I just wanted to share a few observations about marriage that I've come to believe. There is so much information about how to make marriage work these days, so many ideas, therapies, predictions, so much advice. It's hard to know how to sort it all. And most of its pretty good, actually. Tons of books, blogs, vlogs, podcasts... sometimes we just need to keep listening and reading and unpacking and trying to find our truth. But from where I sit, having been working with couples for over 20 years, I offer you four truths and a lie. (A bit oversimplified, but relevant nonetheless):
Truth One: Too much entitlement felt by either spouse can take down a marriage
Truth Two: Too little self esteem in either spouse can take down a marriage
Truth Three: Difficult in-laws can take down a marriage
Truth Four : Too little or unsatisfying sex can take down a marriage
One Lie: Its not worth trying to fix it
Abuse aside (and I am not defining it here), it is worth it. When we thrive as individuals, the marriage does better. When the marriage thrives, the individuals do better. Yes, its painful. Yes, there are lots of feelings, and undercurrents and thoughts and perspectives and beliefs and perceptions and things to sort through. Sometimes, we'd rather be right than married. Sometimes we'd rather suffer silently. Sometimes we just want the other person to suffer, or to understand or change.
Sometimes we'd rather believe that nothing is going to help. Sometimes we have an overblown or underblown sense of how things should be, whose fault it is, what our capacity (or our spouse's) for change is, and whether we really need or want help. Sometimes, we proceed in ways that we ourselves don't even realize. And maybe we don't care. Sometimes we are too angry to really listen, or to try or see if maybe we could have an entirely different experience. Sometimes we are afraid to rock the boat, even if the boat is adrift.
In my office, sometimes I help people separate and resettle well. Sometimes I help them stay married and make things better. Sometimes I help them figure out which one of the above they really want to do and why. And sometimes we just talk through the pain of it all until the next right thing becomes clear and we know what to do and how to feel better.

Showing posts with label Desire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Desire. Show all posts
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Foggy Drive
I've suffered a great many catastrophes in my life. Most of them never happened. - Mark Twain
A friend of mine recently told me that last week she was driving to work up the New York State Thruway and there was a ton of fog. There were times that she absolutely just could not see. She was moving slowing and carefully and the fog was in and out. There were times that the road appeared again, clear as day, and then the she'd drive into a patch of fog. It was only for a moment or so, even at its darkest. But those moments seemed so long, especially when she could not see the road. She said she began thinking about just pulling over to the side and waiting. But she also realized that although she could not see it at times, she knew the road was there. She knew the road well, and she knew she was headed in the right direction. She knew she would get there. Sometimes she had to slow way down. Sometimes she could travel a little faster, but she trusted that she was still on the road. She could feel it.
So (driving safety aside), I'm thinking we can use this. It's sort of like gravity, we don't question gravity. We just know that it operates all the time, at all times on earth, without exception, unless we create very special circumstances. We don't let go of our coffee mug in mid air, because we know instinctively that it will fall. My friend just trusted that the road was there.
It's the same way with our innate wellness and wisedom. Many people walk into my office and want to be fixed. They believe they are broken. They feel broken. Often they believe someone else broke them, or they were never well or wise to begin with. But just like the road, just like gravity, our wellness and our wisdom is there. Sometimes the fog rolls in. Sometimes our innocent human thinking and our emotions run through us and cloud our wisdom and our wellness and our vision. Sometimes we even want to believe we are broken. We want someone to fix us. We want to be rescued or saved or taken care of. We believe that if we have to do it ourselves, or take care of ourselves that means we are not valued or worthy or that we matter. We hook all of our self worth to how others treat us or take care of us. We need to feel broken in order to get fixed in order to believe that we matter.
Of course we need human care and love and nurture from others. We need to know we matter. And these things help us clear the fog. But really, the road is always there. There is always gravity. We are well and whole and wise and we can get glimpses of it, insights, relief, when we trust that we may be in a foggy patch, but that it will clear, and we will move through it. It will move through us, if we let it. Sometimes, we do have to wait it out, sometimes we keep moving, but the fog will lift. And the road is still there.
