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7 Things to Do (and Not to Do) When You've Been Betrayed

Posted: Wed 06/27/2012 08:00 AM
Betrayal can be one of life's deepest blows, but everyone has the ability to move forward as long as you're in touch with your core. Read on as Oprah's Lifeclass teacher Deepak Chopra shares what to do (and not do) to heal from the pain of the past. Then, tune in this Sunday for Deepak's insights about finding more spiritual solutions in your life from the footage you didn't see on Oprah's Lifeclass: the Tour.

By Deepak Chopra

After being betrayed, most of us want two things, usually at the same time. We want to wound the person who hurt us—as deeply and as excruciatingly—as we've been wounded, and we want to rise above the situation and offer that person forgiveness. But neither of these tactics work. Wounding words tend to boomerang and make you feel as terrible as the person you wanted to hurt. Forgiveness, especially if halfhearted, tends to come off as condescension.

There are actions, though, that you can take to can heal yourself. Every hurt has its own story, and so does every healing. But we can say this: You can heal yourself when you've filled the hole left behind by a betrayal, and you can heal the other person when you sincerely drop the need for revenge

Remember, the only betrayals that inflict damage are the ones where an intimate bond has been torn. Love makes you merge with another person, able to feel their emotions as keenly as you feel your own. If you have experienced such bonding, you know that it is a kind of higher reality—and when that bond is ripped apart, it's as if you've lost half of yourself

So how can you get out of torment and find yourself again?

Deepak's 7 steps to moving on

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