So think about what these feelings are doing now. Are they changing anything in the past? Are they adding anything to the present? Or are they potentially robbing you of happiness for the future? By hating and blaming yourself you simply (and deliberately, although you don't realise it) sabotaging your own peace of mind and the possibility of accepting things for exactly what they are, today.
Forgive me if you've seen this analogy before (it's a favourite!).
When we want to weigh out ingredients to cook something, we place a bowl on the scales and hit the zero button so that the weight of the bowl does not confuse our calculations. Then we add the ingredients and the numbers go up; were we to remove the bowl, the scales would read a minus number. To continue weighing anything accurately we must hit the button to zero the scales once more, now the bowl isn’t there.
When we have a tragedy in our life we can be plunged into depression because our happiness levels now read a minus. Any attempt to improve our life would result in slightly less of a minus... but a minus all the same. Depression is when we don’t see any way of getting back to zero. A person’s ability to move on from tragedy depends entirely on their ability to adapt to where they are now and to
effectively ‘zero the scales’.
If we can accept where we are today we can start to once again build on our happiness levels. Our scales are neutral, so any joy you can find in life is going to take you into positivity.
Human beings are, in fact, excellent at resetting the scales and adapting to new circumstances (we do it every time we improve our situation or circumstances but very quickly take that for granted).
“It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent but the most responsive to change”,
Charles Darwin.