I'm not suggesting anyone drive unsafely, literally, in bad weather. But I think we can use the idea to help point us to how we can move forward with faith, even when we can't see so clearly at times, as long as we know we are generally on the right road.
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Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Pointing in the Right Direction (What do we really want?)

But when we don't follow up with actions that support it, and when habit starts slipping into obsession, or out of control behavior, or even just too many slip ups, we can be well served by taking another look at want we want and where we are really pointed any why.
Slip ups and set backs are a normal part of any quest for better. They are a learning opportunity, a source of information and a reason to stay curious about life and about our minds and hearts and psyches and bodies. Sometimes we don't respond the way we seemingly want ourselves to because old habits are deep grooves in our psyche. Sometimes its because we are in the same mindset that we've always been in. And usually the mindset that got us into difficulty is not the same mindset that can get us out. Even if we say we want to. We need a new way of looking at how thought works, and how to work with our mind. We need to start, and restart, and restart and look again and again at where we are really pointed and why. Even if we think we know. Especially when we think we know. If we keep slipping up too much, its a signal that we need to take a look at what we really want. And its sometimes not as simple as it appears. We sometimes have compelling, innocent, understandable ideas and thought stories that end up ruling our responses, instead of what we say and "know" we should be doing, saying.
All the great techniques and therapies and programs in the world (and there are many!) won't take hold if we are pointed unconsciously in the wrong direction. And we often are! And for good reasons! For example, someone who repeatedly picks fights with their spouse and knows they shouldn't or is trying to work on things because they know words and communication and language are so important in creating relationships, may keep engaging in fights anyway. Someone who wants to stop bingeing may keep doing it even though they think that don't want to. There are so many examples!
But sometimes, underneath, we have competing reasons. We are often ashamed of them, or think we should be. We often think we don't have a right to them, so we can't acknowledge them. Sometimes our only communication seems like it is through what we are doing, or we, want to be understood, feel right, or feel powerful or understood or avoid emptiness. Sometimes we feel punitive or we don't want to let someone off the hook. It's usually anger on top of fear on top of desire. And we don't give ourselves permission to unpack our motives honestly. Especially if our mood has slipped out from under us or if we are lacking sleep or nutrients or a place to talk it through.
We can do it though. We can have mixed motives and forgive ourselves for them. We can take a look at what our priorities really are, where we are pointed, what effect we really want to have and why. We can do it without shame, without filtering and without letting anyone else off the hook. There is so much freedom in this, and then we can begin to walk where we want to really be walking.
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Friday, September 16, 2016
Just Because
Just Because
Just because I know something
Doesn't mean I have to say it
Just because I'm right
Doesn't mean I need to show you that you are wrong.
Just because I know a negative truth about someone
Doesn't mean I don't have to be kind to them
Just because I'm attracted to someone
Doesn't mean they are going to like me
Just because I believe something strongly
Doesn't mean I have to make others believe too
Just because I see a lot of evil in the world
Doesn't mean there isn't a lot of good too
Just because I can't see God's plan
Doesn't mean He doesn't have one
Just because I'm tired of waiting, that it's taking too much time, or won't happen
Doesn't mean I'm supposed to do something to make it happen.
Just because I'm strong or good at something
Doesn't mean I can take advantage of others.
Just because I think something is true
Doesn't mean it is true.
-Phil Maher (February 2016)
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Monday, April 11, 2016
What is a Miracle?
"Do you know what a miracle is?" my friend Sarah asked me recently. "What?" I humor her.
"A change in perspective."

And we are so sure of it.
Often in my office, as we are unpacking the thought behind the thought and looking at the nature of thought and the different ways of looking at and living life, at both the very personal and the univeral wisdom about humanity and relationships, and when we are looking toward both insight and useful tools and strategies, we hit upon an idea that seems to offer up some hope and some help:
We often live life from the outside in. We focus on what needs to be changed in others and in the world, instead of how we look at things, at how we think and what we believe. This, of course, leaves us at the mercy of others and of the outside world.
