Just a single woman over 50 trying to discover who she is in a world that moves too fast, and loves too little.
Showing posts with label dating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dating. Show all posts
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Shower Epiphany: Being a Nice Person vs Flirting
I posted on Facebook recently that I had received a rather lengthy email from an old friend who was concerned that my feelings for him were more than just "friends" status. I was really surprised by this email because I hadn't given any hint during the random times we'd spent together in two weeks that I wanted to be more than friends. Because I didn't.
One of my Facebook friends commented that I must have been flirting with him.
Hmmmm. Nope.
You see, this old friend was my ex-boyfriend. You know, the one I've mentioned in previous posts. Why would I even consider going into a relationship with him again that was anything more than just friends? Some might wonder why I would even want to be friends with him. Because, I'm a nice person. I forgive easily. No, really. I do. I can be trampled over and over again and still stand up and say, "Okay. One more chance." It's what I do. I did it for 22 years (even doing it now, three years later) with my ex-husband. I love so I forgive.
Anyway, Comic Con was approaching. I go every single time with my youngest son, Luke. It's our thing. But Luke has become a social butterfly so he likes to go wander Comic Con by himself, or with his friends (who wants to hang out with their MOM?), and I knew I would be left alone to wander Comic Con in my little Steampunk outfits. I knew it wouldn't be as much fun alone. It's always more fun with someone who also wants to be there as much as you do. I don't have any other Comic Con friends. You know, the ones who get soooo excited about being there that they buy their tickets as soon as they go on sale...6 months ahead of time. And I knew the ex-boyfriend was one of those people who did. We had a common interest: Comic Con. Since the first one three years ago that only Luke and I had attended, we had gone to every single one together, the ex-boyfriend and I. That was why I contacted him after a no-contact zone of six months. So I'd have someone to wander Comic Con with. And so that, knowing him, he'd have someone to go to Comic Con with also. That was the only reason. Nothing more.
Let me first preface this whole thing (wait, I didn't really preface it, did I?) by saying that I am not lonely. I don't feel alone. At all. It's weird. For a really long time I had felt lonely. I perused dating sites every six months, hoping to find that one person who'd fix my loneliness. Guess what? I fixed it by myself. Seriously. Didn't need some guy to do it for me. Imagine that. AND I am really confortable in my single status. Really. That scares me a little bit too, but that's a blog post for another day.
So, two weeks ago I contacted the ex-boyfriend via email and asked him if he was going to Comic Con. He replied that he was and would be interested in doing what we've always done at Comic Cons before: wander together. Between that contact and Comic Con, we've gone to two movies together and a lunch (and I paid for myself which makes them NOT DATES), and the local Italian Festival. Once again, I paid for myself. Once again, not a date. Then we wandered Comic Con. The ex-boyfriend did not fund one part of my personal Comic Con experience. NOT DATING.
And so, imagine my surprise when I get the lengthy email the day after Comic Con ends telling me that we could only be friends. That he didn't want me relying on him for movies and dinners. That I should also be seeing my other friends and "movie buddies". And not be surprised if he distances himself when he becomes interested in someone else.
HUH?
Yeah. Me too.
So, back to my initial epiphany: Being Nice vs Flirting.
I'm a nice person. I treat all humans, male or female, with the same niceness. If you are friendly or sarcastic, BONUS!! We will get along perfectly. If you're nice to me, I am automatically nice back. That's why I've always been in customer service. It's what I do.
When I worked at the front desk at my hotel, more than once I was told (jokingly) to stop flirting with the guests. It's because I am friendly. I'll act interested in what you have to say. I will laugh at your jokes. It's my job to make you feel good and walk away happier than you were when you first started talking to me.
Is that flirting?
Or am I just being nice?
So is this where the world has gone? Have we forgotten what it's like to be friendly to people? So much so, that when someone is friendly to us, we think they are flirting? Or other people think we're flirting with them?
My Facebook friend said that he found it hard to believe that I wasn't flirting with said ex-boyfriend.
I cannot tell you when the last time was that I actually flirted with someone. I almost think I have forgotten how to flirt. Seriously. It's been so long.
So the other morning when I was in the shower (because that is where all serious thinking - and karaoke - is done), it hit me: Was my ex-boyfriend so un-used to people being nice to him that when someone is, he thinks they're interested in him? Is that why he thought I was wanting to be more than friends? Because I was nice to him?
