Overcoming Long-standing, Recurrent Painful Patterns

Written by Radhule Weininger

Personal hang-ups and over-reactions can occasionally throw us for a loss and even sabotage important relationships and projects. They often escape a person’s understanding and control, and force them to endure their problems, leaving them increasingly insecure. My own long-standing painful patterns, which I’ve had since childhood, inspired me to become a clinical psychologist. I hoped to find a way through for myself and for my patients. Psychotherapy as well as mindfulness, compassion, and awake awareness meditation practices have helped me during the last four decades to find a measure of peace and freedom.

I found that working with painful patterns is especially necessary in these times, as many of our old painful patterns are getting triggered by current difficult circumstances in our country and world. Uncertainty, trauma, danger, and divisiveness are frequently unearthing our own woundedness and fears.

I have come to call these constellations LRPPs (say aloud: lurps), or Long-standing, Recurrent, Painful Patterns of hurt. LRPPs express themselves as long-standing patterns relating to difficulties. A person’ early experiences, especially the painful ones, predispose them to a heightened sensitivity to certain problems and to reacting to those problems in self-defeating ways. Being insecure and self-preoccupied in this way, keeps people from fulfilling their purpose and from applying themselves meaningfully. 

In my work as a psychologist and meditation teacher, I have witnessed these patterns of heartbreak and pain. The psychoanalyst C. G. Jung called this kind of hurtful configuration a complex—a core pattern of emotions, perceptions, and wishes originating in early life and organized around a common theme. In Buddhist psychology, the Sanskrit word for this ancient formation is samskara—a psychological or karmic impression left in the deeper structure of a person’s psyche by a behavior, experience, or intention. 

Over the years I have learned that when I bring awareness, understanding, and choice to such recurring, painful challenges, these obstacles can become opportunities. My own LRPPs have been a doorway to a new kind of wisdom, to an opening of the heart. By looking at their own old wounds—by identifying them, taking them on, and addressing them—a person can all find healing and meaning. 

Drawing on Buddhism and Western psychology, I have experimented to discover which practices and approaches are particularly helpful in loosening the grip of LRPPs. Since I began studying mindfulness in a Sri Lankan monastery in 1980, my practice has expanded and transformed. In addition to a mindfulness that looks at the moment-by-moment aspects of what is happening, I introduce a particular practice of mindfulness that is rooted in the limitless, knowing field of effortless awareness. I call this practice Deep Mindfulness. It is especially helpful in freeing us from the tenacious, contracted quality of these primal entanglements. 

In the posts to come, I will introduce what LRPPs are and how we can understand their nature. Then I explain how trauma sits at the core of a LRPP and what trauma does to our body, heart, and soul. Next, I explore why it is that we are prone to repeat these hurtful patterns. I will explore the nature of awareness, as awareness leads to choose, which then allows us to change. Understanding our LRPPs leads to compassion. The more deeply we understand our inner workings, the greater the wisdom and tenderness is we develop, both of which are necessary for healing. 

In 12 steps, I introduce several practices that allows a person to gradually free themselves from the claws of a LRPP. At first, a person needs to learn about how to recognize that they have been “LRPPed.” With self-compassion they can look at themselves honestly, while compassion for others and forgiveness can help us untangle difficulties in the relationship with another person. Practices around intention give a person perspective and vision. 

Learning to work through being triggered allows a person to stay present, even when they feel an urge to react. Being able to feel deeply into grief and sorrow, rather than trying to avoid or push away painful feelings helps a person to resolve their LRPPs. Engaging in service allows a person to transcend entanglement and agony, and to regain their confidence and trust in themselves. These twelve steps and 35 practices help those who have felt discouraged, paralyzed, and filled with self-loathing, when finding themselves repeatedly entangled in such pain-loops. Then freedom becomes possible.

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C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, vol. 8 of Collected Works of C.G. Jung, trans. R. F. C. Hull (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1969).

Bessel Van der Kolk, The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma (New York: Penguin Books, 2015). 

Jack Kornfield, The Wise Heart: A Guide to the Universal Teachings of Buddhist Psychology (New York: Bantam Books, 2008), 

Daniel Brown, keynote, 2017 Positive Peace Conference, October 31, 2017, YouTube video, 25:04, www.youtube.com/ watch=72C2PRKZ3oo.

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Why Choosing Pain May Be a Key to a Meaningful Life

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LRPPs and the Holidays: How old Painful Patterns re-emerge in Times of Stress