Monday, June 25, 2012

Bears Will Be Bears


While a bear from the wild may be captured to live in a zoo or such place and a wild bear may be trained to ride a bike in the circus, for the most part, wild bears do what wild bears do.  Several years ago, while trying to emphasize a point about how to deal with some types of difficult people, I began to pick on bears.  I could have easily picked on some other animal, but the bears were an easy target.  I have sometimes heard horrible stories about how a bear somewhere had attacked an innocent hiker.  More frequently we hear stories of how a bear somewhere entered a campground and ate all the campers’ food.  Bears, being bears, do not judge the ethics of their actions.  If you get too close to a mama bear’s cub, she will attack to protect her baby.  If a bear is hungry, it will seek out food and eat whatever is most convenient.  The bear does not judge a camper’s goodness or badness.  The bear does not care how hard it was for the camper to haul the food to the camp site.   The bear is just doing what the bear does.  The first time that a bear eats a camper’s food, the camper may be angry with the bear, but once it has been established that bears are present and that bears will eat your food, one can hardly be angry with the bear if the bear does this again.  This is why campers often have to hang their food in trees or put their food in a boat on a lake away from the camp site.  Bears will do what bears do.  There is nothing that will make the bear change its behavior, so, the camper must change how he manages the camp site and the food.

Like the camper, many of us have people in our lives that do things that hurt or annoy us.  There are people that continually try to rob of the good things in our lives.  Our first instinct is to take these behaviors personally and wonder why we have been singled out.  We may feel anger at the person and may even make attempts to change their terrible ways.  However, if we begin to think of them as bears, we realize that these problematic people are not doing these things “to us” because they do these things to everyone; it is just their nature.  We do not have to take it personally because it is not personal.  The bear is just doing what bears do.  The bear’s behavior is not a judgment on us because the bear is not taking our value into account at all.  Just as campers must find ways to protect their food from the bear’s attacks, we must find ways to alter our ways when we encounter the “bears” in our lives.  There is not one universal way for dealing with “bears”.   Often the way we need to respond is dependent on our situation.  In some cases, doing whatever the equivalent of hanging our food in a tree is sufficient to protect us from the bear’s attack.  However, as some of clients have pointed out, there are times when the bears are so persistent that not camping in those areas at all may be necessary.  One client once heard me talk about the bears and told me that the “bears” in her life had completely ruined “camping” for her altogether.  In this metaphor, we must assume that not “camping” is not an option.  We cannot allow the actions of some bears to ruin our experience in the great outdoors.  We cannot let others rob us of the joy of living.  I know sometimes it feels like we should just avoid every situation where there might be bears, but the reality is that bears are everywhere.  (I saw a news story this week of bears wrestling in a backyard in Florida.  Who knew there were bears in Florida?).  We cannot change the bears, but we sure can change how we relate to them.  The bears in our lives can be crafty and sometimes can trick us into letting our guard down, but when we do, we must look at ourselves and how we were deceived and not at the bear because the deception may be in the “bear’s” nature.  If we are picking on bears, then I would say that we cannot avoid every single animal simply because there are bears in the world.  Not all animals act like the bears.  However, all the animals have their own way of relating.  Some of those animals can be quite docile and affectionate. 

Most of us have some “bears” in our lives.  Some bears live in our own homes with us and some are people at work, school, or church.  Sometimes figuring out the emotional equivalent of “hanging your food in a tree” can be tricky, but it can usually be done.  “Leaving the woods” or never “camping” are rarely the best options.   If you are having difficulty with a “bear” in your life, a good therapist might be helpful.  A good trustworthy friend can often be helpful as well.  Just remember that bears will be bears and you can learn to co-exist with them.  Happy Camping.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the reminder that "bears will be bears." It is easy to forget sometimes, especially when the "bears" are family members that one only seems a couple of times a year.

--Kathleen