I brought the question to him, feeling fatigued: “Why,” I asked, “do some relationships keep breaking down in the same way? No matter how much I try, the same irritation, the same tension, keeps coming back.”
He looked at me for a moment, then said something that caught me off guard: “Tell me first,” he said, “what you carry into the conversation before it even begins.”
I didn’t understand.
He smiled gently. “Your memory.”
That was the start of a realization that changed how I viewed recurring conflicts.
He explained that memory is not the problem. In fact, memory is one of the greatest gifts given to human beings. Without memory, we wouldn’t even be able to function properly. If memory were erased, something as simple as opening a door could become dangerous. Memory protects us, teaches us, and helps us learn. “But,” he added, “memory becomes harmful when it turns into a fixed lens.”
Objects behave consistently. Fire burns wherever it is. A sharp edge cuts every time. But human beings are not objects. A person can do the same action in ten different emotional, psychological, and situational contexts, and the meaning can be entirely different each time. The trouble begins when I unconsciously freeze someone in a single version of themselves. “He behaves like this.” “She always reacts that way.” “This is how he is.”
Once that pattern is locked in my mind, I stop seeing the present moment. I’m no longer responding to what is happening now. I’m responding to what had happened earlier.
He gave me an image that stayed with me.
“Imagine,” he said, “you walk into a dark room and see something coiled on the floor. Your heart jumps. Your body reacts. You think it’s a snake.”
Fear floods in instantly.
“Now imagine the light turns on,” he continued, “and you see it’s just a coiled wire.”
The fear disappears immediately.
“What changed?” he asked.
“The object?” I said.
“No,” he replied. “Your interpretation. The object remained the same. The emotion changed because the meaning changed.”
He explained that our emotions are not produced directly by situations. They are produced by how we understand situations, by our existing mental patterns, and interpretations. Past experiences create those patterns, and unless we become conscious of them, they quietly hijack the present. That is why the same person can trigger the same reaction again and again. Not necessarily because they are repeating the same behavior. I may be repeating the same interpretation.
I realized how often I walk into conversations already armored, already defensive, and already irritated, before even a single word is spoken. The other person hasn’t done anything yet, but I’m already responding to a memory.
He said something that felt uncomfortably accurate: “When you keep reacting to the past, the present never gets a chance.”
Then he offered a subtle but powerful shift: “Detaching from past experience,” he said, “does not mean denying it.”
That distinction mattered. Detachment doesn’t mean pretending nothing happened. It doesn’t mean becoming naïve or careless. It doesn’t mean erasing memory. It means not letting memory run the show unconsciously. He suggested that instead of silently carrying past experiences like hidden weapons, we bring them into the open calmly, respectfully, and consciously.
“For example,” he said, “you can say, ‘My previous experience with you made me cautious. I may be reading this situation through that lens.’”
That one sentence does something remarkable. It removes accusation. It removes mind-reading. It removes silent resentment. And most importantly, it brings responsibility back to where it belongs: inside me.
I tried this approach in a relationship where tension had become routine. Instead of reacting sharply, I said, “I realize I’m sensitive here because of what happened before. I don’t want that to distort what’s happening now.”
The conversation didn’t magically become perfect. But something shifted. The defensiveness softened. The space opened. We were finally talking about this moment, not replaying an old one. For the first time, the relationship felt like it had room to breathe.
He warned me of something important: “When you focus only on behavior,” he said, “you try to control. And control always leads to frustration. Because control is not available to us.”
The moment I focus on why someone is doing something or how they should behave, I start to lose emotional balance. But when I focus on understanding, on the inner construction behind behavior, I move from control to curiosity. And curiosity changes everything.
He summarized it in a way that stayed with me: “Memory is meant to inform you, not imprison you.” Past experiences are data, not verdicts. They are signals, not sentences. They are reference points, not chains. When I learn to acknowledge them consciously rather than carry them silently, they stop poisoning the present. And when the present is finally allowed to be present, something unexpected happens. Relationships get a chance to grow. Conversations become lighter. And I discover that many conflicts were never about the other person at all; they were about the story I kept replaying in my own mind.
That realization, uncomfortable as it was, felt like freedom.


Thank you sir, yet another great article. Simple but profound. By the grace of God and with the help of your guidance, I’m getting freedom from the chains of my past experiences, alhamdolilah