Amazingly, and often, when we take a closer look at our thoughts in the moment and how they influence our thinking, how we feel our thinking, we can often have a new experience of life, people, circumstances, of ourselves.
It seems impossible to some. And preposperous to others - after all, we rely on our thinging, but what if much of our thought in the moment is not always reliable? What if we humanly, innocently have thoughts that run through us and influence us that are maybe not true, or not the only truth. What if how we view our thoughts and work with our perspectives could change our life?
At the intersection of personal emotional pain, shared and universal human wisdom and life expieriece and "coping mechanisms," we have the choice to learn to see through our thoughts and to examine our perspectives, Often when we do so, we come to have a different and much better
experience of life and people. One that we never imagined to be possible.
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
The Land of Doubt and Maybe
It can be painful not to know. Not to know if you should stay in the relationship or leave. Not to know if you should stay at your job or try to find a new one. Not to know if you should try to forgive someone who has behaved badly or who has hurt you. Not to know if it is you who is messing things up, or if it's someone else's fault, or exactly, generally, what the breakdown of responsibility is. It can be painful not to know if you should reach out and try to make an amend. Not to know why this (whatever this is) is happening. Not to know if someone can grow, could be worked with, could understand. Not to know if we should invest time, or money or emotional energy or all three to find out, to work it out. Not to know what will be worth the effort and what will just disappoint us further. Not to know if our fears are real, or our feelings are trusted guides or only reactions based on old patterns of defense.
Here's what happens sometimes, to some of us. We want it to get better quickly, of course, when it hurts. We want to know, or we think we do. Give me a solution. Fix it. Fix me. Fix him/her. Don't make me wander around in it, or venture into the unknown, the unpredicable. It's too uncertain. Too frustrating. Besides, we think, how will it help? And sometimes especially when our emotional well-being or sense of self seems to be latched on to someone or some situation being different, we lose faith. Often, we (usually unconsciously in part at least) hook our self worth, self esteem, peace of mind to what someone else thinks, understands, agrees with or does. We get lost trying to find ourselves.
The land of doubt and maybe can seem like an endless mine field. We just don't know exactly where the emotional bombs are or what the point of forging forward is, or how, even if were were willing. So much so sometimes, that we don't even want to look around.
Seems to me though, as I continue to hear so many stories of emotional pain, frustration and confusion, that we are more resilient than we think, sometimes more reslient than we want to be. And most of the time, when we ease up on our selves, we somehow can tolerate not knowing just a little bit better. I find too, that we when this happens, the instinctively correct answers seem to come, they seem to emerge from some quiet healthy place deep within, and then instead of the land of doubt and maybe being littered with bombs, it becomes abundant with possibilities.
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Monday, April 13, 2015
Don't Ask - Don't Tell
Seems like there are so many ideas in the world about how to live our internal lives. Religious ones, spiritual ones, philosophical ones, psychological ones. Sometimes, its hard to know where to focus our thoughts, our energy. Sometimes it feels like it's so overwhelming, why even bother to ask.
And similarly, why bother to ask about ourselves, or about others, or about how to work with our minds?
In my office I hear a lot of pain. I hear a lot of fear. And urgency. And more fear. Fear of not getting what we want. Or what we think we want. Fear of having things we don't want. Fear of not being good enough, happy enough, satisfied enough, loved enough, lovable enough. Fear of making wrong decisions, or of being left out or missing out.
So lots of times we don't even ask. We function in ways that seem to be what we need, but somehow, don't actually move us forward. We stay safe, and somewhat asleep to what thoughts are repeating, what ideas are guiding us, what notions keep us stuck.
We think that if we ask, if we look, we will have to do more, know more, figure out more. We think we will be told things we don't agree with, or that will keep us from getting what we believe we have to have.
I have seen this played out in a thousand ways:
Pursuing a partner to the point of pushing him/her away.
Pursing money to the point of losing a job.
Pursing a point to the point alienating someone, or sabotaging a relationship or job.
Pursing relief externally to the point of addiction, compulsion, danger to one's self or others.
And the opposite:
Ignoring what someone tells us they feel, need or are effected by to the point of damaging a relationship
Ignoring that quiet, innately healthy voice that we hear whispers of, when we are quiet.
