“Our interactions with one another reflect a dance
between love and fear.”
In my personal experience, I’ve learned that it is
sometimes easier to dance this journey of life solo rather than in partnership.
Many of us have experienced life both in relationships and outside of them.
Both are just as sweet.
SWEET ENDINGS will like to offer up some lessons people
have learned in their dance in and out of relationships:
1. They are
not meant to last forever.
Our society seems to put a lot of pressure on the
idea that things will last forever. But the truth is, everything is
impermanent.
After a recent break-up, maybe you find yourself feeling as though you had failed the
relationship. But then if you step outside of your condition and think, you
discover that love and failure do not reside together. For when you have loved,
you have succeeded—every time.
SWEET
ENDINGS is introducing you to a rather practical concept that “not every
relationship is meant to last forever.” What a big burden off your back! Of all
the souls hanging out on this planet, it seems to make sense that we might have
more than one soul mate floating around.
Relationships can be our greatest teachers; it is
often through them that we discover the most about ourselves. In relationships,
we are provided with an opportunity to look into a mirror, revealing what we
need to work on as individuals, in order to be the best version of ourselves.
Each relationship will run its course, some a few
weeks, months, years, or even a lifetime. This is the unknown that we all leap
into.
2.
Attachment is often the cause of suffering.
We sometimes cling to people in an attempt to hold
them closer, but this often pushes them further away.
In love there is nothing to grasp; it is so
expansive that trying to capture it is like trying to capture water with a net.
When we attempt to control where a relationship is going, we become
disconnected with the sweetness of the moment.
Ram Dass shared one of the most exquisite
paradoxes: “As soon as you can give it all up, you can have it all.”
It is silly to think that we can own someone’s
love, but many of us have tried to do it.
Do you often find yourself fantasizing about how
your future will unfold with a new partner, but it is in that moment when you fall
out of the present.
We have the opportunity
to surrender to the natural flow of relationships, letting go
of our proposed outcomes and taking ourselves out of the driver seat.
This means being fully present in moments of
intense love, conflict, uncertainty, vulnerability, and joy.
3. Being vs.
doing.
In the beginning of relationships, we strive to
show up as our best selves, hoping to impress the other person and to receive
their love in return. In most cases, we are focused on doing simply
because we want to make an outstanding impression on the person we fancy.
But if you’re anything like me, being and doing
are extremely hard to keep up at the same time.
In relationships there is work, but there isn’t
much we have to actively do. In fact, doing can often be
associated with attempting
to control a situation.
The place where we should hang out is in the being.
Being allows us to show up as our authentic selves. When we show up as
humans being, something magical happens. Being is our natural
state. Love thrives in this space.
4. Allow for
change.
Don’t be attached to any particular way your
partner is showing up each day. Change is inevitable. As humans being, we
are constantly growing and discovering
new passions and experiences.
For example, next week your partner might wake up
with the realization that they want to leave their job as a lawyer and become a
yoga instructor. How will you respond? The news might be shocking and somewhat
unusual, but change happens. The question is, can you allow space for that?
Oftentimes it is harder to embrace change within
others than it is to accept within ourselves. If you are anything like me,
consistency is super important; however, completely unrealistic. Someone once
told me “you are consistent with your inconsistency.” I initially took this as
an insult, but now I see it as a practical strength. It shows movement and
willingness to change.
–
Love is the greatest dance in life. Surrender to
each step, hold your partner close to your heart, but don’t grasp. If we can
allow ourselves to enter into partnerships with this awareness, it may
dramatically shift the way we see and experience relationships and love.
HOW TO BE MORE ATTRACTIVE TO MEN......FIND OUT ON OUR NEXT POST..
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