The Black Sheep – Is It Okay to Leave Your
Biological Family?

23rd July 2016
By
Lia Love
Guest writer for
Wake Up World
“You did not invent these family
habits. Your family is like mine; for thousands and thousands of years
our families have embraced a dysfunctional lifestyle, passing these
habits as gospel on to subsequent generations. This was not done out of
malice, spite, or hate, but what they knew best.” ~ David
W. Earle
As we heal our family-related
aspects, our personal energy patterns and behaviors change. As we
evolve, awaken and become more aware, our past participation in negative
family patterns emerge, are magnified and become obvious. Our
participation no longer appeals to or nurtures us. This can be
especially so if trauma and drama are the norm within the family.
Because of the connectivity with our
biological family, our healing impacts the family patterns. Our healing
may be a premium invitation for the family to take a look at their own
unhealed and active aspects, especially family-related ones. Yet there
can be resistance to our change, and their healing, if established
familial patterns continue to serve them. Families can become stuck in
ruts, comfortable with the status quo and unwilling to make the
herculean step of getting out of disfunction.
There can come a time when we are unable
to endure negativity from loved ones, or maintain a worn-out dynamic
around those who remain stagnant within it. It is okay to walk away from
the family at that point. Walking away can benefit not only you, but
also the entire family…
The Black Sheep Of The Family:
Generally there is a caretaker or holder
of discharged family drama, and that person is known as a Black Sheep.
That means the energy of family discord is absorbed by that one member,
and as the discord accumulates, that person will become more and more
erratic and unsettled within the family dynamic. Fundamentally different
from the rest of the flock, a black sheep is nominated through unspoken
agreement and morphs into the habitual go-to person for placing the
blame card for whatever befalls the family, either as a whole or
individually.
All of us inherit loads of dysfunction
within the family timelines of our two biological parents, so the black
sheep is not only hosting pre-existing chaotic entanglements (family
timelines) but also excessive patterns of discharged drama. Anyone in
that position will not be having many good days to say the very least.
While the black sheep is living life,
experiencing their own challenges and acting out, the family becomes
accustomed to attacking, judging and placing blame on that one for not
only their own messes but also everything else that comes down the
family pike. Even though the black sheep may not be responsible for
specific events, somehow the family will create a scenario, in their
minds, that will make that one culpable.
These habitual actions mutate into an
ingrained behavioral blueprint where each piece fits perfectly within
another. A customary and solidified chain of reaction to any unpleasant
family event funnels down to the black sheep. And as long as the
reaction chain and concentrated focus remains on the black sheep, as
long as the black sheep is deemed responsible for all ills that befall
the family, there is very little impetus for other family members to
look at their individual selves and disfunction. And that is not a good
thing.
When The Black Sheep Exits…
The shit hits the fan: When a
black sheep heals, exits and no longer participates in the disfunction,
the family has nowhere to go with their trauma/drama/blame games and is
thrown off balance, severely off balance. They do not and literally
cannot, energetically or emotionally, release the reformed black sheep
from blame or recognize the healing that has taken place.
The family structure must be
maintained at all costs and when it can’t, a
point of desperation arrives. The family blueprint enters into the
throes of a death struggle. As long as there was a
scapegoat to kick around and hold responsible for the family drama, they
could turn a blind eye to their own behavior and contributions. When the
healed black sheep has finally had it and exits the disfunctional web,
the remaining family is sitting there with fresh platters of unhealed
stuff and nowhere to serve it. The platters are hot and stinking, and
they are now forced to hold them. The spinning and the upheaval in their
lives begins unfolding in earnest. This is the moment that everyone has
been, unconsciously of course, waiting for.
Now, finally, THEIR healing
can begin. And this can produce all kinds of denial —
denial that the black sheep has healed, denial of their own load of poo
to resolve, denial that someone would actually walk away (imagine that)
from them and stop sharing in the family dysfunction. This can initially
be overwhelming.
Blame shifting: When
the drama pressure again builds in the family and the customary place of
blame (black sheep) is no longer available to absorb that pressure,
another family member becomes the target. That is a family member who is
still in the web and has never received extreme harsh behavior because
the black sheep was always the targeted repository, and that repository
has now disappeared.
