Who we are, or at least who we think we are, rests in large part upon the walls that we have built inside ourselves. These walls are our self-defined limits, constraints on our own potential put that we inflict on ourselves.
We're not really aware of that when we build them, though… we build them for other reasons, not even recognizing how much we are limiting ourselves. Eventually we even forget that there is a wall that we built… we just perceive it as part of our natural environment, something that has always been there.
We build these walls to shelter our inner, vulnerable self. We build them to provide safety, safety from pain, safety from risk. We build them to keep others out, so that they can't see our weaknesses.
Unfortunately, they don't truly work the way we intend. They block pain… but only from our conscious mind. Our subconscious mind still feels it, and reacts to it… we just don't know where that reaction originates. Since we don't know why we do something, we can't control it… we can't fix the cause if we don't know what it is.
It does protect us from risk, but when building our walls we seldom consider the fact that reward is generally closely related to risk, meaning that if we experience no risk, we experience no reward. If we did consider it, we might be less likely to build them… knowing that we are limiting our future potential.
Walls also keep others away… but they do so by walling your self off from the world. As you build more walls, the part of the world that you can see keeps shrinking. Eventually, if you build enough, you can't see anything but your self… and that's an awfully lonely place to be.
When people are in prison for a long time… they become "institutionalized", used to walls around you all the time and strict limits on their potential. When they get out, they are uncomfortable and disoriented. The outside world is such a chaotic place, filled with so much activity.
Mental walls work the same way… you are, essentially, building your own prison. As you spend more time in your prison, you become more comfortable with your limits, with your smaller version of the world, and the world outside your prison seems more and more scary.
That, in turn, makes you build your walls thicker and higher, to keep that world away. Sometimes something comes along, or more to the point someone, that makes you open your walls a little bit. You let them inside the outer walls of your prison, to continue our analogy, but you don't let them past the visitor area. This could be a spouse or child, or even a true friend.
If that person hurts you, which is essentially a given when you are around someone enough, that can reinforce your fear, and cause you to push them back outside your outer walls, which you then proceed to build yet higher. This walls you in even further away from any opportunities in the outside world, in fear that they might turn out to bring pain.
Within your own prison, there is no parole, and you are serving a life sentence. The only way out, long term, is to break down the walls that make up the prison.
This is a very uncomfortable thought for many, perhaps most, people. That's because they look at it as all or nothing… essentially you don't change anything, or you have to let go of all your walls.
Fortunately, it doesn't have to be that way. In fact, if you attempt to do it that way, you're very likely to fail to make your freedom permanent. It's like digging a tunnel to escape your prison… you may escape, but if they catch you, they'll put you back inside, in a different cell, probably one that's much harder to escape.
You can, however, break down your walls a little bit at a time. You can make the conscious decision to tear down individual walls, releasing individual pains and fears. When you release them, you'll have to face them, but once you face them and accept them, they lose their power and depart.
As each wall crumbles, you grow stronger… less of your time and energy is spent maintaining your prison, which leaves more available for tearing down more walls, and reaching for outside opportunities.
That effect snowballs, too… as you break down each wall, it adds to the energy you have available to break down the next. That makes it easier and easier to do… you build up momentum, and after a while you may find that some walls are falling apart on their own, without you even having to make a conscious effort.
The sense of openness and freedom that you experience as you do this can be both exhilarating and uncomfortable. The strength of those feelings is directly related to how fast you're moving in tearing down the walls… that's why I recommend that you start slowly: you can find a speed where the change is slow enough for you to handle.
Each wall that you break down is one less restriction on your self, one less limit to your potential. Even very early in the process you can feel this, and it is often the motivation to continue.
There's nothing like that first sight of the outside world, that moment when you can see just how much potential you really have. It's scary, exhilarating, and powerful, like the moment on a roller coaster when you're just starting a free fall.
If it doesn't scare you back inside your prison, though, the world is out there for you to conquer.









March 22, 2010
I hope you cited the album “the wall” by Pink Floyd, because what you have just described is the premise of the album
August 22, 2011
Give us some examples. Or give me examples. Tell us about these walls. I’ve been told time and time again that I’m tense. That I look tense. And when you talk about walls it confuses me. I see a wall or two at most. Maybe I’m not only tense, but dense. Could you please reply to me?
August 22, 2011
I sent you an email with some examples… essentially our walls are the limits that we put on ourselves, where we don’t want to go because it’s too painful, or too potentially painful. It might be for fear of rejection (or from past actual rejections), it might be from fear of “not being good enough”, or it may be from actual pain… someone close to you that you lost, maybe, or if you happened to be adopted and feel the pain of feeling like you were abandoned by your birth parents. Walls can cause you to turn away from things that aren’t even directly involved in the origin of the pain, like having lost someone close keeping you from allowing anyone else close, or having a painful experience with your parents keeping you from wanting to be a parent.
It’s really hard to break down your walls, as they often cause you discomfort for even thinking of their existence, let alone actually confronting them and their source. The bigger the wall, the more discomfort, but the more you gain for breaking it down.
August 25, 2011
What I dont understand is how to break these walls. I have social anxiety and freeze up around new people or when im publicly speaking. How do I let other people in and ease my stage fright? Do I mentally visualize the walls slowly being torn down?
August 25, 2011
Generally the best way to break them down is to take a few minutes of quiet time to figure out WHY you have that wall… all walls have a cause. Once you know why you have the wall, you can address the cause. If, for example, you have a wall to keep people out, you may look at it, really look at it, and see that it’s there because someone that you were very close to when you were young hurt you (intentionally, unintentionally, or even something like dying). That can cause you to have a fear that anyone you let that close will hurt you, which causes you to build a wall to keep that from happening.
All walls, honestly, boil down to being afraid that something will happen. The specific wall is determined by what that thing is, and why you are afraid it will happen.
Walls are not something that simply vanishes overnight, usually, although it is possible to have a breakthrough where that happens. It usually takes weeks, months, even years to completely destroy a major wall.
Does that help?
August 27, 2011
yes definitely thank you for your help.