***Insert eye roll here***
And is that why he never once asked me how I'd been or what I'd been up to for the last six months? Or showed any interest in my life? Or even smiled the first or second time he saw me after six months? (in fact, he just looked plain pissed) Because he was afraid I'd think he was interested in me?
***Insert another eye roll here***
Is that where the world has gone? You can't be nice to someone without them thinking you're seriously interested in them?
That's just sad.
NEWSFLASH:
Being nice to someone is not always flirting.
Sometimes it just is what it is.
I suppose there are those who are so blind to flirting that they don't notice it when someone actually is interested in them. They have their buddies punching them in the shoulder, "Dude. She was totally flirting with you!" and they still have no clue. (OR, there are those that assume EVERYONE is flirting with them. Big ego much?)
And there are those, like me, who are just being themselves. Being nice to other people simply for the sake of being nice. No intentions. No ulterior motives.
Just. Being. Nice.
Maybe, WORLD, if everyone started being a little nicer to those around them, there'd be less wars. Less homelessness. Less hunger. Less anger. Less loneliness. Less confusion. Less judgement. Less hate. Less of everything that is sad and bad.
Maybe, just maybe, there would be more peace. Imagine that.
You know those little kids who smile at you in the grocery store checkout line simply because you're looking at them?
Do you suppose their flirting with you?
Doubtful.
Maybe we need to be a little more like them.
Friday, November 28, 2014
Forgive Myself?
Talking to my "life coach" (I always put it in quotations because I kind of think it's a silly name. Isn't it more like inexpensive therapist?) the other day and I thought I was doing well going through the whole apology letters to people I felt have caused me to be angry today. I wrote those letters and I was feeling pretty good about myself. He was right. It was a huge release to do it.
So, when I met up with him (after he'd printed out and read the letters), I was feeling good. I wasn't feeling emotional. We met in the middle of his restaurant prior to the opening. No problem. Just a casual chat about what I'd written. Somewhere in there, the tables turned. I'm not sure what happened but suddenly I was crying. In the middle of a restaurant. That had opened. Swell.
Like I said, I'm not even sure where it started. I know I was already upset (internally) because of a couple things I'll touch on later. Somehow we got on the subject (that I was upset about) and then I was gone.
Okay, fine. I'll just tell you now. It would make more sense if I do, right? When I was twenty, I got married. I'm pretty sure I've told this story before. Anyway, I got married, had two kids, and got divorced all in about 6 years. Here's what happens when you get divorced when you have little kids. It becomes a game of visitation. It's bad enough when your kids are little (which is why I'm a huge advocate for not getting divorced, especially when your kids are little), but then they grow up, get married, and have kids of their own. And the visitation competition continues.
It's not bad if your adult child lives out of town. It IS bad if you don't have money to fly out and visit all of the time (or more than once a year). It becomes worse when they come to town and they have to split their time between you and your former spouse.
And grandchild birthdays. My grandson turns two this year, right after Christmas. I don't have a lot of family living here in town. Just me and my sons. No reason to have a big birthday party. Nobody to invite. My ex and his wife, on the other hand, have tons of family to invite. Am I jealous? Of course. It's probably dumb. My grandson has no idea that a big birthday is important because it's not. It's not at all. And it's dumb for me to be jealous or upset or whatever. That cute little kid won't care. It's a cake and balloons and a ton of people singing Happy Birthday. And he won't have any idea what it all means. He's 2.
Look what talking it out with all of you has done for me. I'll throw that cute kid a party for just me and my sons and whomever shows up. We'll have cake and ice cream and presents and it will just be a celebration. And it doesn't even have to be on his birthday. Because he's 2 and he won't know the difference. That's awesome. I'm good now. Moving on.
So, because that day I was upset about this particular issue, it brought up regrets. Regrets are a bag of crap that you drag around you like a horrible weight and they don't matter because they are in the past. Yes, I get that. I told my life coach I hang onto my "regrets" because they remind me to not do it again. Right? Isn't that what they do? Well, no. I really don't think they do. Have I learned enough from past mistakes to never do them again? Nope. I can say that I have not. Sadly, I have not. Why? Shoot. I don't know. I'm dumb. I'm human. Bad judgment. It's all dumb.
And this is when he told me I had to forgive myself. FORGIVE MYSELF? Are you serious? Yes, your 20 year old self (20-25) was young and she made mistakes. Forgive her. And that was the final blow. Why can't I forgive her? She made a buttload of mistakes (yes. A buttload). She left her two little boys behind to go after what SHE wanted. Would she have done it when she was older? No, she would not have. She got remarried when she was 27 and had two more kids. And she could never imagine leaving her kids behind. She would not have done at 27 what she did when she was 23 or 24 or 25. Sadly, two to four years made that much of a difference.
