Validation
Years ago I was visiting a friend who lived on Vancouver Island. He’s wealthy (unlike myself, I was dead broke at the time and hitch hiking through) and had a large beautiful sailboat. One day he invited me to go sailing with him, his wife and kids and a few friends. Their friends included an elderly couple accompanied by a young girl, five or six years old. I found out later that her father had died, her mother worked a lot, and this couple were her grandparents and looked after her much of the time.
I noticed that everyone talked to her ‘like she is a kid’; you know, they used a higher tone of voice, suggested she go play around the boat with the other kids, just spoke very differently to her than they do to each other, in both content and voice. Almost everyone does this, baby-talk kids almost until teen-hood. Whatever that gene is I didn’t inherit it; I speak to kids, and spoke to her, in the usual tone of voice I use even to adults, responding clearly to whatever she said, looking at her with the same steady gaze as when I face any adult I’m speaking with. I do this even during my opening greeting to kids.
Once we were underway sailing, she kept wandering back to me, wherever I was around the sailboat. Kept trying me out, saying a few words, then skipping away to play. She would say things not in a kid-to-another-kid way, but seriously. Testing me subtly each time, to see if I was like this always, or if I was going to change and start dismissing her as a kid. I knew something was ‘up’ but I didn’t know what, didn’t know why she had singled me out, since I had greeted her initially with the same attention I’d greeted everyone else. But she kept returning, so I knew she needed something, had somehow sensed that I might be where she’d find it, and she was taking careful little steps towards it.
Eventually she came and stood beside me for a while, talking, then we sat down together, reclining side by side on the roof of the sailboat while the other people remained fore and aft, doing whatever. (Okay, the limit of my nautical terminology is ‘fore’ and ‘aft’; I do not know if there is a proper nautical term for the ‘roof’ of the sailboat, and I’m not going to go looking it up, so kill me.) Her grandparents and friends, and my friends, would glance at us from time to time, but they kept to themselves, sensing something was ‘happening’ between us.
Sitting there side by side, arms touching, watching the waves and islands pass by, she began talking about things. A little about her dad, about her life with her mom and grandparents, school, being happy and sad sometimes. This little six year old girl was talking calmly, clearly, with a voice as grounded as any wizened adult, about her deepest thoughts and feelings, with me, whom she’d first met in a group of people an hour ago. I hadn’t asked or overtly invited any sharing, she just slid naturally into telling me things. She sensed that, to me, she wasn’t just a kid… she was an entire unique and important being, and I did not treat her like a kid, I treated her in response to whatever she sent me. I just listened, like I would to any adult who had lost a loved one and spontaneously started talking about that event and her life afterwards. I didn’t try to solve anything or advise, I didn’t ask rhetorical questions, I asked only questions whose answers I was truly curious to know. She talked and talked.
And then, that was it. The seriousness left her, she jumped up and skipped to her grandparents and hugged them, then played with the other kids. Along the rest of the voyage she swung by me occasionally with a look or a word, and we were like people who’d known each other for years, even though we didn’t ‘talk’ like that again. After the sailing, in the marina parking lot she started crying because she didn’t want to leave me. It was a surprise, because she hadn’t been ‘hanging around me’ for the rest of the sailing. But she had found a true listener, and that was so important to her that she didn’t want to let go, and after crying she then turned sulky. I said I’d see her tomorrow when her grandparents were bringing her over to play with my friends’ kids again, but she stayed in the same hurt mood. Her grandparents said, “You must remind her of her dad, that’s why she’s being like this.”
But it wasn’t that at all. It was because I listened to her as a unique soul of the universe. I completely validated her as a being, and validated everything she was going through. Her grandparents were kind people and loved her very much, but I could tell they were decidedly ‘old school’ and definitely did not ‘listen’ to kids, past a certain shallow depth.
You know what happened the next day when the little girl came over to my friends’ place where I was staying? Nothing. She played with my friends’ kids, treated me like any other adult, was friendly but not avoiding me nor pointedly coming near either. I’d been what she needed for a little while the previous day, and then she didn’t need it this next day. It was done, she didn’t feel tied to me any more, didn’t need anything else from me, I might just as well have been a tossed-away Barney doll.
