Archive for the ‘Relationships’ Category

Soul Questions

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about dating sites. Then I received an email with this poem by Oriah Mountain Dreamer.

Next time you are on a date, forget the usual “what do you look like,” “what do you do,” “how much do you earn,” “what car do you drive,” “how many children do you want, and when?” Go to the real heart of the matter with an inquiry into the soul:

The Invitation

It doesnt interest me

what you do for a living.

I want to know

what you ache for

and if you dare to dream

of meeting your hearts longing.

It doesnt interest me

how old you are.

I want to know

if you will risk

looking like a fool

for love

for your dream

for the adventure of being alive.

It doesnt interest me

what planets are

squaring your moon…

I want to know

if you have touched

the centre of your own sorrow

if you have been opened

by lifes betrayals

or have become shrivelled and closed

from fear of further pain.

I want to know

if you can sit with pain

mine or your own

without moving to hide it

or fade it

or fix it.

I want to know

if you can be with joy

mine or your own

if you can dance with wildness

and let the ecstasy fill you

to the tips of your fingers and toes

without cautioning us

to be careful

to be realistic

to remember the limitations

of being human.

It doesnt interest me

if the story you are telling me

is true.

I want to know if you can

disappoint another

to be true to yourself.

If you can bear

the accusation of betrayal

and not betray your own soul.

If you can be faithless

and therefore trustworthy.

I want to know if you can see Beauty

even when it is not pretty

every day.

And if you can source your own life

from its presence.

I want to know

if you can live with failure

yours and mine

and still stand at the edge of the lake

and shout to the silver of the full moon,

Yes.

It doesnt interest me

to know where you live

or how much money you have.

I want to know if you can get up

after the night of grief and despair

weary and bruised to the bone

and do what needs to be done

to feed the children.

It doesnt interest me

who you know

or how you came to be here.

I want to know if you will stand

in the centre of the fire

with me

and not shrink back.

It doesnt interest me

where or what or with whom

you have studied.

I want to know

what sustains you

from the inside

when all else falls away.

I want to know

if you can be alone

with yourself

and if you truly like

the company you keep

in the empty moments.

(By Oriah © Mountain Dreaming, from the book The Invitation published by HarperONE, San Francisco,1999 All rights reserved)

Mismatch

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Dating sites like match.com have proliferated over the last few years and have entered the mainstream of life. So much so that people, upon observing the dearth of eligible men in my life, often ask me why I don’t use them.

It is true. There is a dearth. Since Ian died over six years ago I have dated no one. I have had a coffee with a couple of guys but you could hardly call them dates. It took less than five seconds for me to decide I wanted out, and I suspect they felt the same, and from there on we just went through the motions so as not to offend.

One guy I know, a linear left-brainer, is quite insistent that it makes logical sense to speed date. Based on statistics on the page, he is convinced I am much more likely to find a compatible man by appraising, and in return being appraised, in a matter of minutes.

But soul, love and destiny don’t fit easily on anyone’s page, or checklist. That is the point of it all. There is an irrational, indescribable, almost fated feel to the relationships we are destined to have, and anything less feels like an empty shell that we merely inhabit to avoid being alone.

And isn’t that why people use dating sites, because they are too afraid to be alone?

An older-than-her-years 24 year old young woman recently told me, she sees these sites as a way for people to find a quick fix for some lack or inadequacy in themselves and they are searching for that special someone to make them feel special, because they can’t feel it for themselves. They want someone who will make them feel smart, funny, beautiful, worthy, sexy, desirable (if not just to make a night pass) because for them, it’s only true when someone else says it.

Trouble is, just like after a while one cookie/beer/coffee/cigarette can’t satisfy our appetite and we start to need two, three, and more. That one person soon loses their shine and the insidious feelings of lack/inadequacy creep back again. And then on top of that, it is possible that we create a whole new set of karmic entanglements which we must eventually disentangle and balance.

Besides, ‘compatible’ doesn’t nearly do it. That is living life way too small for me!

I’m not looking for someone who can make me feel better about myself. I’ve learned to do that on my own. These last six years have been a crash course in self-knowledge, and thus, appreciation. It is an irreversible journey to self/Self that changes one forever.

I’m also not looking for someone to help me fit into others’ social boxes, even though sometimes it would be great to be one of the many couples in my life. But this brief moment of feeling excluded is just not enough to go through the suffering and angst of being in a mismatch.

If true love exists at all, it must exist within us first. No matter our relationship status, we carry that love with us and we find we are always “in” love. It needs no love object outside of ourselves.