Ignoring good advice, good sense, good wisdom to the point of destruction or loss.
It's hard to ask. It's hard to get curious about our behavior, our minds, how to work with our minds. We are afraid. And it takes a bit of time, a bit of talking, to clear the path and come to what works for us, uniquely, individually, and instinctively.
But when we are willing to ask, we are on the way, and that in itself is something.
And similarly, why bother to ask about ourselves, or about others, or about how to work with our minds?
In my office I hear a lot of pain. I hear a lot of fear. And urgency. And more fear. Fear of not getting what we want. Or what we think we want. Fear of having things we don't want. Fear of not being good enough, happy enough, satisfied enough, loved enough, lovable enough. Fear of making wrong decisions, or of being left out or missing out.
So lots of times we don't even ask. We function in ways that seem to be what we need, but somehow, don't actually move us forward. We stay safe, and somewhat asleep to what thoughts are repeating, what ideas are guiding us, what notions keep us stuck.
We think that if we ask, if we look, we will have to do more, know more, figure out more. We think we will be told things we don't agree with, or that will keep us from getting what we believe we have to have.
I have seen this played out in a thousand ways:
Pursuing a partner to the point of pushing him/her away.
Pursing money to the point of losing a job.
Pursing a point to the point alienating someone, or sabotaging a relationship or job.
Pursing relief externally to the point of addiction, compulsion, danger to one's self or others.
And the opposite:
Ignoring what someone tells us they feel, need or are effected by to the point of damaging a relationship
Ignoring that quiet, innately healthy voice that we hear whispers of, when we are quiet.
Ignoring good advice, good sense, good wisdom to the point of destruction or loss.
It's hard to ask. It's hard to get curious about our behavior, our minds, how to work with our minds. We are afraid. And it takes a bit of time, a bit of talking, to clear the path and come to what works for us, uniquely, individually, and instinctively.
But when we are willing to ask, we are on the way, and that in itself is something.
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Internal Solutions for External Problems and Agency Over Our Lives

And sometimes that is true. We need things to change. Sometimes they can change. Sometimes external problems need external solutions.
But sometimes, we need an internal solution to an external problem. We need to slow way down and take a second look at how we see things, how we and others experience them. We need to get curious about our convictions, our assumptions, our beliefs about why things are going the way they are going.
Its not about assigning or reassigning blame. It's not about blame at all, actually. And in fact, when we can take the blame out, even just for a little while, we can discover so much more about ourselves, and about what we need and feel and believe. And moreover, we can come to a new agency over our lives that is not dependent on something or someone being different, or in fact, on any outside shift.
We can open ourselves up to what the meaning might be for us, on our journey, in this life. We can shine a spiritual light on things, and wonder what we might glean from our struggles, our pain, our circumstances. And how experiencing them differently might make all the difference.
I'm not suggestion that we stay in unhealthy or harmful situations, but I'm saying that we can often be surprised at how much internal definition we can find and how relieving that can be when we work with how we experience others, how others experience us, and not just what we take for granted as facts - or what we believe on a surface level.
We can go not only deeper, but broader, to what other possible experiences might be like. We can risk some vulnerability for the sake of discovering more of our authenticity and fortitude. We can work it out inside and that can be life changing.
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Monday, December 8, 2014
Better is Not So Far Away is Here (small steps do actually move you forward)

Sometimes process is difficult to wait through, especially when there is emotional pain, confusion, or a feeling of time passing. There are so many things that are worth shining the light on to see what lies below the surface of our wantings, our longings, our pull or push to move things along.
And sometimes here in the office, we see the opposite - the hesitancy to change, to move forward, a pull toward staying with or in the status quo, to keeping things as they are. Sometimes this is fear of change, a clinging to what is known and familiar. Even in emotional pain, changing or saying, thinking, feeling, doing something new, can seem too risky, too strange, too different and unpredictable.
And the culture backlash these days to the competitive, achievement focused world is to encourage mindfulness, personal vulnerability from a position of self reflection and grace and gratitude. And to be in the moment. In the small moments of the moments of the day. But even this, sometimes, can seem too far away or like a pressure of a different sort.