In other words, our ‘moment’ was a ringing success. And that is what happens with a lot of problems: the moment you are in the presence of someone who truly validates you, hears deeply what you want to tell them… a huge part of your burden, or at least how it is affecting you… is lifted. You no longer feel so unheard and alone. And you often don’t even need to revisit that person again on the same level. You shared that essence, that moment, where one person selflessly gave what the other person needed, and then you both moved on, to your separate lives.
I never saw her again, nor heard from her. She just needed a brief conversation that apparently she hadn’t felt ‘right’ about having with anyone else to get a certain validation she needed, and something she sensed in me opened it to happening. You can tell your problems to a thousand people, for decades, and still not feel validated. Or you can talk to one person, for twenty minutes with a certain dynamic between you, and feel so intimately heard that you don’t even need to talk about the same things to anyone else, at least in the same way, ever again.
WERE YOU MISSING VALIDATION LONG AGO?
People around you, even good people, may neglect or not know how to validate the importance of you and whatever you’re going through. This is especially common for children; we adults have our adult problems and stresses and it is very easy to downplay the importance of children’s problems and small successes. After all, children haven’t grown up into the real world yet, right? They don’t understand about the large, serious problems of adults and our complex stresses. So even people who do love their children and validate their worthiness, may still not feel it is particularly important to take seriously many other aspects of their children’s experiences.
For most kids, life is pretty normal and they receive average-to-good validation from their parents, teachers, community. And that is all most of us need. Even into adulthood, an ‘average’ amount of validation has probably given you an average-to-good sense of self. But what if it hasn’t? What if a large part of your later problems in life have stemmed from a lack of feeling validated earlier in your life?
I’ve been in contact with someone who is an extreme case of not being validated early in life. She had parents who were both abusive and neglectful to all their children, resulting in her and her siblings suffering from severe ‘failure to thrive’, among other syndromes. She formed a close alliance with only one brother who was very protective of her, and would often sneak to his room and sleep next to him when she was scared or couldn’t sleep. One night, when she was five, she woke up feeling cold; her brother had died in the night, asleep in her arms. She didn’t understand ‘death’, she just tried to wake him, then pulled another blanket over him because he felt so cold, and she waited until morning, hoping he’d wake up.
In the morning when it was discovered, the household became a maelstrom of police and investigators and paramedics. This five-year-old girl was shuffled to the side, nothing was explained. The parents were suspected of poisoning her brother, but that’s another story. She kept wondering what was happening, where her brother was. All this, in full view of neighbors and the media, in an extremely private family where the parents kept everything hidden behind walls. The children were all ordered by their parents to never mention their brother again, not even say his name. The children were never allowed to learn exactly what happened, never allowed to grieve, never had their own trauma validated and helped. To them, their little brother mysteriously died and disappeared and was never allowed to be discussed or mentioned again.
That little girl spent the next couple decades still not being validated or treated as if she were in any way important. Now she is a middle-aged woman… who feels, daily, there isn’t much reason to live, that she has zero value in the world. She hasn’t been able to sleep in a bed for decades, she sleeps (if at all) sitting up on the living room sofa. She has severe attachment issues, untrusting and unable to really attach to anyone or believe they’ll be there for her. She has a handful of severe related syndromes and dysfunctions that have largely immobilized her forward growth and corroded her health. She has never learned how to grieve about things, never grieved for her brother or her childhood… doesn’t even trust herself to grieve, feeling like she has so much grief and rage bottled up inside her for so long, that if she even opens up a tiny crack to let it out, it will uncontrollably explode and destroy both her and those around her.
I want to mention more about her in later chapters. Her lack of validation was an extreme situation and I feel that talking more about it will help others too. Validation of the important things in your early life can directly and massively impact how you respond within situations for the rest of your life. Because those first few early years are when you learn how to deal with things in your mind, when ‘coping tools’ (and lack thereof) become solidly implanted forever. Once anything is missed or learned poorly at this young stage, it can be difficult or impossible to learn later as an adult after habitual responses have been formed down to your deepest level.