But, if we happen to be in a relationship then it becomes a magnificent, soul-affirming, soul-feeding emanation, extension and enhancement of the healthy and whole love that already exists within us.

Now that’s a match made in heaven.

Are We Worth It?

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

I recently had a conversation with a young mother who has a toddler which she not only loves being at home with but also understands the immense value of being a full-time mother to her gorgeous little girl. Despite this, she is thinking of going back to work.

When I asked why, she said she wanted the freedom to spend money – shoes and handbags were high on her list – without having to account to anyone else, namely her husband, for her periodic indulgences.

This seems to be a recurring and common attitude that I see in young (and even more mature) women, and sometimes men. They think that if they are not the ones directly responsible for earning the family income they have less right to that income. Using that logic the one who is not responsible for actually shopping, cooking and presenting the meal on the table would have less right to eat it.

Surely marriage and family life is a matter of teamwork, a division of labour that benefits all. It is only our societal worship of all things material, and by extension the currency that enables us to acquire them, that leads us to give greater value to the breadwinner.

So the fundamental question is: are we worth it? If we don’t think we are, then all the money in the world won’t change the persistent sense of emptiness we feel inside. which we try to fill with things outside of ourselves (bags and shoes are really good for this – don’t get me wrong every self-respecting woman needs a good supply of both, but it’s all in the intention behind the buying, not the act of acquiring itself).

If women valued themselves more and had a greater appreciation for their contribution to soul life of this planet – as well their invaluable and inimitable contribution to all aspects of life – we wouldn’t even have to ask the question.

Looking For Love

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Love means different things, depending on which part of us that is doing the looking.

The soul/spirit part of us – the only part of us that is real or true – knows that we are inextricably linked with all life, and that everything we need we already have within us.  Everything we desire is there, waiting to be called on and brought to life. (more…)

What’s A Man For?

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

Most people, if asked, could tell you the basic function and role of a woman. Woman’s part in the birth and nurturing of the young is self-evident. What is not so clear is what a man is for.

As more families operate without a man at either the head or helm, as single mothers are increasingly both mother and father to their children, one can see how and why the great mother of the second wave of feminism, Gloria Steinem declared: women need men like fish need a bicycle. (more…)

Porthole Judgment

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

If you had been a fly on the wall of my house 17 years ago, your assessment of me, of my character, would have been different to the one I imagine you would have today.

With two young children ( 7 and 5) in tow, we had just moved to Sydney after an international stint spanning 11 years (three years in London, three years in Ohio – including both Cleveland and Columbus- and two and a half years in Wellington, New Zealand). I had a husband who travelled for business almost every week, for at least three days, and it was my sole responsibility to find and choose schools and houses, and to settle the children into each new culture. (more…)

Want Or Should?

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

There is a difference between love, and duty and obligation.

When we are in a state of unconditional love we always do what we believe to be right both for the other person and for ourselves. What we believe to be the appropriate course of action may coincide with the desires (or even demands) of the other, or it may not. (more…)

The Miracle of Change

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

The husband of a friend of mine walked out a few years ago. My friend struggled with all the obvious emotions – shock, anger, resentment, hurt, betrayal – but like most mothers I know, she never let any of this to distract her from her commitment to her children.

No matter how much was required of her, no matter how uneven the division of labour between her and their children’s father, she continued to do whatever it took to ensure her children were safe, happy and thriving. She is not a martyr or a moaner. She does it all gladly and with an open heart because, as she says, her children are her passion. (more…)

Hug It Out

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Dannion Brinkley was struck by lightning – twice. Apparently after the first time he didn’t listen to, or obey, the powers that be over/up there, so they socked it to him again, with both fists. After this second near-death experience, and a protracted recovery in hospital  he got the message. He now knows his calling – or should I say yelling!

I recently heard him speak to a crowd of the converted. He has a large following in whom he seems to inspire awe and cheering. His southern drawl at what seemed like triple digit decibels just fueled their evangelical fire and it quickly descended into a mutual scream fest. (more…)

Desire After Desire

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

Most of us did not get from our parents and family of origin all the things we would have liked. Some of us got things that were problematic for our health and well-being. Others were downright abused and traumatized.

No matter our particular circumstances, most of us spend the rest of our lives searching for the things we didn’t get that we either needed or wanted. We seek out ‘mother’ and/or ‘father’ figures in our relationships, searching for someone out there to feed and nurture our wounded inner child. (more…)