ZIP UP
A Free Emotional Health Coverage
Plan for Those Over 65 Seconds Old
Deena Zalkind Spear
www.singingwoods.org
Our
energy fields are a manifestation of our thoughts,
beliefs, feelings, and intentions. Our physical bodies result from our
energy
fields, not the other way around. While at the deepest layers we may
well be
one glorious being, at this level of reality we live in a world where
each of
us has our own challenges and our own free will. We need to keep our
energy
fields to ourselves.
I
have observed that some clients who ask me for healing
assistance are merged in with someone else’s energy field. This dynamic
is not
conscious, but it creates all kinds of problems. Merging is an attempt
to
control or rescue the other person in an unhealthy way. On the
energetic levels
merging looks and feels as if the auric field, which surrounds and
permeates
the physical body, overlays or mixes into another person’s field.
Sometimes the
overlap is so severe that it looks and feels to me as if one person is
completely on top of, or totally merged into, the other.
Awareness
of merging and the ability to disengage can be
taught. So far, almost all of my clients, who have previously had a
problem
with merging, have learned to live unmerged. There is a simple visual
exercise
that I have observed works well for either the person merging or the
person
being merged into. I call this exercise “Zip Up.” If just one of the
involved
parties becomes aware of the merging dynamic and properly executes the
“Zip Up”
exercise in his or her own mind, the merging will be prevented. I will
explain
how to perform the “Zip Up” exercise at the end of this article.
One
client wrote: “Merging
was something I did with almost everyone I met, until I understood the
feeling
and how unhealthy it could be. Outwardly I was a friendly, outgoing,
and caring
person. Inwardly I was in much emotional pain. The confusing part was
that I
felt I was being ‘loving’ in the midst of merging. It started when I
met
someone. I could often sense their needs and believed it was my job to
take
care of them—sort of fill them where they were empty and love the
places they
didn’t love in themselves. Their needs were always more important than
mine. I
couldn’t even see what my own needs were. If I did, I thought they were
selfish. Often I could see others’ pain and loneliness and felt somehow
I could
help them not feel so alone. But without my boundaries or separating my
energy
field, the result was merging. Often I tried to get people to do what I
thought
was best for them, and it might have been; but at the core was a
neediness on
my part, maybe looking for their love or appreciation so I could feel worthy of being
alive. It became very
clear that when I grounded, centered, and loved myself, I didn’t need
to merge.
And it was so easy. All I had to do was ‘Zip up’ and turn away.”
When one
person merges his or her field with another’s, the
end result is that both people are hampered in living their lives.
Sometimes
when someone wants a spouse or a child to behave differently, he or she
may try
to control the situation by unconsciously merging.
One
mother wrote to me about her experience with her
daughter as she learned to stop merging: “I
felt as though my daughter was a
reflection of me. If she wasn’t good or had failed, I had failed as a
mother.
This was obviously tied to my ego. When I let go and let her be her own
person,
all the arguments vanished. Yes, sometimes she failed, but that was her
problem, and I still was a good mother.”
Another
reformed “merger” commented on her relationship with
her stepdaughter: “I had felt a constant
power struggle for rule of the house and for her father’s alliance. I
kept
getting hooked, trying to make things right in a no-win situation. Only
after I
‘zipped up’ and turned away did I have peace. The power struggles were
still
there, it’s just that I could weather them.”
I
have also observed the unhealthy merging dynamic in the
workplace and between health care practitioner and patient. As we
become a more
enlightened society with more awareness of energy fields, all health
care
practitioners, and therapists in particular, should be trained to
recognize
this phenomenon so that they neither instigate nor allow a merger with
the
field of a patient.
A
client who learned this firsthand wrote the following: “The
relationship with my therapist was very
tricky. He was my rescuer and I tried to be his perfect, over-achieving
patient. He was thrilled with my progress, but after many years, we
reached a
plateau. According to him, I needed to take one more step, re-live my
childhood
traumas in his presence, and rewrite the script together. It sounded
good, but
something didn’t feel right; I felt he was in love with me and couldn’t
let me
go. But from his point of view, it was my unconscious stopping me from
complete
healing. From my view, I was way too dependent on him and asked Deena
for help.
She said we were both merged. I was able to ‘zip up’ and she talked to
him
telepathically (on a level that is not conscious). He really was not
letting
go. I had an excruciating in-person conversation with him, but I kept
my
resolve and it made me stronger. Then I was able to move on and end the
relationship.”
One
place to suspect merging is in a relationship where one
frequently has arguments. Often, when the merging dynamic has ended,
and each
person stays centered in his or her own field, the relationship becomes
better.
It is not a panacea for all relationships, but in order for a
relationship to
be healthy, both people must stay in their own separate energy field.
After
learning to not merge with her husband, one client
wrote: “It was my second marriage and I
felt desperate that if this relationship failed, I’d be a total
failure. I felt
so worthless and ashamed when we didn’t get along. I felt so
responsible to set
an example of a good marriage for all our children. It couldn’t fail
and I’d
force it to work. I felt at the edge of an empty canyon. I kept trying
to talk
things through even when getting nowhere. I felt rootless. In this last
year,
since I’ve been mostly ‘zipped up,’ I’m so much more at peace. The most
difficult part was accepting that my husband might not want to change,
ever.