ARE YOU MISSING VALIDATION EVEN NOW?
Any neglect to validate you, during your regular daily existence as a child, teen, adult, can be a large part of what leads you to slide so far into your problems. How much would it have helped you if the people around you validated everything important about you, even before your problems arose? How much would it have helped steer you away from even entering your problems? Were you validated while you were beginning to sink into your despairing state, during your drowning times, and afterwards when you’re recovering? Are you feeling validated right now, by the people around you? By yourself?
This failure to validate you is a huge contribution towards incubating your feelings of separation, aloneness, unimportance, being unheard, unloved, especially during the times you are going through difficult things. And that weakened sense of self can contribute to your failure to be strong, clear, skilled, effective in dealing with any and all problems later in life.
Do you have people in your life who will literally stop what they’re doing in order to take a courageous and penetrating look at what you’re saying and how you’re feeling? Who truly try to set aside their opinions, set aside saying the usual caring-but-banal things, and really hear you, make an effort to open themselves to understanding what you’re going through?
To not have someone like that in your life allows a very unhealthy void to grow inside you, a place where you feel unseen and unheard with your problems, at the deepest levels where you NEED to feel seen and heard. Having that unfortunate void allows you to further slip and fade away into feeling your difficulties aren’t that important to anyone. That your life doesn’t really matter to anyone. That you’re weak and empty and powerless. Maybe it allows you to slide down that long slope into believing you don’t even matter to yourself or to the world, that you’re totally alone and totally unable to dig yourself out of whatever hole you’re feeling trapped in.
If you’d had authentic validation along your recent paths, maybe you wouldn’t have arrived at this state of needing to ask for help?
But for this course, we have to let that go. We have to let go of any lack of validation you’ve had up until now. We can’t turn back the clock, we can only move forward with what you do have. You ARE here in this place of asking for help, and if any part of that is due to a lack of validation in your past, we can only begin filling that void from this point on.
Where do we begin? Whether or not your past and recent validations, or lack thereof, have contributed to your present problems… why is ‘Validation’ the first step in this course? What can it do to help, from this moment forward?
BEGIN
Every journey needs a starting point. Even if you’re in the middle of a journey, the rest of your journey still needs the starting point of ‘right now’. So you are always at your eternal starting point, each passing second is the first second of the rest of your life.
Your healing, your growing, your process of extracting yourself out of your problems and building something better inside yourself, is an actual journey. It’s an inner journey that begins in your mind, travels through nerves to affect the rest of your body, and finally radiates outward to affect your circumstances in life. You began this new journey when you began asking for help. And that journey-of-help begins afresh, any time you ask for help again. Even if you asked for help a day or a month ago for the same thing, and thought you were beginning your journey then… you can still ask for help today, in the same way, and begin again. You can keep beginning thousands of times, until eventually you find yourself immersed in the journey rather than feeling like you’re at a beginning.
Until you entirely validate your life, your importance, all the things you are and own, and entirely validate the importance of every part of your problems, you are trying to spring forward from an unsolid starting platform. You are using an unstable mess of life-ingredients to start from. The mess that has overwhelmed you and mired your life down, also creates the shaky ground that you can’t seem to leap ahead from.
You’re trying to clear up your life, but you’re starting from quicksand that doesn’t allow you firm footing upon which to plant your feet and begin your journey. We need to firm up your initial footing, in your mind. How do we do that? WHAT EXACTLY IS VALIDATION!!?
You already know what validation is. Just reading my first story above, about the girl on the sailboat, reminds you entirely of what validation is, without even needing a definition.
THE AMOUNT OF REAL
It’s such a strange, subtle thing, you can’t quite put your finger on it. It’s a very quiet and powerful thing. It’s the greatest gift anyone can give you, even beyond love, and yet most people have no idea how to give it. It’s a little gift from their soul to yours, given quietly, yet it’s so earth-shaking when it happens that even a little bit of it… changes you. Improves you. Strengthens you. Introduces the power of self-ness into your veins.