What I came to believe through the process of writing this book is that you can have both. Back and forth and with ease at times, and at other times, a bit of difficulty. But the difficulty is so valuable because when you get through each bump, there is a renewed sense of purpose, of accomplishment, of both quiet mindfulness and personal movement and meaning.
It means that just doing one more next right small thing is small enough that you don't have to jump farther or go faster than you can, but that you can go somewhat forward toward progress and still not miss the meaningful private moments in life. That you can compare yourself to yourself, and that it does add up to something as well, but the process is in its own right is something of value, and the destination comes along as a soft reminder that we don't really have to move fast or big.
Things don't always have to be exciting to count. They can count just because they are part of our process. When we look at how we spend our time, what is valuable to us to devote our attention to, we can - yes - have meaning and movement both getting there and being there.
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Monday, October 6, 2014
Changing the Direction of Your Inner World - Thank You
It's not that we don't want to change things in our outer world - or in the world in general. There are usually always things that could be better, sweeter, easier in our relationships and our lives. And certainly in the world around us. There is always a need for growth and most often, a struggle to get there.
What comes up here in the office a lot is how changing the direction of our inner world can not only bring us more ease, more clarity, more satisfaction, but it is also a way of being of service to the world around us. It's a win win.
So it seems that one good way to change the wind and sail in a different direction both internally and externally is by upping the use of gratitude. Yes, we know that focusing on what we "yes" have can offset our pain a bit and help us not feel so deprived and stuck. We know that it does not erase our hurts, but it can pave the way to new thoughts and better feelings. But...
Several new studies out are now confirming that actually saying "Thank You" to others - even - and maybe especially for the "little" things - like taking out the garbage, holding the door open, making dinner, remembering to call can make a big impact. Seems like the words themselves make a difference. In the worthy discussion of whether we should act ourselves into thinking or think ourselves into action in order to feel better and have better, saying thank you is on the simple side.
Apparently, saying thank you brings in more money, improves work performance, improves cooperation, brings reciprocity, and creates good feelings in both the speaker and the receiver. We know this, but now more science is backing us up and common sense is not so common so we have to keep saying it.
It's not always easy of course. If there is a brick wall of resentment or old hurts or disappointments between you and the world or you and a particular person, it's harder to do. We may not feel like it. We may not want to, think we should or should have to. But it's a small action. Nothing grand, but words do make a difference and not just to the person we say them to. Our words shape us, they shape our inner and outer worlds. Instead of waiting for the wind to change, we can put good vibes out - they will come back to us. I'm not saying that things will magically change, nor should we ignore our feelings, of course, but when we don't know where to start, two small words can be one small step. They will help take down the bricks.
Thank you for reading.
What comes up here in the office a lot is how changing the direction of our inner world can not only bring us more ease, more clarity, more satisfaction, but it is also a way of being of service to the world around us. It's a win win.
So it seems that one good way to change the wind and sail in a different direction both internally and externally is by upping the use of gratitude. Yes, we know that focusing on what we "yes" have can offset our pain a bit and help us not feel so deprived and stuck. We know that it does not erase our hurts, but it can pave the way to new thoughts and better feelings. But...
Several new studies out are now confirming that actually saying "Thank You" to others - even - and maybe especially for the "little" things - like taking out the garbage, holding the door open, making dinner, remembering to call can make a big impact. Seems like the words themselves make a difference. In the worthy discussion of whether we should act ourselves into thinking or think ourselves into action in order to feel better and have better, saying thank you is on the simple side.
Apparently, saying thank you brings in more money, improves work performance, improves cooperation, brings reciprocity, and creates good feelings in both the speaker and the receiver. We know this, but now more science is backing us up and common sense is not so common so we have to keep saying it.
