“With each passing day, I find myself in deeper shit.”

We spoke about the importance of letting go and freeing ourselves from the pain that holding onto the emotional baggage was causing. But I couldn’t impose that on him without him letting me in.

“Talking of letting go, Ma’am, have you heard about the story of how farmers catch monkeys in India when they become a menace to their crops?”

I was intrigued and wanted to know more. The story goes like this.

In a certain part of India, a set of farmers was concerned about the monkeys that were destroying their crops. They didn’t want to shoot or kill them, and sought to look for a compassionate way of dealing with this menace, by finding a way to catch the monkeys and have them return to the jungle.

A farmer observed the monkeys’ behavior and came up with a plan. He carved out a small hole in a coconut, big enough so that a monkey could slide its hand through. He then put a banana inside the coconut, and tied it to the side of a tree. The smell of the banana caught a monkey’s attention, and of course he had to stick his hand inside the coconut to grab the banana. When he tried to pull out the prize, the monkey couldn’t get his hand out, because it was clenched in a fist holding the banana. It did not fit out of the small hole. The monkey refused to let go of the banana, however long he was in captivation, or however much the banana rotted. The farmer was able to catch the monkey. Had the monkey just let go of the banana, he would have been free.

(Side note: I later remembered reading this story a decade ago in a book called Full Catastrophe Living, by Jon Kabat-Zinn.)

I smiled at Samir, because he knew what was coming next.

“So what all are you holding on to that no longer serves you? Do you see what it does to you? The constant living in pain, the anguish, the depths you acknowledge plunging deeper into?” I asked him.

“The bananas have rotted and I am still holding onto them.”

Even in the midst of this anguished realization, Samir was able to share a lighter moment when we figured that there may be half a dozen bananas in the mix. We agreed to start letting go one “banana” after the other or if he saw the pain of holding on, to drop them all at once.

--*--

We label emotions as “negative” and I have nudged people to move away from that perspective. Negative means it’s something to be avoided, but when it comes to emotions, the more we avoid them, the more they come back with a vengeance. When we avoid facing thoughts and feelings that cause distress, we suppress them, repress them, because that seems easier to deal with, rather than look at them as messengers telling us something.

There is an impact from the past that hurts us, that brought on anger, resentment, regret, guilt, a falling in our own eyes, and we continue to live with those imprints. They hurt, just like bullet holes would, I am sure. And hence, till the time these wounds aren’t healed, band-aids just won’t help.

Can we make space for them, learn from them on what needs to be done from this point on, tend to them with tenderness and care, and work on healing them? Because it is only then that we can experience true liberation from the emotional baggage.

Samir let me in.

--*--

After a session I usually ask people to reflect on something I would write or say. I throw in “homeworks” which I am notoriously famous for by now.

Late one night, after one such email with a couple of assignments from me, I heard from Samir, a long, detailed reply, towards the end of which he acknowledged that while the session hadn’t been easy that morning, he had made space for the sadness, saw it from a different perspective, heard himself out compassionately, and that he had reflected on the homework I had sent him.

“I read all the documents you had sent. Re-read them. Got some insights. Acted. And I am free…I would have possibly lived the rest of my life with my muddled emotions, memories, and regrets. I will never be able to thank you enough for this breakthrough.”

I congratulated him for starting the process of letting go and wanted to ensure that the work was deep, and had a lasting impact and wasn’t just a “surface cleansing.”

We exchanged a couple more emails, and promised to take that up in our following therapy session. 

--*--

I can understand how facing our worst fears, failures, disappointments, regrets, mistakes can be tough. It brings up a barrage of emotions that wrenches us from inside and we quietly go back to avoidance again. All it takes is an empathic, compassionate person to be with in the here and now, whom you can trust, who can virtually hold you in a safe space, and who walks together, stumbles together, cries and laughs together, on this journey of true healing.

Just for today, what can you let go of in order to be free? I understand it’s not always easy. You may call it impossible too. But once you realize that living a life on a roller-coaster, or living in pain is worse, “impossible” just becomes yet another wall to break down. Together.