I was living with a friend for awhile, and his sister was visiting from out of town for a few days. His sister and I knew what each other looked like but had never spoken alone, just in passing with ‘the group’ of her husband, in-laws, brother, etc. One afternoon as I was walking downtown I saw her coming my way, alone. We stopped and said hi and I asked how she was doing. She began letting off a little steam, things weren’t going so well for her. But she was saying things in a brief, blowing-it-off way, eyes darting all over, figuring I’d be like anyone else and say something banal like ‘Yeah, I hear you. Yeah, that’s shitty. Hope that gets better’ and blow it off and say See You Later and then keep walking.
But I just looked at her calmly, while she said these things. Looked at her impatience, her complaining, her attention darting all over the place, her assuming that I’d say something fleeting and that I’d keep on walking. I stood there and looked and listened, with no semblance of wanting to change the subject or walk away. Soon her eyes stopped darting away and looking down; soon she stopped fidgeting; soon she stopped thinking she was going to be blown off. She started relaxing, looking straight at me, directly, calmly, no longer nervously avoiding my eyes. She became so… seen, human, real, important. We stood there on the sidewalk, people moving around us, and she just talked and I just listened, for as long as it took, and it was comfortable and important.
You see, ‘validation’ is another way of saying, “You are real. You exist to me. You matter, right here and right now.” Validation is the ‘amount of real’ you accord to another person and to anything they do and say. We often only half-listen to someone, or we’d rather be somewhere else right now, or we have some filter or biased opinion about what they’re saying, or we consider them ‘less than us’ in some way, or we just aren’t interested, or we’re too busy, or we’re preoccupied, or we’re afraid to hear what they’re saying; there a thousand other reasons why we often don’t just stop, hear, see, give our attention wholly to someone. To do so, actually becomes a great rarity in our lives.
Validation is when someone sends you the ‘vibe’ that they consider you one hundred percent real and important. This might seem like an abstract, spiritual comment, but bear with me because validation is what bequeaths to you the essence of your life, your belonging here, your place in this world, your sense of the importance of your own existence, and your definition of you. Validation is someone else hearing you, or you hearing yourself, on the deepest level. It is someone putting aside their own disbelief, complaining, discomfort, judgments, agreement or disagreement about your issues, and just hearing what your soul is trying to say, hear what is seeping up out of your heart and marrow, even beyond your words. Validation, true validation, is selfless and is the ultimate generosity someone can give to you.
WHO CAN VALIDATE YOU?
A friend of mine was going through a rough period many years ago and tried to commit suicide. Fortunately she was found in time and survived. Shortly afterwards she was talking about her experience to someone she knew, and that person’s only comment was, “Well, a lot of people who attempt suicide just do it to get attention.” My friend was a little shocked at this callous response, but managed to say something that perhaps urged the other person to think about care, rather than about judgement; my friend said, “But if someone needs attention so badly that they’re willing to risk killing themselves to get it… don’t you think you should give them some?”
My friend was reaching out for help, unfortunately via the form of a suicide attempt. And later when she was talking about it to this person, she was again reaching out, to a listener. And what did that listener do? Instead of hearing that my friend had been so despairing that she’d attempted to end her own life, instead of validating my friend’s experience and trying to be caring and helpful in some way… the listener just blew it off, demeaned the entire experience, devalued what my friend was going through, swatted aside what my friend was telling her.
This is an all too common lack of effort and compassion, lack of even trying to understand and validate another human being’s difficulties.
You can’t just talk to someone and expect to feel validated, even from those people closest to you. Because most people are unable to validate you in the ways you need. Just like the little girl in my first story in this chapter, you can sense a ‘vibe’ from people who can validate you. They somehow radiate it outward. And it is rare to stumble across a person who can validate you, so rare that, when you do find them, you want this validation from them almost as much as you want your next breath. It is that powerful.