The newbie on the receiving end of this
first-time harshness and blame is shocked, has a significant
reaction and spews. Everything goes downhill from there. Soon the entire
family turns on each other because SOMEONE has to be the caretaker and
holder of the family garbage, and no one wants to do it!
The previous caretaker and holder has
long gone so that leaves a vacuum. Nature abhors a vacuum. A family can
really begin to implode when a working part of the machine has been
removed, and the imploding and adjusting can go on for years if the
family terminates the healing cycle that black sheep started.
Stay out of the ‘guilt
zone’: There is absolutely nothing wrong or ‘sinful’ about
walking away from a situation that is continually detrimental no matter
who is involved. When we stay, we only hurt our selves and others. When
we stay, we grant silent permission to prolong and feed negative agendas
and remain fodder for target practice.
We actually do the family a disservice
when we don’t move along. For them to get to a space of serious
self-reflecting and awakening, our presence needs to be withdrawn
otherwise they could experience arrested development for a very long
time.
On the way out… When
we let the door hit us on the butt on the way out, there can be all
kinds of backlash — possibly in the form of name calling and emotional
blackmail. The scene can get ugly and know that that is all part of the
process. Bless the mess and withdraw.
In many cases, estrangement does not
have to be a forever situation. People do heal and change. Change could
take a little while or happen in the blink of an eye and, eventually,
there could be an opportunity to rejoin the family or part of the
family. Sometimes, though, change is not possible, and remaining at a
distance is still ok.
If we decide to walk away from our blood
family, we eventually join with other like-minded people and form our
own families. And these relations can be even stronger than blood. There
is an energetic and emotional strength and cohesion that supersedes any
3D bond.
Sticking around anyway: And
on the other side of the coin, there are some folk who experience deep
levels of healing and remain in a dysfunctional family structure without
being emotionally pulled down – who can be in the midst of high drama,
stay at zero point and sustain a calm, detached and helpful manner..
Being in the detachment field and
energetically deflecting negative bombs takes a lot of skill and
practice. Being able to deflect bombs, with ease and grace, is an
exceedingly helpful attribute that serves all aspects of life. Learning
this skill in a family setting may be the most rigorous training ground
there is. However I do not recommend that setting if you are unable to
hold your own.
This ability, being in detachment,
is part of stepping into our mastery. This is a leading edge tool that
we all must master before we can graduate to the next level. That is
another story.
In the scheme of things, we are all
going at our own pace and doing the best we can in any given moment even
though it may not seem so to an outside observer. So do what you have to
do and know that others do what they have to do. Everyone is perfectly
perfect exactly where they are.

What To Do If You Are The Exiting The Family:
Stay gone until you are
absolutely sure you can handle re-entry. Only you can
know. Nobody but you is in charge of you. And you have the final say
whether you re-enter or not.
You do not have to
communicate. This means not returning phone calls, texts
or any other form of reaching out, especially in the beginning stages of
the walk out. It could get very ugly when the collapse begins because of
the vacuum that your departure will create. Just say no to verbal or
written exchanges.
Watch out for the guilt. You
could have pre-existing guilt from family issues, and the added bonus of
more from the walkout. Remember why you have walked out.
Break patterns. If
there was a family activity or ritual that became a habit within the
family, then stop doing that habit. Don’t take it with you. If you find
you are automatically doing it, notice, stop and substitute that habit
with something else. Create your own rituals and traditions. Now is your
time to finally be authentic. When we break patterns, we change not only
our world but the world around us.
Get help. If you
are still spinning and can’t quite seem to get a grip, seek help. It can
take a while to emotionally decompress from any kind of walkout. And
sometimes a little help can make all the difference in the world.
YOU. HAVE. THE. POWER. You
are the boss of you and from here on out, it’s up to you to determine
exactly what you are willing or unwilling to accept within the family,
if you decide to go back. The importance of this knowing cannot be
emphasized enough before returning.
And, as always, remember — we have
eternity to work it out!
In love with you,
Lia
Copyright © 2016 Wake Up World.
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