SO, why was she so dumb at that age? Why did she make those mistakes? I look at my children. My daughter is 23, the year I made my first HUGE life changing error. She's making her own choices, and a lot of them I don't agree with. BUT, do I hold a grudge against her? Nope. Not a one. I have talked to her about paying attention to my past mistakes and learn from them but she wants to live her life, experience what she is going to experience, and make her own mistakes. And there is nothing I can do about it. She will learn on her own. Should she know better? Of course. She's not dumb. She's young.
My youngest is 21. He's a funny kid. He has made many mistakes and I just shake my head. Do I hold a grudge against him? Nope. He's young. He won't always make these mistakes. He'll grow up and he'll learn and chances are he won't make the same mistakes when he's older.
My mom doesn't hold my past mistakes against me even though I screwed up more than once. She just kept loving me. I KNOW I hurt her many times over. I know she was worried about me. I know she was disappointed in me. But she's still here. She still loves me. She has thanked me for being me. Do I think she'd do that if she was ashamed of me? Nope.
SO, the magic question is "Why do I continue to feel ashamed of the girl I was 30 years ago?" You tell me. It's dumb, right?
That young girl made me who I am today. She was funny, cute, sweet, loving, kind, and slightly messed up. But I DID in fact learn from it. There are many things I don't do now that I did then. I am kinder, more loving, honest, more thoughtful, more sweet, (still cute), selfless, and I've turned into a caregiver because of her. She was self-centered. I am not. (atleast I hope I'm not). She walked away from her children when they needed her. I would never do that. Just ask my kids.
She just did what she knew to do. She was young. She was dumb. She was probably lost. She was undoubtedly REALLY lost. Poor thing.
What would I tell her if I could have met her and talked to her?
Everything is going to be awesome.
Four gorgeous kids, an adorable little grandson who will crack you up all the time. Life will be incredible. You'll get to travel, and live in five different states, and spend time with family, and go to college for Heaven's sake! And paint, and teach, and meet lots of really wonderful people. And make lots of really great friends. And you'll love. Love A LOT. And you will eventually find forever love. I haven't yet, of course. Not forever love. But eventually you will. I will. Your heart will be broken many times. You will cry a lot. You'll be sad. There will be loss. But you will become a survivor. All of this crap you go through will make you stronger. Make you more loving. You will make a difference in someone's life. And your children will love you.
And I would hug her for a really long time and we would cry together because we understand eachother, and what we have gone through and what we will go through. Then we'd laugh because we'd be all embarrassed over the fact that we were crying.
And then we'd sit down, crack open a Diet Coke and some peanut M&Ms and I'd tell her about her children. And her grandson. It would be amazing.
SO, have I forgiven my twenty-something year old self?
Yes, I have.
Four gorgeous kids, an adorable little grandson who will crack you up all the time. Life will be incredible. You'll get to travel, and live in five different states, and spend time with family, and go to college for Heaven's sake! And paint, and teach, and meet lots of really wonderful people. And make lots of really great friends. And you'll love. Love A LOT. And you will eventually find forever love. I haven't yet, of course. Not forever love. But eventually you will. I will. Your heart will be broken many times. You will cry a lot. You'll be sad. There will be loss. But you will become a survivor. All of this crap you go through will make you stronger. Make you more loving. You will make a difference in someone's life. And your children will love you.
And I would hug her for a really long time and we would cry together because we understand eachother, and what we have gone through and what we will go through. Then we'd laugh because we'd be all embarrassed over the fact that we were crying.
And then we'd sit down, crack open a Diet Coke and some peanut M&Ms and I'd tell her about her children. And her grandson. It would be amazing.
SO, have I forgiven my twenty-something year old self?
Yes, I have.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Attraversiamo
One of my favorite authors is Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Eat, Pray, Love. I've always felt a connection with her books. She sometimes writes as though she is in my head, and sometimes she says exactly what I need to hear. This was one of those days (I stole it off of Facebook).
Word of the day...
Oops, I mean: WORD OF THE LIFETIME.
Dear Ones,
A sweet reader named Jackie painted this for me, gave it to me the other night at my event in Cleveland. I love it and I will keep it always.
Readers of EAT PRAY LOVE will remember this as the last word in the book. Italian for "let's cross over" — the most elegant way I can imagine to remind myself to let it go, to put it all behind you, to face the future rather than dwelling in the past, to stand up and try again.