That was heartbreaking, but Deena helped me realize I was not alone,
and the
essential thing was my own internal peace. ‘Zipping up’ is how I get
there.”
It
is possible for more than two people to merge together. I
sometimes see that clients who have merging issues have grown up in a
family
where the various energy fields are merged together in one unhealthy
clump.
This is what they know, and so they themselves merge or marry “mergers.”
When
I asked a former “merger” how she felt being merged,
she responded: “Unsteady physically,
obsessive thinking about what was going on with the other, panicky,
playing out
scenarios of ‘what if,’ often angry, but feeling trapped and powerless.
Sometimes I felt ‘in love,’ sometimes I felt like a small child who
couldn’t
speak.”
When
two or more people are merged, it makes it less likely
that any individual is going to do his or her own personal emotional
homework.
That doesn’t guarantee that if you unmerge from an overweight spouse he
or she
will suddenly cease to eat lunch at Pizza Hut. But it does increase the
likelihood that a person will consider emotional change. While merged,
no one
can really tell who is who.
A Bedtime Story
I
had worked with Sheila previously concerning matters of
self-love and self-esteem. She had learned grounding and had begun
opening her
heart to herself. This was an important foundation for what was needed
in the
healing she then requested for her nine-year-old son, Nathan.
The
first seven years of Nathan’s life were spent in a
one-room cabin, and he was accustomed to sleeping in the same room as
his
parents. Sheila wrote that shortly before they moved to a larger home,
it
appeared to her that Nathan began to fear the dark and to fear his
mother going
to sleep before he did. She felt that sleep-aways from home were
traumatic for
him. After the move to a larger place, Nathan had his own room but
continued to
sleep in a bed beside his mother. It seemed to her that he continued to
panic
if he were not the first one to fall asleep, or at least fall asleep
before his
mother.
As
I looked at the energy fields of Sheila and Nathan, I saw
that Sheila’s energy was merged in with Nathan’s and that it was very
unhealthy
for both parties. I could see it was important that Sheila separate her
field
from her son’s, and I gave her the “Zip Up” exercise to do. Very
quickly, she
was able to perform it successfully and separate her field from
Nathan’s during
the day. I knew, however, that there was no way she could keep that up
at night
with Nathan sleeping in a bed right next to hers. And I could see that
Sheila’s
husband was not thrilled about the sleeping arrangements either. (This
does not
mean that married couples who have overlapping problems need to sleep
separately in order to unmerge. This particular situation with mother
and son
required a physical separation.)
To
me it looked critical that Sheila move Nathan into his own
room at night, and that she do it in a very matter-of-fact way. I
believed that
with the separation of energy fields, he would no longer panic.
At
first Sheila was reluctant and she simply moved Nathan’s
bed further away in the same room. I saw this didn’t change the energy
dynamic
and that she still overlapped fields with him at night. I became
adamant that
she not waste another minute in getting him in his own room. Again, I
believed
that if she felt it were no big deal, moving Nathan to separate
sleeping
quarters should be fine.
To
Sheila’s astonishment and relief, the whole move of
Nathan to his own bedroom for sleeping took place without trauma at
all. Once
she understood the energy dynamic and took steps to remedy the
situation, she
was able to change the physical logistics without much ado. She sent me
an
email shortly after saying:
"Nathan sure has
responded positively to this healing. Not only is he feeling really
good in his
own room—it’s like a revelation…Last night he woke up about 2:00 a.m.
and
called out for me, stating that he was scared. I walked over to his
bed, gave
him a kiss, and told him I was going back to bed and would be in my
room if he
needed me...and he went right back to sleep! And this is the only
incident of any
fear. He hasn't mentioned feeling afraid—which was practically a
nightly ritual
before—when he prepared for sleep."
She
wrote again later that Nathan now looked forward to
bedtime in his own room and she was amazed at how effortless the change
had been
once she unmerged with his energy field. Previously she found Nathan
completely
resistant to sleeping in his own room.
The
follow-up for a healing like this involves being sure
that the self-esteem of the person who has learned not to merge is
sufficiently
in place. Sometimes when one makes a change like this, there is a
tendency to
feel guilty about not having done what was needed earlier. There might
be worry
about having caused harm once someone realizes how different the energy
dynamic
between two people can be when energy fields are separate. The
understanding
needs to be that we do the best we know to do in the moment, and when
we know
better, we do better.
The “Zip-Up” Exercise
This
is a very simple exercise,
and so far it has been like magic for a number of clients who needed to
separate their energy fields from others. The exercise is the same
regardless
of whether the person doing it has been actively merging into others or
someone
has been merging into him or her. It only takes one party to end the
dynamic.
Of course, if both parties are open and understanding of what needs to
happen,
it’s terrific for everyone involved to perform the “Zip-Up.” But if you
are
being merged into by someone else in a situation where you can’t say
anything,
you will not be a victim. You can prevent the merge from your end alone.
Visualize
you and the other
person facing in opposite directions (away from each other). This
visualization
is done within your own mind. There is no “out there.” Each of you has
on a
body suit that zips up above your heads. Zip up the suits and walk away
in
opposite directions. Repeat as needed. Most people feel the difference
and the
relief is so evident that they learn quickly to remain in their own
field.
Copyright July,
2006 by Deena Zalkind Spear