interviews
On Forgiveness
An Interview with Dr. Sam Menahem


Tammie: Dr. Menahem,
I want to thank you for taking the time to share your wise and gentle
perspective on what I believe is often a very complicated and difficult issue
for many people, that of forgiveness.
Dr. Menahem: Thank
you, Tammie. It is my pleasure to share my thoughts on this difficult and
highly charged topic. It has been my experience that many people have trouble
letting go of old grudges, even when they realize it is hurting them more than
the other person. Much of my work is centered on helping people to let go and
forgive.
Tammie: What are some
of the most common reasons we don't forgive ourselves?
Dr. Menahem: Most
people are much too hard on themselves. They think they have to do something
great just to be OK. They have bought into our cultural madness of competition
and success. They feel that they are only as good as what they do and how much
money they make from it. If their parents were conditional with their love,
critical and controlling, the problem is even worse. Behavioral perfection is
then substituted for spontaneity and conformity replaces individuality.
Tammie: Why should we
forgive our enemies and why is it important?
Dr. Menahem: Most
people are sensitive to minor slights or hurts. They feel that they would never
be so insensitive and are very critical of others who are insensitive.
Sometimes they are upset because the others are getting away with things they
couldn't do for either personal or societal reasons. We also dislike people
that have qualities we have had to repress. For example, if we have had to
repress our anger, we may dislike angry people. We fear that we may be angry
like them. When we forgive our enemies, we are accepting a variety of ways of
being. We are "letting go" of our fear, anger, guilt and inferiority
feelings and promoting love, joy, peace and interdependency. This heals us
individually- by freeing us to be kinder and more loving. It also heals
interpersonal strife and creates a more peaceful world.
Tammie: Can
forgiveness actually help in healing physical pains?
Dr. Menahem: Yes, it
can heal us physically. When we are being unforgiving we are tense and
stressed, creating powerful hormones that are needed for fight or flight
reactions. Since there is no need to fight or flee, these hormones build up and
create stress in the body, which can result in pain and physical illness. When
we forgive, we relax and the body tends to heal itself naturally.
Tammie: What are the
necessary steps we must take in order to forgive?
Dr. Menahem: First,
we must accept our angry, fearful or guilty feelings. Second, we must release
these feelings willingly. Third, we must affirm our intention to forgive.
Fourth, we must take appropriate actions. Finally, we must be thankful for the
ability to choose forgiveness and peace.
Tammie: Is there any
way we can skip the grieving process?
Dr. Menahem: No. When
we lose someone or something dear to us, it hurts and we must grieve. After a
while, we can affirm our spiritual values of faith, love, forgiveness and unity
and heal the grief.
Tammie: How does
prayer and meditation fit into your practice as a psychologist?
Dr. Menahem: I pray
for and with my patients. I pray that they heal for the highest good of their
soul. I suggest they pray for themselves. I teach them how to pray
psychologically-to affirm rather than plead for things. I teach them to
meditate-harmonizing their consciousness with divine consciousness. I get them
in touch with spiritual feelings of love and peace that come up when fear,
hate, guilt and inferiority are released.
Tammie: Could you
explain what a self-hypnotic trance is and how this can help your
patients?
Dr. Menahem:
Self-hypnosis is a sort of selective awareness that arises when the critical,
conscious part of the mind is interfering with functioning. By relaxing and
turning the criticism off, we are able to release negativity and turn toward
peaceful, loving feelings for oneself and others.
Tammie: What is
spiritual psychology?
Dr. Menahem: I see
people as primarily spiritual beings, temporarily living in a body. The
problems usually seen as psychological like fear, hate, guilt and inferiority
are actually solved by developing spiritual qualities-faith, love, forgiveness
and unity. Spiritual psychology gives people tools to heal their psychological
problems by interacting with the endless source of love and peace-God-or as
some people prefer the "Higher Power."
Tammie: What are some
of the common myths and misunderstandings about spiritual psychology?
Dr. Menahem: First,
some people think it forces religion on people. Actually spiritual psychology
is non-denominational and non-dogmatic. Second, some people feel that it is of
no use to agnostics or atheists. Actually, it helps by releasing toxic
feelings, leaving Spiritual FEELINGS like love and peace to arise naturally.
Third, some people think it rejects non-spiritual forms of therapy. Actually,
it embraces most traditional forms of psychotherapy, while adding metaphysical
and mystical methods-like prayer and meditation.
Tammie: How does one
grow spiritually, is there a step-by-step process for this?
Dr. Menahem: There is
no set formula but the general guidelines call for awareness of problems with
thoughts, feelings and behavior, followed by release of these problems and
replacement of fear, hate, guilt and inferiority with faith, love, forgiveness
and unity with Spirit.