Another way to say it, I just realized, could be: ONWARD — my other favorite word.
Today, let's share some stories of crossing over.
I will start with one from me. Lately I've been really showing up for my work on processing forgiveness. Much of this is inspired by having met Iyanla Vanzant, whose e-course on forgiveness I've been taking all month.
I had no idea how much work I had to do on this subject, y'all. I mean, I knew I had some garbage in my heart and mind, but I hadn't realized just how MUCH resentment I was carrying around still. As I've done my work on this, I've discovered that what lurks at the very deepest bottom of all my old resentments is usually nothing but a pile of my own shame. (Shame for my own failed relationships, shame for having been stupid or a sucker, shame for my own inadequacies and mediocrity, shame for not having handled things better, shame for still holding on to ancient anger, etc.)
And instead of trying to force all of those negative feelings out of me (I've never had any luck forcing negative feelings out of me...How 'bout you?)I've been making all kinds of interior space to allow those feelings to be revealed, to give them space to breathe, to accept them as human, and to forgive myself for all my own perceived faults and shortcomings.
In other words, all my work on forgiving others has unexpectedly turned into a giant exercise of self-empathy.
Which has, by accidental extension, turned into an exercise in feeling greater empathy for everybody else, as well...stuck as we all are in these crazy-town human minds.
Which has, ultimately, led to a great and sudden diminishing of old resentments.
Which does, in fact, feel like crossing over.
So that's been nice. (TO SAY THE LEAST.) And I'm grateful. Because, like you, all I ever want is to be more free.
So what about you?
How have you been crossing over lately? Let's share some stories of liberation and its rewards.
And, of course, ATTRAVERSIAMO!
LG
LG
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Random Things That Make Me Happy
I remember years ago reading someone's list of "100 things that make me happy" and trying to write my own. It was impossible. I could barely think of twenty. Last night at almost 2AM, I decided to write down things that make me happy, just because I was thinking about them, and I thought it would be another short list. It wasn't. It was really long and just kept pouring out of my head. When I woke up this morning at 6AM, I found that I had even more to add. And I keep adding to it!
I think I must be happier in my life now than I was years ago when I tried to compile the list originally. I know I was unhappy in my marriage at the time but I still thought I was a happy person. Imagine my surprise now when my list was so easy to write and so easy to add to. This is a time in my life where I think I am at a pretty low point yet I could think of so many things that make me happy. And I could easily add more to the list even as I type this now. Is it because as I have gotten older that I pay more attention to the little things, the every day mundane experiences, than I ever have before?
What is on your list? I challenge you to write a list of 100+
things that make you happy. If your list comes up short, find
out why. Life is too short to not notice
Every. Beautiful. Moment.
Things that make me happy.
(in no particular order, I swear)
Children's laughter
A baby's smile
Hugs
Smell of lavender
Puppy breath
Sunshine on my face
Flirting
Singing to the radio
Sitting on a beach with my toes in the sand
Going on a cruise
Love
Baby animals
My children laughing together
My grandson
Belly laughs with my friends
The smell of garlic
Great food
Italy
Sound of waves
Swimming
Roses
Great movies
Hard rain
Great music
Singing in my car
Driving fast
Road trips
Disney anything
Holding hands
Ice cream
Chocolate
Being with my kids
Girl talk
Back massages
Love notes
A man who can dance
Pedicures
Smell of leather
New shoes
Nordstrom's shoe department
Nordstrom's shoe department
Fitting into skinny jeans
Colored contacts
Dressing up
Kissing someone I love
Cuddling
Raspberries
Comic con
Dancing
Nature
Silence
Cicadas
Steak
Sushi
Diet coke
Lemonade
Palm trees
Crack of a metal bat that announces spring time
Wind chimes
Birds singing
Laying in a park in the sunshine
Watching the stars at night
Thunder and lightening storms
Power outages
Candlelight
Deep conversations
Making love
Sightseeing
Adventures
Getting lost
Epiphanies
Someone who "gets" me
The smell of clean skin
Smell of babies
Being pregnant
Being a mom
Shopping
Spending time with my mom
Skype
Cheese
Kisses on the back of my neck
Jazz music
Dentist cleaning
Cleaning the kitchen
Reading a good book
Making someone smile
A child's wave
Being warm in the winter
When someone says "Me too!"