It's not always easy of course. If there is a brick wall of resentment or old hurts or disappointments between you and the world or you and a particular person, it's harder to do. We may not feel like it. We may not want to, think we should or should have to. But it's a small action. Nothing grand, but words do make a difference and not just to the person we say them to. Our words shape us, they shape our inner and outer worlds. Instead of waiting for the wind to change, we can put good vibes out - they will come back to us. I'm not saying that things will magically change, nor should we ignore our feelings, of course, but when we don't know where to start, two small words can be one small step. They will help take down the bricks.
Thank you for reading.
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Monday, April 28, 2014
April: Memory and Desire
“April is the cruelest month, breeding
lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
memory and desire, stirring
dull roots with spring rain.”
― T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
It's almost the end of April and in the Northeast we are slowly inching toward better weather. It is, I think, finally, getting warm.
The sunshine and good weather are definitely good news especially for those who suffer from seasonal affective disorder, depression, and anxiety. The ability to step outside and tilt one's face toward the sun, absorb some Vitamin D and take deep breaths of fresh air can go a long way toward lifting moods and calming fears.
When I read this poem from T.S. Elliot I am moved by how much it conveys some truths of emotional pain. Especially grief and longing. The blending of remembering what was, or what was lost, or even the fantasy of what was, or what was lost, and longing for those good feelings, or that person, or for emotional relief and contentment to trump the hurting.
We are resilient. It may not always feel like it, but I believe it's true. Sometimes we need a lot of soul searching, a lot of talking, a lot nurturing and some rigorous but gentle honesty about what we really need, how we are behaving, what we hope for, expect and desire. And we can't always push the process, move the months, the way we might like to, but relief comes, progress happens, I believe. Things open up when you keep looking.
lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
memory and desire, stirring
dull roots with spring rain.”
― T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land
It's almost the end of April and in the Northeast we are slowly inching toward better weather. It is, I think, finally, getting warm.
The sunshine and good weather are definitely good news especially for those who suffer from seasonal affective disorder, depression, and anxiety. The ability to step outside and tilt one's face toward the sun, absorb some Vitamin D and take deep breaths of fresh air can go a long way toward lifting moods and calming fears.
When I read this poem from T.S. Elliot I am moved by how much it conveys some truths of emotional pain. Especially grief and longing. The blending of remembering what was, or what was lost, or even the fantasy of what was, or what was lost, and longing for those good feelings, or that person, or for emotional relief and contentment to trump the hurting.
We are resilient. It may not always feel like it, but I believe it's true. Sometimes we need a lot of soul searching, a lot of talking, a lot nurturing and some rigorous but gentle honesty about what we really need, how we are behaving, what we hope for, expect and desire. And we can't always push the process, move the months, the way we might like to, but relief comes, progress happens, I believe. Things open up when you keep looking.
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Tuesday, March 25, 2014
The Last Time Was The Last Time

So I recently heard this: We know that our thinking is going in the right direction when we are met again with temptation - to ruminate again, to use our drug of choice again, to act inappropriately, to lose it, to give in, to yes when we should say no, or no when we should say yes - and instead of doing whatever it is that we do that keeps us going in circles we do something different. Instead of saying to ourselves "Okay, this time will be the last time," we say "No, the last time was the last time."
It's not always so easy. We can't always pull it off. We can't always say this to ourselves, even when we know it's probably for the best, for our best, for everyone's best. Especially when we are hurting, or feeling low about ourselves, or are angry with someone we love and want to trust. Or when we are afraid of feeling too much, too intensely.
But sometimes we can. We can know that whatever the urge is to do whatever it is that keeps us going in circles will pass. That we can change directions, even it seems like it's only a small, incremental, tiny pivot point, it still counts. We can do one thing differently. We can say something different to ourselves. One thing at a time counts. Next right small thing. Because the small things add up. And even if they didn't, they make a tiny mark in the right direction.
And even if we are hurting, or frustrated or feeling hopeless, it's amazing how one small thought can make such a big impact toward getting us over the mountain to a better feeling and a better life.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Broken Up Does Not Mean Broken (or does it?)

S/he broke up with me/broke my heart/disappointed me/hurt me/betrayed me: therefore not only is s/he awful but really because s/he did this/feels this way: that means that I am awful, worthless, unlovable, un-wantable. It must be all my fault. Whatever I did or however I am (which I can't even look at because that would be too terrible to deal with) must be so bad that I deserved this. So: therefor it must be all his/her fault and s/he must see this or I will go crazy. Maybe I am crazy.
