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Karen Salmansohn

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Think Like a Lion Tamer About the Hurt in Your Life

Posted: 05/29/2012 7:50 am

Have you recently been through a challenge, disappointment, break up or disloyalty with somebody in your life? If so, it's important after you've been hurt, to take some time to think like a lion tamer about your pain, so you can tame the possibility of more negativity coming back to bite you again!

Here's a quickie true lion tamer story to explain more about what I mean.

Graham Thomas Chipperfield, a star lion tamer with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, got bitten by Sheba, one of his 500-pound lionesses -- when he was merely trying to save Sheba from being hurt by an attacking lion.

It took a while before the mauled Chipperfield healed from his injuries. During this time, Chipperfield made the choice to truly try to understand what happened to him from Sheba's point of view. When Chipperfield mulled over how he got mauled over, he recognized how lions tend to think of the trainer as another lion. And so Chipperfield figured out that when he bounded into the cage to help Sheba -- Sheba unfortunately assumed Chipperfield wanted to join in on the fight, too.

Did Chipperfield sit around blaming Sheba for her inaccurate thinking? No.

Did Chipperfield waste his time cussing out Sheba for hurting him -- when he was only there to help her? No.

Instead, Chipperfield took the time to see the biting from Sheba's perspective -- so he'd make sure this bad event would not happen again. And he made sure to take the time for this analysis before he stepped into any lion's cage ever again.

"Being bitten by a lion is always the trainer's fault," Chipperfield has been known to chipperly say.

Robert "Dusty" Staub, a psychologist who counsels people who have been through failure agrees with Chipperfield philosophy for moving forward. In fact, Staub describes the number one top cause of career and relationship failure as: "not being able to adopt the viewpoint of others."

For this reason many therapists, beginning with bigwigs like Freud, instruct patients in therapy and marital counseling to create a "mimesis," and mirror back the offending party's point of view -- role-playing how they envision the offending party would describe things. The hope: Through "mimesis" the patient might better understand why someone might have emotionally taken a bite out of them -- so they can avoid being emotionally bitten again!

Marriage counselors in particular all strongly recommend divorcees try to understand their role in a divorce before re-marrying. Statistics show if you re-marry before you've clearly seen things from the biter's point of view -- you're re-bounded to fail again! The proof? About half of first marriages end in divorce -- which is high. But for second marriages, the divorce rate increases rather than decreases - to a whopping 60 percent. Meaning? Far too many individuals aren't taking the time to see things from the biter's point of view, before they get back into a marriage -- and thereby wind up getting emotionally re-bitten all over again!

Bounce Back Assignment: Never, ever, ever, ever put yourself back into the same environment -- a marriage, a job, a friendship, a repeat of a similar circumstance -- until you've fully understood things from the biter's point of view. Take the time today to understand your contribution to any bad event you've just been through.

Karen Salmansohn is a best selling author, motivational speaker, designer and artist - with over 1 million books sold - known for creating self help for people who wouldn't be caught dead doing self help - because her messages include a combo of stylishly designed posters, unusual metaphors, and feisty humor. Her new book INSTANT HAPPY (a collection of her viral posters she's become famous for on her popular Facebook fanpage of over 42,000 people) is due out from Random House in Oct. 2012. For more bounce back tools, check out her Oprah.com recommended best selling BOUNCE BACK BOOK at her site: www.notsalmon.com.

For more by Karen Salmansohn, click here.

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Have you recently been through a challenge, disappointment, break up or disloyalty with somebody in your life? If so, it's important after you've been hurt, to take some time to think like a lion tame...
Have you recently been through a challenge, disappointment, break up or disloyalty with somebody in your life? If so, it's important after you've been hurt, to take some time to think like a lion tame...
 
 
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Imago1122
Hurry up, we're dreaming
10:38 PM on 06/04/2012
I've been meaning to read this article for a few days now. I'm glad I did. There's often another point of view other than our own and we ought to remember this fact that's so easy to forget.
08:53 PM on 05/31/2012
Nicely written, Karen. Thank you. Bad things do happen. In fact, occasionally, someone does something bad/cruel/destructive to us on purpose out of spite and in ways that we could not have prevented -- no matter what. However, in many cases in life, especially in the interactive flow of personal relationships, it is spot on that we've accidentally brought on a "bite" by not working to understand someone else's point of view. Empathy is always key.
10:23 AM on 05/29/2012
Karen S: You rock. This wonderful little article is so playfully written and is yet a clever way to get such good information through to the reader, thank you! Loooooved this piece of work.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chiara0
The sleep of reason produces monsters.
08:52 AM on 05/29/2012
That's actually very helpful. Weirdly, many situations can be viewed with a 'biter' on the other side and this knowledge alone can help one navigate prudently. And I'm not talking about the marriage scenario. Useful in business, etc.