Christmas lights in the dark
Christmas music
Having money in the bank
Hotels
Doing anything with my kids
The "sound" of silence during a snow storm
The "sound" of silence during a snow storm
Feeling healthy
My bed
Naps
Sincere people
Great sarcasm
Feeling loved
New friends
Old friends
Green grass
New car smell
Playing footsie
Spooning
"Making out"
Connecting deeply with someone
Barbra Streisand songs
Barbra Streisand songs
My old wedding ring
Encouraging words
Life coaches
Being in love
Cooking
Earth tones
Painting
Crafts
Gardening
Accomplishments
Singing hymns in church
Singing hymns in church
Planning a trip
Flying somewhere
Fresh fruit and vegetables
New place to live
New beginnings
Knowing my children are happy
Weddings
Art
Architecture
Big cities
Small towns
Ferry rides
Riding a horse
Rivers and streams
Eastern Tennessee
Florida
San Diego beaches
Rome
Italian accents
Some men's cologne
Beards and goatees (but only on men)
Great hair
Grey or white hair on men
Curly hair
Grey or white hair on men
Curly hair
Beautiful eyes
Beautiful smiles
Empty house and silence
Playing cards
Happy people
The zoo
Roller coasters
Clean sheets and a freshly made bed
The smell of the dryer running
Nice people
Online shopping
Shopping for other people
Chocolate cake
Seafood
Feeling beautiful
Feeling loved
Service for others
Cheap gas
Socks
Musicals
Anticipation of a first kiss
Anticipation of a first kiss
Old movies
Feeling inspired
Babies sleeping
Old Saturday morning cartoons
Selflessness
Old couples holding hands
My dad's smile and laugh
Compliments
Italian food
New "toys" (electronics)
Fresh air
Rental cars
Warms blankets on a cold day
Fire crackling in a fireplace
Campfire
Bacon
Camping breakfast
Smell of coffee
Starbucks
Fire crackling in a fireplace
Campfire
Bacon
Camping breakfast
Smell of coffee
Starbucks
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Monday, November 17, 2014
I Mourn
I Mourn
I mourn the loss of my children
with their independence
and adulthood.
I mourn the loss of their childhood
and how quickly it passed.
I mourn the loss of their innocence,
and the life experiences they must now have.
I mourn the loss of their need for me.
I mourn for the loss of love
that was supposed to be forever.
I mourn the loss of love that used to be mine.
I mourn for the heart that now feels empty.
I mourn for a love that is forever gone
Never to return.
I mourn the friend that helped me smile
and brought me comfort when I was sick.
I mourn the time that is lost
that we spent together
and movies, and dinner, and just being.
No more will they exist
In an effort to save myself.
I mourn something I thought might be;
love, and laughs, and deep conversation.
I mourn the loss of endless possibilities.
I mourn the loss of future
deep thoughts,
and laughs
and conversations.
I mourn the lost unknown.
What might have been.
And wonder,
why not
I mourn the loss of my home,
wherever that may be.
That feeling is lost
with no sense of a home in sight.
I mourn for the loss of a sense of purpose.
A reason why I exist.
A future not seen.
No one has need for my heart,
my love, my care.
A purposeless existence.
I mourn the loss of my children
with their independence
and adulthood.
I mourn the loss of their childhood
and how quickly it passed.
I mourn the loss of their innocence,
and the life experiences they must now have.
I mourn the loss of their need for me.
I mourn for the loss of love
that was supposed to be forever.
I mourn the loss of love that used to be mine.
I mourn for the heart that now feels empty.
I mourn for a love that is forever gone
Never to return.
I mourn the friend that helped me smile
and brought me comfort when I was sick.
I mourn the time that is lost
that we spent together
and movies, and dinner, and just being.
No more will they exist
In an effort to save myself.
I mourn something I thought might be;
love, and laughs, and deep conversation.
I mourn the loss of endless possibilities.
I mourn the loss of future
deep thoughts,
and laughs
and conversations.
I mourn the lost unknown.
What might have been.
And wonder,
why not
I mourn the loss of my home,
wherever that may be.
That feeling is lost
with no sense of a home in sight.
I mourn for the loss of a sense of purpose.
A reason why I exist.
A future not seen.
No one has need for my heart,
my love, my care.
A purposeless existence.
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Sunday, November 16, 2014
Do I Feel That I Am Unworthy?
This article was waaaaay too close for me. It touched on so many things that I am going thru/feeling right now. I feel like I need to tattoo this on my forehead to truly embed it in my head so I can just move forward in my life.