Tammie: What about
those folks who complain that prayer doesn't work for them, do you have any
suggestions for these folks?
Dr. Menahem: Yes,
these folks might want to stop praying to a super-hero God to solve his/her
problems externally. Instead, ask for the awareness of your emotional issues
and help in resolving them internally. Thus, prayer is a process of improving
his/her character, developing spiritual growth instead of material
solutions.
Tammie: Your book is
entitled, "All Your Prayers Are Answered," do you really mean
that or is this just a figure of speech?
Dr. Menahem: I am
speaking of prayer in the widest possible sense as all thoughts and feelings
being "broadcast" into the universe. The Higher Power is not a
powerful person responding with punishment or reward. Rather, the thoughts,
powered by feelings are "answered" according to the law of cause and
effect. These "prayers" are all answered according to this law.
Negative thoughts and feelings will produce problems just as surely as positive
ones produce abundance and love. All of these answered, once recognized are
designed to give us opportunities to move toward positive living. There is
always room for improvement.
Tammie: Do you have
suggestions for effective prayer-ones that will help in obtaining answers and
results that we need versus ones that we want?
Dr. Menahem: First
of all practice getting quiet and centered before you pray. This is a
meditative state where prayers are clearly sent and answers are clearly heard.
Second, pray for character development-greater faith, love, forgiveness and
unity, rather than things-money, health, romance. The things, especially
health, will come naturally as you relax and surrender to the God within.
Third, listen for answers to your questions. Sometimes you will hear inner
thoughts. Sometimes you may just be inspired to behave or feel differently.
Follow the inner directives that lead to peace and love. Ignore directives that
lead to stress, tension and negativity. Fourth, learn to view life as a
learning process. Difficulties are not punishments; they are opportunities to
move toward spiritual growth.
Tammie: What about
those folks who feel that there are just too many people on our planet for God
to listen to each person's individual prayers? Please comment.
Dr. Menahem: God is
not a busy Santa Claus, rewarding good and punishing bad. Nor is God a super
hero saving all damsels in distress. God is not an external being. God dwells
within each person and when asked is an unending source of love, inspiration,
peace and power. The idea that God is too busy to get I involved with
individuals comes from a misunderstanding about what God is and what he can or
can't do. God has a much better idea of what we need than we do. Thus, some of
the answers to prayers seem like punishments. Actually, everything happens for
a reason-our spiritual development.
Tammie: What is the
difference between meditation and prayer?
Dr. Menahem: There
are four kinds of prayer; petition, intercession, adoration and meditation.
When we use the word prayer we think of asking God for something, that is
petition. When we meditate we are simply turning everything over to God and
quieting the mind, allowing whatever happens to just be. It is totally
accepting, peaceful state. It is the highest form of prayer.
Tammie: What is the
distinction between disease and illness and between treatment and
healing?
Dr. Menahem: Disease
is literally a lack of ease in the mind or body. It indicates that we are
disturbed, not quiet, that the body is abnormal in feeling or function. Illness
is a sate of being out of health or sick-symptoms like pain often appear.
Treatment indicates interrupting the disease process by trying to remove or
relieve the visible symptoms. Healing is a holistic endeavor designed to
eliminate the true causes of the illness or disease. The harmony induced by
holistic healing returns a person to a state of health and symptoms
disappear.
Tammie: How can
prayer help depression? Do you also recommend any dietary supplements? What
about prescription medicine?
Dr. Menahem:
Depression is caused initially by repressed anger and guilt along with thoughts
of hopelessness, weakness and despair. If left untreated biochemical changes
occur in the body making psychotherapy much more difficult. Psychotherapy,
prayer and medication (herbal or prescription) work very well together. The
same is true of anxiety, though the prescription drugs for anxiety are very
addictive.
Tammie: Please
comment on your beliefs concerning positive thinking versus negative
thinking.
Dr. Menahem: All true
healing includes a cognitive shift from negative to positive thinking. The
trick is that you cannot apply positive thought like a band-aid while keeping
negative beliefs. You must imaginatively pull the negative thoughts out by the
roots, first. This is done by accepting and releasing the emotion connected
with the negative thought; then replacing the negative belief with a positive
one.
Tammie: Tell us about
the Center For Psychotherapy and Spiritual Growth.
Dr. Menahem: We are a
group of psychotherapists and healers who believe that we are primarily
spiritual beings, having a human experience. We have six therapists, one
chiropractor and one energetic healer. We are located in Fort Lee, New Jersey,
Telephone # 201-944-1164.
Tammie: Where can
your book be purchased and have you written any other books?
Dr. Menahem: My first
book is called, "When Therapy Isn't Enough." The new one is "All Your Prayers Are Answered." Both can be viewed and
purchased through my web site, which also contains sample chapters,
www.drmenahem.com.
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