Your Tor-Mentors: God's Gift to You at Thanksgiving
Dear Souls and Hearts Member,
Thanksgiving is again upon us -- the annual American holiday famous for family reunions, turkey feasts, televised football and backyard pick-up games, the Macy’s parade, afternoon naps and pumpkin pie. A day specifically set aside for giving thanks to God for all the good things in our lives.
This holiday brings our families together from near and far, a day when friends and neighbors break bread together. This annual celebration with its history and tradition also comes complete with all the ingredients for a total ‘interior disaster.’
For mixed in with the cranberries and the stuffing comes a host of people converging for the festivities. We encounter others in close quarters with whom we don’t relate regularly. With good reasons. Some of these people simply torment us with their challenging personalities, habits, and mannerisms. There are guests at the table who might be quite welcome at the gathering, but aren’t really welcome in our hearts, and with whom we aren’t really interested in nurturing a relationship beyond the casual holiday niceties.
The cast of characters
Let’s be real. For many of us, the excitement of this holiday is tinged with anticipation of being in close contact for extended periods of time with people who just rub us the wrong way.
Let’s take a look at a stereotypical lineup for tomorrow’s feast:
Backstage preparations
A successful Thanksgiving feast requires much planning and careful attention to detail. In a similar way, our interior preparations for this upcoming celebration to be spent in the company of our own particular ‘cast of characters’ can pay off in big ways.
It’s likely that some of the people we’ll encounter at our gatherings tomorrow are prime examples of what Internal Family Systems founder Richard Schwartz calls “tor-mentors.”
Richard Schwartz is not a Christian, but his description of tor-mentors captures how they can be a gift to us. He writes in his essay, The Larger Self that:
…I’ve tried to let my most disturbing clients become my best teachers. They’re my tormentors – by tormenting they mentor me because they trigger key wounds and defenses that I need to heal. Also, they present ample opportunities for me to see what happens when I don’t take the bait and, instead, remain Self-led.
Alicia Dabney in her article Tormentors or Just Mentors? How IFS Therapy can Help you Discover The Gift that Keeps on Giving defines tor-mentors as “individuals who torment us but also teach us about what is needed to heal. Tor-mentors can be among our most valuable teachers, for they make us aware of what needs our loving attention.”
Take a minute and envision the person (or persons) most likely to be your key tormentor(s) as you celebrate Thanksgiving. Let’s prepare for the interior, hidden work that will enable you to be truly loving toward your tormentors from the inside out not just at this holiday, but every day.
Tormentors as PIECES in our lives
Our tor-mentors are PIECES in our lives. PIECES, an acronym that I introduced to you on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving last year in the weekly reflection Thanksgiving: Skin-Deep vs. Profound, refers to all that we find difficult, challenging, annoying, or otherwise unpleasant and disagreeable to us.
PIECES stands for:
Persons – My family members, neighbors, coworkers, friends, all the people I am in contact with – and this includes my tor-mentors. In particular the “P” in PIECES references certain parts of the person that I find trying or problematic.
Institutions – My school, the company I work for, the Church, my parish, professional, social and fraternal organizations, etc.
Events – The things that happen in my life, and in the lives of those near to me.
Circumstances – Current conditions, conditions, states of affairs and factors in my environment that impact my life and welfare, and the lives and welfare of those around me.
Experiences – What I perceive with my senses, and my internal reactions. These include my emotions, thoughts, impulses, desires, attitudes, perceptions, memories, temptations, pain, body sensations, distress, psychological symptoms and any other subjective happenings within my psyche, soul, or body.
Systems – Integrated networks of interrelated members who interact in a larger whole, such as my family, my friend groups, social clubs, all of which may not be formal institutions.
Schwartz see these “tormentors” as giving him a gift – the gift of mentorship. The gift of revealing his wounds and his maladaptive ways of interpersonal responding. The gift of providing a “living laboratory” to try new, more attuned, more loving ways of relating, from a recollected place, from an open heart.
Dabney adds to Schwartz’s list the gift of calling to our attention to what needs love and healing within us: The holidays may bring us together with these very tor-mentors who trigger us in some way, whether family or others with whom we have a difficult history. Our family members have a unique way of activating us, wounding us, and challenging us.
