The Purpose of Radical Acceptance

There are a lot of misconceptions about radical acceptance, and the purpose of practicing it in your everyday life.

Radical acceptance means agreeing with what happened, it does not mean approving or liking what has happened.

If I accept what happened, then I approve of it. Then I like it. Then I’m OK with it. Then I excuse the abuse. Then I absolve the person who deeply hurt me of all responsibility. Then I allow the infidelity. Then I can’t do anything about losing my job or losing my home. I can’t change it. Then I become stuck in a place of hardship and hurt.

Radical acceptance doesn’t mean any of these things. It simply means that you are acknowledging reality, you are acknowledging what happened or what’s currently happening. Because fighting reality only intensifies our emotional reaction.

Fighting reality only creates suffering. While pain is inevitable in life, suffering is optional; suffering is what happens when we refuse to accept the pain in our lives.

Acceptance also doesn’t mean throwing our hands up in the air or waving a white flag. To the contrary, once we accept reality, we can consider if we’d like to change it.

In other words, practicing acceptance actually leads the way to problem solving.

If you don’t like something, you first have to accept that it is the way it is before you can try to change it. If you’re not accepting something, you’ll be so busy fighting that reality that you don’t have the energy to put towards trying to change it.

Another benefit is that you typically spend less time thinking about the situation, ruminating on it. And when you do think about it, “it triggers less emotional pain for you. People often describe a feeling of being ‘lighter,’ ‘relief,’ ‘like a weight has been lifted.’”

With acceptance, your suffering dissipates. The pain doesn’t disappear (though it might over time). But because you aren’t suffering, the pain becomes more bearable.

Radical acceptance takes lots of practice. And understandably, it might feel strange and hard. But remember that radical acceptance is about acknowledging reality – not liking it or contesting it. Once you acknowledge what’s really happening, you can change it or start to heal. Radical acceptance has nothing to do with being passive or giving up. To the contrary, it’s about channeling your energy into moving on.

 

https://psychcentral.com/blog/what-it-really-means-to-practice-radical-acceptance/