The One Thing That's Keeping You from the Life You
Want
The author of The Seat of the
Soul and co-founder of the Seat of the Soul Institute explains how
unworthiness keeps us from our happiness.
By Gary Zukav
What is unworthiness? It's the experience of
having parts of your personality say, "I'm not worthy." For example,
they might say, "I am unworthy of the love that I have in my life, or the
wealth that I have." More commonly, they might say, "I am unworthy of
the happiness that I feel." Thoughts such as "It's too good to be
true," and "This can't last forever because it is too good" are
experiences of unworthiness. You feel unworthy of what the universe has given
you, you feel that you do not deserve it, that the other shoe will fall, and it
is only a matter of time before you will get what you really deserve, which
will be painful.
Unworthiness is the inmost frightening thought
that you do not belong, no matter how much you want to belong, that you are an
outsider and will always be an outsider. It is the idea that you are flawed and
cannot be fixed. It is wanting to be loved and feeling unlovable, or wanting to
love and feeling that you are not capable of loving. It is the feeling that no
matter what you do, it is not enough and that you are incurably inadequate,
intrinsically and permanently flawed. It is the fear of people seeing you as
you really are and the belief that if they did, they would not want anything to
do with you.
Beneath all of this is the experience of
powerlessness—of feeling powerless to be a real part of life, to love, to be
loved, to affect the world, to be heard, to be worth hearing or to have
something worth saying. It is self-loathing, self-hatred. The pain of
powerlessness is excruciating. It is the most painful experience in the earth
school, and everyone shares it.
Until recently, the pain of powerlessness has
driven our evolution. It has caused us to reach outward continually,
relentlessly, to change the world around us. Pursuing external power—the
ability to manipulate and control—has been our way of avoiding the pain of
powerlessness. Anything that we do to make ourselves feel worthy and safe is a
flight from the pain of powerlessness. Every pursuit of external power—every
attempt to change the world or a person in order to make yourself feel valuable
and safe—is a distraction from the pain of powerlessness. All the distractions
in the world cannot uproot the pain of powerlessness inside you.
Our history is a chronicle of the ways that we
have attempted to escape from the pain of powerlessness, or said another way,
the ways that we have pursued external power. Tribes fight tribes, siblings
fight siblings, nations invade nations, individuals strive to become stronger
than one another, or more seductive, educated, wealthy or famous. The list is
as long as it is familiar.
The pursuit of external power surrounds us
everywhere. We are continually attempting to mask the pain of powerlessness
from ourselves, and others are continually doing the same. Driving every
avaricious banker, sexual predator, workaholic, perfectionist and all attempts
to exploit anything or anyone is fear of the pain of powerlessness and the need
to escape it.
Our perception is now expanding beyond the five
senses. We are becoming able to see the pursuit of external power for what it
is and the futility of trying to escape the pain of powerlessness by changing
the world. When we look inward, not outward, we can dismantle the parts of our
personalities that have controlled us for so long—such as anger, jealousy,
vindictiveness, superiority, inferiority. We realize we need to change
ourselves instead of the world in order to liberate ourselves once and for
always from the tormenting experiences of unworthiness.
Spiritual partners help one another recognize
when a frightened part of the personality is active. They can alert you when
you're striving to mask the pain of powerless, for example, by becoming angry,
jealous or a victim. When you are not aware that a frightened part of your personality
is active, you forget that all is perfect. You forget to relax and enjoy
yourself. You become serious, concerned and overwhelmed. But if you were able
to say, "I am doing it again! A part of my personality is feeling like the
most unworthy person in the universe," then you could all laugh at
this.
The pain of powerlessness is still driving our
evolution, but in a different way. Instead of reaching outward to change the
world in order to avoid it, we must look inward to experience it, to change
ourselves, to create authentic power, and act on the healthiest parts our
personality that we can access in the moment. For example, we choose to act
with patience when we are angry, or to act with appreciation when we are
judging.
This is a very big change. It is a change in
the way that humanity is evolving. Our evolution now requires us to experience
consciously all the painful impulses that have created all the painful
consequences in our lives and then choose consciously to act instead from the
healthiest, most wholesome parts of our personalities that we can access in the
moment.
Each time we do this, we create authentic
power. When we create authentic power again and again, we become authentically
powerful. Each experience of unworthiness reminds us, if we let it, that now is
the time to create authentic power.
To learn more about worthiness,
visit SeatoftheSoul.com and
read The Seat
of the Soul. You can send questions to Gary
Zukav at gary@seatofthesoul.com, and he will answer as many as he can on his
website.
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