(*Note: “Band-aids don’t fix bullet-holes “ is a line in a song called Bad Blood by Taylor Swift.)
(** Note: Samir’s details & name have been changed to protect his identity and to ensure confidentiality. He has also given me consent to write this piece. )

We All Have a True North*

A year after I became a solopreneur, almost two years on from my mother’s passing, a time when I lost my way and then pieced myself together again, I have now chosen a name for my private practice. Or, more accurately, the name chose me.

Dhruva
The North Star.

Mariners and wanderers from ages past to modern-day nomads have found their bearings with this True North in the sky. It’s perceived to be the one fixed point in an otherwise constantly-moving universe, where the other stars and the earth itself and all those on it are constantly in motion.

And so it came to symbolize being an anchor, a guide, a source of inspiration, a beacon of hope, a path shaper. When you find the North Star, you know you won’t be lost anymore.

With the guidance of our own internal compass, which knows our purpose, our dreams and ambitions, and being inherently stable, steady, centered, it was to be trusted. The True North thus meant spurring personal growth and finding our true selves, the self that lies hidden beneath layers of sadness, depression, anxieties, self-deprecating thoughts, abuse, rejection, failures, isolation, loneliness, and whatever else that weighs us down.

This name that chose me has reinforced yet again that what I have now is not just a practice. It’s my calling. It’s what I’ve been shaped to do. It’s what gives me purpose and meaning. And it’s what takes the sum of all my experiences and emotions, and centers them all around who I am—inside and out.

When I started to reflect upon why the name chose me, I went down this path of questions and answers, guided by my True North. Perhaps you will identify with these questions and answers too. And perhaps you will find your True North too, as I have.

Here are those questions. And answers.

My True North,
How will I discover wondrous things if I don’t wander?
But also, how will I know I won’t get lost if I do wander?
How will I know what lies beyond the horizon,
If I never leave the shore?
But how will I know I’ll find my way back to the shore,
If I am unmoored?
How will I know who I am,
If I don’t find out who I am not?
What will it take for me to part the sea of confusion,
And find the land of clarity?
Is it you that is my North Star,
Or is it me?
Will I shape my experiences and emotions,
Or will they shape me?
Do my relationships dictate how I am,
Wholesome or a jumbled jigsaw puzzle?
Or do I make relationships what they can be?
Will I have the courage to take on the world,
And not be weighed down by expectations, of my own or of others?
Will I able to gaze upon the limitless sky
And find that unblinking, brilliant fixed point to guide me?
What will it take for me to lose that which holds me back?
And what will it take for me to find myself?
I look at you, my North Star,
And I realize, all I need to do is look at myself,
To look within.
For, it is not just the questions that reside inside me.
The answers all spring from within too.
Because the darkness-dispelling light is within me.
The darkness-dispelling light is truly within me…

~~~~~****~~~~~****~~~~~

When I reflect back on the year gone by, to the time when I had commenced the journey of setting up my own private practice, I realize how much my Dhruva has been guiding me, now that I have found it.

This may all seem serendipitous to you, but I guess my inner self knew what it was doing, and what it was guided by.

I had carefully selected art work for my “den” where I would be seeing people for psychotherapy and coaching and had picked up the following pieces that read:

“We are stars wrapped in skin, the light you seek has always been within”
“Go find yourself first.”
“Find the place inside yourself where nothing is impossible.”

At home, I had done up a wall of Mom’s pictures, and exactly a year ago, I placed a plaque below it that read “My True North, Strong & Free.”

I didn’t realize it at the time. But last week, my North Star unveiled itself as what has been guiding me.

Dhruva,” guided by Mom, my True North. On one hand, I wish she was here to see it in person, but I also know she resides within me, because she is the source, and the spring.

Wish me luck 😊

(PS: The next blog post will be what finding your True North could mean for you, what I have experienced on this journey with individuals I have worked with in therapy, which means the translation of this name into moving on a path of self-discovery, transformation, and healing.)

The North Star still in the sky, while the entire Northern Sky moves around it.

The North Star still in the sky, while the entire Northern Sky moves around it.

*Banner Image picture credit goes to my friend and ace photographer, Abhishek Kumawat, who shot this beauty at Wari La High Camp, Leh (Ladakh)