Most of us make the mistake of seeking validation only from family, friends, other close loved ones, thinking that if they really care for us, then they can validate us. We fall into the trap of wanting validation from those who are most important to us, because their opinion of us is what affects us most. So in a perfect world, those we love and respect most, would be the ones who validate us in the greatest ways. It doesn’t work that way. Yes, the average person receives and gives the average amount of validation through life. But often, that average simply isn’t enough, and it definitely isn’t enough when someone is having more serious problems.
Even if you have the most loving people around you, people who give you a wonderful upbringing, help you feel loved and worthy and strong, they might still be unable to validate you in the ways you need. The world is full of loving parents… who still have children who grow up feeling miserable, worthless, empty, unseen, misunderstood, unrecognized, to the point where they decide they don’t even want to live. If you can grow up feeling that way after having parents who loved you, how much worse is it to have parents who didn’t? Or parents who gave you away? Or parents who died? Or parents who split up?
The person who validates you might not be in the position of anyone you’d normally would think should validate you. Let go of ‘should’. Because we’re all human, and there is no one person who should validate you. Not your mother or father, family or best friends, acquaintances or professionals. Some of them might be that person, and some of them might not. Professionals are human also, and even those in the professional position to validate you will vary – some will be sincere and caring, some will be not so sincere or caring. It’s not the profession, or the person’s closeness to you, that will validate you; it is the person themselves. Who they are, their depth of natural human understanding, what they’ve been through in their own lives, how much they care about even strangers… that is what will validate you.
An elderly lady friend of mine was going through some life problems and decided to see a local well-known therapist. He asked her questions, and she didn’t get much out of the session but figured the first visit was just ‘getting to know’. On the second visit… after a few questions she began to realize something and said, “But… you asked me these exact same questions, in this same order, on my first visit!” This ‘professional listener’ hadn’t really listened, he was doing things by rote, and simply forgot where he was along his rote methods. He wasn’t validating her at all, he was plodding through his same-old, same-old, to collect his paycheck. At least, she said, he looked sheepish and embarrassed about it, and fumbled through some papers and tried to do better, instead of making manipulative excuses to backpedal and cover his butt.
This professional could not validate her, even though he might regret his own inefficiency. He would have to undergo some soul-level life change in order to become a person who can truly validate others. The person I mentioned earlier, whose brother died beside her as a child, she has been to at least a half dozen therapists… and has told me that not one of them could validate her. She said a couple of them even made her feel worse, and a couple were themselves very uneasy in listening to her story. Remember that even professionals may be sincerely well-meaning, but not have the personal depth or life-awareness to be able to validate you on the level you need. If you find one who can, you’ve discovered pure gold.
I am not a professional – at least, not in the way of being certified by any recognized body outside myself – but do you think if people came to me for help, I could ever just ask a bunch of questions from a rote list, and that I could ever let myself forget that I asked the same person all these rote questions last week? It simply could not happen because I am in the moment of validation with each person, at each second, and what happened last visit – or even two minutes ago – is history. What if you need something completely new validated this minute? There is no such thing as following a guide or timeline, when you are in the authentic moment with each person, each visit. To validate you, is to be open to receiving what you are at every changing moment, hearing and acknowledging you with involvement, interest, and care. Not a ‘mental checklist’.
I know that a debate must be made for asking initial questions in order to begin some ‘getting to know’ process, but it must be more intuitive than that. What if you yourself need dire help, and your next meeting with someone – anyone – is the last meeting you’ll have before putting a gun in your mouth or touching a razor to your skin? At each moment, each meeting, that may be the one chance someone has to validate you and possibly help you past your present despair.
I used to miss opportunities as much as anyone else; about fifteen years ago I was working in a coffee shop, and one customer came in as a semi-regular, once every week or two. He was a prominent business owner in town, and successful. He’d leave his beautiful big dog in the back of his pickup truck outside, and my co-worker in the cafe loved that dog and would go out to pet it. One day the man came in and ordered, sat down, and as I placed his coffee on his table he looked at me and asked, “Do you like working here?” His tone of voice was a little different than normal… I noticed this on some level, but it was a busy day and I was tired and harried and I blew him off with some complaining answer about how sometimes it was okay but sometimes like today it was go go go and I was tired and sore and… well, let’s say my answer wasn’t my finest moment.