Sometimes this is a quiet whispering - sometimes very quiet and - sometimes not so much.
And there is often this too: If I do not have infinite value to this person, and s/he does not place my feelings and me above all else at all times, then I really must be worthless. Or s/he must be way too flawed. Or our love must not be the real thing. Or it's broken. Or I am broken.
Of course everyone does this to different extremes at different times.
But when we can we ask ourselves - without awful self attack - What is my part? How reasonable are my expectations? Are they emotionally reasonable? Am I making unreasonable demands? How do I come across? How do I behave? Am I putting the responsibility for my own self worth on someone else? Is it possible that my reaction to this current situation packs the punch that it does because of a past trauma, feeling, hurt, experience, relationship? Could I have a role in it, but not be awful? Or worthless. Could I bear the hurt without it being so attached to my sense of self?
For sure, these are not usually simple questions, they need some real and tender exploration and study. And we are absolutely influenced by what other people think of us and how they behave toward us, especially people we respect, love and are attached to. But. We tend to suffer a lot more when we don't take a look into the deeper emotional messages and beliefs we have, and when we attach being hurt by someone to the deep - sometimes quiet belief that we are unlovable or pathetic.
This prevents us from finding out what our part really is and then taking care of it so that it does not keep repeating in our lives. But it does not mean that we are worthless, it just means we have to work to do - good, worthwhile work.
And of course, there is so much emotional pain when someone we love and depend on leaves us, or hurts us. There are many layers to such grief. But one piece of the puzzle that can bring us real relief is to consider that taking a look at our part will help us feel and be better. And another good piece is to have the idea that just because we have been hurt does not mean that we are worthless and undeserving of love.
Monday, December 30, 2013
The Year in Review (sort of) and Hope Forward Again
As the year turns again, I've been thinking a lot about hope and about resiliency and about resources.
I've been thinking about complicated grief, complicated life choices, sacrifice, joy and meaning.
Lots of folks this year in my office have talked out and through difficult relationship issues. Some have stayed in the relationship and tried to climb through the mountain of anger and sadness and do what needs to be done to cultivate a culture of mutual respect and to bring back the love and seen surprising good results. Others have decided to move on and forward.
Some folks have keep at the good - but not always easy - work of understanding more about their relationship with themselves. Some have dug into the past to see how it effects the present and could shape the future. Others have been talking about trauma, frustration, grief, addiction and obsession.
Some situations take time to sort through, others give way to clarity sooner. The questions of who we are, what we need, what we are willing to sacrifice for, compromise on and invest in continue to be important and discussion worthy.
A lot of folks tell me that there is peace of mind and meaning that comes from the search. That at least the looking serves the purpose of honoring one's self, spirit and psyche. That even when things are not abundantly clear, there is goodness in knowing the effort is being made to find out more.
And, a lot of folks ask me "What if I try (to heal, figure it out, do this method or that) and it doesn't work? What if there is nothing left to try?" So this is where hope can be painful. But I think that there are always new places to explore, and there are old places to explore again in new ways.
Sometimes, we are even afraid of better. Someone once asked me "Why does getting better - feeling better even - seem to make me feel worse sometimes?" And I think that maybe it's because the familiar is so comforting and we think that the fear and the worry will keep us from something really bad happening. That the things that kept us feeling safe no longer work really as we move forward in life is a daunting idea sometimes.
But I land on hope anyway. I think that when we are sorting it all through - be it quickly or slowly - that if we have our sources of nourishment in place, we can keep at it and it pays off. We just have to take good care of our sources: our supportive relationships, our spiritual life, our service to others, our safe places to talk, our quiet time, our genuine pleasures - the places where we get uncomplicated good feelings - and then we can keep on keeping on as the rest unfolds.
I've been thinking about complicated grief, complicated life choices, sacrifice, joy and meaning.