To be clear, the understanding of tor-mentors I’m sharing here does not in any way imply that they are intentionally activating us for some good cause or with good intentions or for our greater good. They may be ambivalent; they may be self-absorbed or have psychological, emotional or developmental challenges. Or they may be acting out of fear or self-protection. They might even be motivated by malice. In any event, our tor-mentors can only do what they do within God’s permissive will – and God permits their actions only to draw greater good from those actions, greater good than if the actions were not permitted.
Some questions to consider
Alternatives to offending or defending
Dabney writes that: It can be common to direct our energy and attention out toward our tor-mentors or to withdraw without taking the time to get curious about what is happening for us. However, it is in these moments that, instead of fighting or fleeing, we have the opportunity to pause and then make a U-turn inside toward what is hurting to ask:
To these I would add.
Often what makes a person a tor-mentor is the experience or the assumption that he or she is not meeting our attachment or integrity needs or is hurting or even harming us in some way. This can lead us to focus excessively on the other to the neglect of our own internal experience – and miss the gift.
The U-Turn in Internal Family Systems is word coined by Richard Schwartz to describe the process of turning one’s attention away from others and inward toward oneself when one feels the need for validation or affirmation. It is in the U-turn that we are more likely to discover the gift from our tor-mentor.
Loving tor-mentors
As difficult as it might seem for some of our parts to believe, Romans 8:28 hold true, even in our interactions with our tor-mentors: We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.
In my November 30, 2022 weekly reflection titled How and Why We Reject God’s Providence, I argued that:
In my experience, the primary difference between Catholics who live lives of profound peace, joy, security, a deep spiritual childhood, with a sense of awe and wonder from those who do not boils down to one primary factor and that one factor is this:
The degree to which you sense God’s Providence in everything that happens in your life throughout your whole being, in all your parts.
This is the determining factor for a deep sense of both spiritual and emotional well-being. This is the most obvious determinant that shakes out Catholics along the spectrum of wellness: How integrated is Romans 8:28 into all your experience and being?
How integrated is the idea that your tor-mentor might be a gift to you?
If we can make space for internal reflection and learn to remain more self-led even in the most complicated and chaotic PIECES of our lives and learn to see our tor-mentors as gifts from God, we will truly have a reason for giving thanks.
Invite St. Therese of Lisieux to your inner reflections on your tor-mentors, and carry her words with you into your holiday celebrations:
Everything is a grace, everything is the direct effect of our Father's love - difficulties, contradictions, humiliations, all the soul's miseries, her burdens, her needs - everything, because through them, she learns humility, realizes her weakness. Everything is a grace because everything is God's gift. Whatever be the character of life or its unexpected events - to the heart that loves, all is well. [From St. Therese of Lisieux: Her Last Conversations].
May your Thanksgiving be truly well and good.
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IIC episode 126 just released this week
Last Monday, 83-minute episode 126 of the Interior Integration for Catholics podcast released, and it is titled Borderline "Personalities": Your Questions Answered by Dr. Greg Bottaro. In this episode, my guest Dr. Greg Bottaro of the CatholicPsych Institute shares with us the most important thing he wants us to remember about borderline personality dynamics, the things that Catholics and non-Catholics most often misunderstand about borderline presentations, and his takeaways about borderline "personalities." We then open the floor to these questions from our live audience:
Episode 127 will release on December 4, and be all about understanding borderline “personality” from a parts and systems perspective, informed by Internal Family Systems. And register here to join Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Dr. Gerry Crete and Dr. Peter on Zoom on Wednesday evening, December 13, 2023 from 7:30 to 9:00 PM Eastern time for IIC episode 128 titled "Relating well with family members with 'borderline' dynamics." Dr. Gerry and I will have a 15 to 20-minute conversation followed by a Q&A with our live audience.
Chris Stefanick and me…
Just yesterday, Chris released the first video we’ve done together on The Chris Stefanick Catholic Show, a 34-minute episode titled How to Deal With a Narcissist with Dr. Peter Malinoski. Chris is a very engaging host, and it was a pleasure to record with him. The audio version will soon be out on his audio podcast.