But something I noticed: the moment I’d begun complaining, he jerked. Literally, his shoulders jerked, he lowered his head, didn’t look at me, stiffened up, didn’t say anything else, withdrew completely into himself. He actually looked physically pained for a sharp moment by what I’d said. I left him and continued with my harried routine, and didn’t think much about the experience right then. I knew something went wrong in our little interaction, some wrongness caused by my answer, but I figured ‘what the heck, it’ll be fine, life’s full of lost moments’, and I carried on with my work.
A week later it was in the newspaper: he’d killed himself. Damn it. Our little moment came back to me. This was a guy in pain, wanting someone, anyone, to say something good to him, bring some kind of positivity, some kind of hope to him, and my complaining answer hurt him so bad that he physically jerked away from it. I was not responsible for his death… but at the same time, damn it I knew his voice was different, I saw the jerk happen, I knew my answer had somehow hurt him, I knew… I knew… even that day I served him, I thought about it after work and felt bad, and decided the next time he came in I’d mention it to him.
But sometimes you only get one chance. I had that one moment to make a difference, and I blew it. It might not have saved him if I’d gone back at that moment and sat down with him and said something sincere. But then again, even back then when I wasn’t this wise, I could still be pretty darn intuitive and I might well have begun some conversation with him that would have made a difference. Might have thrown him some kind of a lifeline. That was my one and only chance to validate something for him.
But I blew that chance. And I vowed I’d never, no matter how harried or miserable I felt in my own circumstances, ever again fail to see, listen to, and obey that feeling, whenever I recognize that someone very obviously needs validation from me. Damn it, damn it. Listen to those moments, and obey, and don’t blow them off.
ACCEPT ONLY TRUE VALIDATION
Validation cannot be faked by the people around you, nor even by professionals. Most people are not able to clearly validate what you are going through. Forgive them. Their lives took a different form. Busy, working, family, their own stresses. Maybe they didn’t have lives that put them through the specific wringer that leads to self-awareness and compassion and knowing how to validate others, and maybe they simply don’t have that deeper understanding in their makeup. Many people have had hardships, but those hardships don’t necessarily result in giving them compassion and understanding, or the tools to help others in the way others need help.
Sometimes people don’t believe you, or can’t comprehend how your situation could be real. Some don’t care. Some are too stressed by and afraid of your problems, and don’t have the tools to cope with helping you. Some are too overwhelmed by their own big tangle of problems to be able to afford any energy towards yours. Some people pooh-pooh your problem because perhaps they have better coping skills and maybe your problem does not really seem like a problem to them. There are a thousand reasons why most people never grow into the kind of people who can validate others at the deepest level. Forgive them. You might be one of them. I used to be one of them.
No matter how sincerely people care about you, no matter how skilled their counseling tools, no matter how hard they try, you will not feel validation until it’s completely legitimate, organic and natural; when a person, professional or friend or stranger or family, has magically become the kind of person who can validate you, then and only then will you feel validated. If it’s faked, or if they’re trying to be helpful and supportive but something’s just ‘missing’, or someone’s comforting or commiserating with you, then they are not really validating you, and you will feel unvalidated.
Validation is not the same as commiseration, there’s all too much commiseration going around: you’re complaining about your problems, you’re making the call for help, and your buddy is right there with you saying, “Yeah, yeah, I know, it sucks. That’s too bad. Screw it. Screw them. What can ya do? Life’s tough. It’ll pass.” When people commiserate with you, it might seem like they’re listening, validating your problems, agreeing with you and sharing their own problems… but validation has nothing to do with commiseration. Commiseration is griping, letting off steam to each other, and with commiseration it is very important that the other person ‘feel’ whatever you’re saying. Hence the ‘co’ part of commiseration.
