Rishika Singh, LCSW on Jun 07, 2022 in Mood and Feelings
At times in life, we experience events that are so difficult that accepting them may seem nearly impossible. In other instances, it may be more day-to-day frustrations that we cannot come to terms with. There may be no justification for the things in life that cause us pain. We may wish things happened differently. We may not deserve them. Some things don't feel fair at all.
To radically accept is to wholly and completely see reality for what it is. It is to acknowledge the past and present as facts and stop fighting what cannot be changed.
The idea of radical acceptance has roots in Buddhism, which posits that letting go of want and desire can free us from suffering. The term was coined by Marsha Linehan (the creator of Dialectical Behavior Therapy) after time in a monastery as a strategy for tolerating distress coming to terms with pain as an inevitable part of life.
Radical acceptance is most useful in situations where we do not like the circumstances but for one reason or another do not have a choice in the matter. For example, when feeling unhappy with someone else’s choices or behavior, we cannot control others. Alternatively, when wishing for things to have happened differently in the past, what has already happened cannot be changed.
While there will be times when we have no control over the things that cause us pain, our reactions to that pain can prolong our suffering. Specifically, by not accepting things in life that we cannot change, we attach to that pain and prolong our suffering.
To move forward and to make progress, we must be able to make rational choices that are grounded in the reality of how things are.
A simple example: You lose your phone and retrace your steps to look for it but do not find it. You go on to look for it in the same places over and over again. By radically accepting that it is not there, you are made free to move forward and do what you need to do next. You could look somewhere else, borrow another person's phone, look into replacing it. Until we accept the facts, however, we are left stuck.
Acceptance does not mean we approve of things or that we must become passive and allow anything that is handed to us.
For example, in a relationship involving abuse: Radical acceptance is not accepting being abused. Denial can look like wishing your partner was different ("He shouldn't be this way") or that things had happened differently ("That shouldn't have happened"). Accepting the truth of the situation ("He is like this; that is what happened") is the first step in moving forward. Rather than being a passive act, acceptance can empower us to change what is in our control.