More of our resources on narcissistic personality styles can be found in these IIC podcast episodes.
A warm welcome to all of you who may have just found out about Souls and Hearts through Chris Stefanick.
Fr. Boniface Hicks and Matt Fradd discuss IFS and Dr. Gerry on Pints with Aquinas
Among many other topics in their wide-ranging interview from last week titled Father Boniface Gives Matt Spiritual Direction For 3 Hours, Matt and Fr. Boniface discuss Internal Family Systems approaches and Matt compliments our Souls and Hearts co-founder Dr. Gerry in a sweet and kind commentary at the 1:05 mark. Check out that episode, there’s a wealth of information and perspective in their exchange. The audio only is here.
Be With the Word for the feast of Christ the King
Join Dr. Gerry and me, Dr. Peter, for our 47-minute episode titled Be The Best Sheep You Can Be where we discuss how our fallen human natures tend to want to be more like “goats” than “sheep” and what we need to do to be more docile to the will of God. The readings for the Mass are here.
The Resilient Catholics Community is reopening in 9 days
It only happens twice per year… The RCC is reopening from December 1 to 31, 2023 for new applications for our St. Francis Xavier cohort. The RCC is Souls and Hearts’ main human formation program, where our members do their most focused work to shore up the natural foundations for their spiritual lives.
You are invited to join more than 200 other pilgrims on our journey to releasing the natural constraints that hold us back from a deeper intimacy with God our Father and Mary our Mother, to know that we are their beloved little sons and daughters, and thus be empowered to share that love with others.
So many spiritual problems are actually spiritual consequences of human formation issues. As St. John Paul II noted, all formation is based on human formation, including spiritual, pastoral and intellectual formation (see PDV, 43,44). Why? Because as St. Thomas Aquinas said, “Grace perfects nature; it does not destroy it.” And grace needs our nature, our human nature, to perfect.
In the RCC, we are seeking to perfect our human natures in a way that is gentle, attuned, and informed by the best of psychology and secular resources but also, first and foremost, grounded in the perennial truths of the Catholic Faith. And we journey together, in companies of nine people, with two companions.
If you these weekly reflections speak to you, if the Interior Integration for Catholics podcast makes so much sense to you, and especially if you resonate with the IIC experiential exercises I offer in episodes 93, 100, 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 111, 117, and 121, then the RCC may be a great fit for you.
Much more information is on our RCC landing page. Find out even more on the evening of Friday, December 1, 2023, from 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM Eastern Time when RCC Lead Navigator Marion Moreland and I will offer you a brief live Zoom presentation on the RCC and spend most of that time answering your questions along with some of our veteran RCC members. Use this registration link to sign up and get details for that Zoom meeting. Also know that you are welcome to call me on my cell – 317.567.9594 – with any questions you may have about joining the RCC.
Dr. Gerry’s book available in 55 days!
Speaking of Matt Fradd, check out his endorsement for Dr. Gerry’s book, Litanies of the Heart: Relieving Post-Traumatic Stress and Calming Anxiety through Healing Our Parts, which is available for pre-order now, and will be released on January 16, 2024. Matt Fradd said: Litanies of the Heart provides innovative approaches linking Christian meditation and psychology that will help the broken find comfort, consolation, and healing for their wounds. Check out dozens of other endorsements here, and you can pre-order as well.
Share, share, share…
Please share this weekly reflection with anyone you feel might benefit from it. I so appreciated it when our readers take the time to give a gift of our resources to others.
We are thankful for you…
All of us at Souls and Hearts are thankful for you in this season – we are glad you can connect with us. Please pray for us, especially as we make the transition from being a start-up to being a more established organization. I have a lot of work to do on the internal management side to help us accommodate our growth, and the success that you have brought us; sometimes the guy with the machete, making a path in the wilderness needs to learn a whole lot more to be able to put in a four-lane highway. Just sayin’… Please keep me and all our Souls and Hearts staff and members in your prayers. We are praying for you.
Warm regards in Christ and His Mother,
Dr. Peter
P.S. Feel free to brows nearly 100 back issues of our weekly reflection in our archive. Also, check out our resources page for nearly all our resources catalogued by topic in alphabetical order.
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