But validation is much more powerful than that. Validation is someone ‘receiving’ you at its best: they’re not trying to decipher how serious they think your problem is, what opinions they have about it, how they judge it, they’re not even trying to think of the right thing to say or how to respond, and it isn’t even important that they ‘feel’ your pain or anything you’re sending them. They are just treating you, the entirety of you and what you’re saying, as one hundred percent real. Fully real, fully important, fully mattering. Fully VALID. They’re hearing you, seeing you, in the most complete and most freeing way.
All important things are intrinsic in validation. That is why it can’t be faked. Validation is such a huge thing… there’s love in there, respect, freedom, nurturing, help, responsibility, understanding, identity, importance, intimacy, trust, strength, wisdom, clarity, oneness. A person who validates you, even if they’re just standing there looking and listening without commiserating or comforting or reacting the way you think they should… all those things are inside them, and you somehow feel it all coming your way, from them. You simply cannot have validation, without all those other words being passed along to you as well, because validation is simply saying ‘you’re real’. Maybe saying it quietly, but it’s with the roar of truth and life behind it.
WHAT WILL VALIDATION DO FOR YOU NOW, AT THIS PROGRESSED STAGE OF YOUR PROBLEMS?
Validation is a difficult thing to describe and define; this chapter is long and I’ve used a few stories in hopes that those happenings will perhaps clarify what I’m trying to describe, resonate more accurately with your feeling of what validation is and isn’t. Remember all those words I said were part of validation in the above paragraph? When you’re on the receiving end of that… something comes alive inside you. How can it not? When you water a long-dried-out plant and you’ve mixed strong plant food into the water… that’s what you feel like when someone truly validates you. It washes through you with powerful warmth and soul nutrients.
Validation will not get rid of whatever your problem is, it doesn’t suddenly shower money on you if you’re broke or in debt, won’t get rid of your cancer on its own, won’t bring back a deceased loved one, won’t get you out of prison, won’t stop you from taking your next drink or smoke;
But validation helps you cope better with everything that is happening. Validation helps to strengthen your mind and courage and confidence, by asserting just how real and how important you are. So many of us feel so alone, unheard and unimportant, because at least some part of our lives is not being treated with concern, with care, even with attention, by those around us, and perhaps is not even being clarified and acknowledged by us personally.
Whatever you’ve done, whatever has been done to you, whatever you are and aren’t, validation makes you feel the equal of any human in existence. If it doesn’t make you feel that way, it’s not authentic validation. Because validation fortifies your own sense of who you are, your own ‘amount of real’. You can be feeling lost, totally un-grounded, empty and directionless, and after only a few minutes of being with someone – or yourself – who validates you authentically, you can literally and instantly feel once again grounded, clear, found, full, and with purpose. That’s how powerful it is.
I’m a stranger and I don’t know your problems. But I hear you, without even hearing you first hand, and I validate anything and everything you are, and whatever you’re going through. It’s real, no matter how small or large it seems. You’re real. I hope you have someone nearby, in the flesh, who can do this for you in person. That person is often, perhaps even usually, not who you think it might be. It may not be someone close, or someone you even know personally yet, or someone professional. But there is someone who can. You will discover them, if you let go of who you think SHOULD have been validating you all along, and open to meeting some – perhaps very unlikely – person who CAN validate you.
I hope that one day your own self-validation will be enough for you. Self-Validation helps you to not feel your entire existence and life-worth is tied up to, dependent upon, being validated by other people. I’m sure you’ve had little validations from others, all your life. But if things are very tough for you right now, I hope you happen across someone who can give you this big-ass, soul-deep validation, in spades, and I hope you can learn to do this for yourself.
VALIDATION:
There is no problem in your life that cannot be helped, to some extent, when at least one person – hopefully that’s YOU – validates you authentically.
I like your honesty. Your commitment to actually reach someone with your written words. I think I’ve given some people some measure of validation before, I remember one time a friend was telling a group that her husbands grandma had died, her voice was breaking a little, and it seemed like she was going to really start crying. The rest of the group was starting to… giver her privacy I guess, and kind of look away, and at their phones. I’m quite a bit older than she is, and have lost some grandparents, and I think she was feeling sad because her husband felt sad, rather than something more direct for herself. I knew I couldn’t help her with it, but I just told her in a completely serious, and understanding way that some of the cliches are true, that time can heal wounds, and that you get used to the new normal, it’s how people work. It won’t be the same, but it will be ok again. She stopped almost crying, and looked a little confused, and then kind of at peace, I think she just believed me. Maybe that’s not validation, I think I know what it is, but I’m not sure if I’ve felt it myself. Do you think people can go through life without it? Or does everyone get it in bits and pieces throughout their life? I think I could use some, and I’m very interested in the idea of self-validation. I’ve been stretching out your pages for a couple of weeks, they can keep me out of the gutter for a while.
This page didn’t help as much, I think I broke it into too many parts, writing this seems to have helped some for some reason. I think the real reason I wrote this is to see if I get an “I have emailed you” comment if you still do those, I’m interested what that’s all about.
Hi Ben, just so you’re not disappointed, I’ll say ‘I have emailed you’. And I just did 🙂
Hi ,. it was bad for me, I can not communicate with relatives and friends on this topic that makes me feel bad, the Internet is the only place where I can be alone, and I saw a lot of sites where the help was offered, once I decided to write about what I feel on one site, they responded to go to the doctor as a psycho or a sick person, some people agressively treated me for what I wrote about what was bad for me. I got the impression that what I feel, this does not exist in the world for other people, they do not write about it, they keep silent about it. Once, when I felt that I was very ill, I decided to write a request for help in the search, I wrote its in English, I thought that, as usual, I will not find anything serious, but here this site, and it exists. I do not understand English, I had to translate it using an online translator. and the fact that you wrote me surprised. What you write is the real truth, what I also feel. This is a whole area unexplored, why are they silent about this? Simply, thank you very much, endless thanks, because you helped me, really. And what you write about, I have proof that this is real: we are casual people, we are divided by continents, languages, opinions, life, this world of chance and unpredictability, and I found in this world what I was looking for written by you. So it can only be when all those feelings are stably real and exist in reality. Perhaps what I’m writing is unclear, because of the translation, I just want to say that what you did is a wonderful job, it’s very important
Hello Andrey, I have emailed you.
I don’t have the words to express how grateful and how amazed I am by your work! Thank you, thank you! I can’t help but wonder, how I could contribute to this? How can I help? You’ve opened new doors for me, you’ve touched and helped me in so many ways. I hope you can feel the many warm thoughts I am sending your way. Bless you.
Thank you Katerina; I have emailed you.
This is great. Thank you. I need a place just like this to get my thoughts out.
I guess my problem is different than most others, because I feel like I get lots (probably too much) validation in my life, however I never feel like it is enough. I’ve done a lot in (my relatively short) life, but I feel like I’m doing it for the wrong reasons. I’m doing things to get more validation and more praise from others, who are willing to give it to me, however, it has become like an addiction to me in which I want more and more and more and will never be satisfied with it. Getting awards and praise feels nice, but it’s only a temporary high, and it goes away quickly. f i knew that my life depended on finding something to be driven on… other than validation… What would that even be? It’s strange but, the thought of not being driven by validation is unthinkable, and I do not know how to fix it this problem. How do I fix the problem? I don’t know, this is somewhat rhetorical, I think I have to figure it out myself. I feel like this is stupid; who complains about having too much praise?
Hello Zach,
I wonder if you are confusing Validation with Praise, or Support or Encouragement, etc?
Validation is powerful, and when you receive it it is more than just making you feel good or like your ego is stroked. It is more even than feeling loved.
It is actually when someone sees and hears you at the deepest level, it’s a seeing of who you are, rather than a praising of anything you do or anything you are.
If you were truly being validated at this deepest level, you would not be still having these feelings of almost cravings or addiction to wanting more.
So I think it is actually the opposite: I think you may be getting a lot of praise, a lot of people loving you, and you’re getting a high from that… but the high is weakening, because these things are not true validation… I have emailed you the rest.