Lots of folks this year in my office have talked out and through difficult relationship issues. Some have stayed in the relationship and tried to climb through the mountain of anger and sadness and do what needs to be done to cultivate a culture of mutual respect and to bring back the love and seen surprising good results. Others have decided to move on and forward.
Some folks have keep at the good - but not always easy - work of understanding more about their relationship with themselves. Some have dug into the past to see how it effects the present and could shape the future. Others have been talking about trauma, frustration, grief, addiction and obsession.
Some situations take time to sort through, others give way to clarity sooner. The questions of who we are, what we need, what we are willing to sacrifice for, compromise on and invest in continue to be important and discussion worthy.
A lot of folks tell me that there is peace of mind and meaning that comes from the search. That at least the looking serves the purpose of honoring one's self, spirit and psyche. That even when things are not abundantly clear, there is goodness in knowing the effort is being made to find out more.
And, a lot of folks ask me "What if I try (to heal, figure it out, do this method or that) and it doesn't work? What if there is nothing left to try?" So this is where hope can be painful. But I think that there are always new places to explore, and there are old places to explore again in new ways.
Sometimes, we are even afraid of better. Someone once asked me "Why does getting better - feeling better even - seem to make me feel worse sometimes?" And I think that maybe it's because the familiar is so comforting and we think that the fear and the worry will keep us from something really bad happening. That the things that kept us feeling safe no longer work really as we move forward in life is a daunting idea sometimes.
But I land on hope anyway. I think that when we are sorting it all through - be it quickly or slowly - that if we have our sources of nourishment in place, we can keep at it and it pays off. We just have to take good care of our sources: our supportive relationships, our spiritual life, our service to others, our safe places to talk, our quiet time, our genuine pleasures - the places where we get uncomplicated good feelings - and then we can keep on keeping on as the rest unfolds.
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Monday, December 2, 2013
Grace and Grief
and this too
“Grief, as I read somewhere once, is a lazy Susan. One day it is heavy and underwater, and the next day it spins and stops at loud and rageful, and the next day at wounded keening, and the next day numbness, silence.” ~ Anne Lamott
I just finished Anne Lamott's latest book, Stitches, and wanted to bring you a few quotes; there some more... especially on grief that I will bring you soon as well.
Because we are all, in one way or another, at one time or another, grieving. And sometimes that grief comes in disguise. It shows up as anger or fear or agitation or overwhelm or lethargy or depression. And sometimes even when life is rolling along seeming okay, but our mood is off somehow, grief can be the cause.
What sometimes comes up here in the therapy room is this: the idea that when we have a feeling or reaction that is really big in current time, it is often because it is a re-trauma, or re-experience or reminder of something from our past. Meaning that something can happen in a current relationship, a current job situation, interaction or event of some kind, and we feel it deeply. It certainly has importance in it's own and current time and right, but we may experience it and react to it with more power because of past trauma or past experiences.
It usually helps to know. To shine the light on things a bit because when we can figure it out, we have a better chance of recognizing, healing and living better with the grief. If our past is still effecting the way we respond in the present, then it's shaping our future.
So that's where grace comes in. When we allow ourselves all of our feelings, and let ourselves be curious and studious about whether they are old ones or new ones or some of both. And then we can be open to grace, for ourselves and others.
“Grief, as I read somewhere once, is a lazy Susan. One day it is heavy and underwater, and the next day it spins and stops at loud and rageful, and the next day at wounded keening, and the next day numbness, silence.” ~ Anne Lamott
I just finished Anne Lamott's latest book, Stitches, and wanted to bring you a few quotes; there some more... especially on grief that I will bring you soon as well.
Because we are all, in one way or another, at one time or another, grieving. And sometimes that grief comes in disguise. It shows up as anger or fear or agitation or overwhelm or lethargy or depression. And sometimes even when life is rolling along seeming okay, but our mood is off somehow, grief can be the cause.
What sometimes comes up here in the therapy room is this: the idea that when we have a feeling or reaction that is really big in current time, it is often because it is a re-trauma, or re-experience or reminder of something from our past. Meaning that something can happen in a current relationship, a current job situation, interaction or event of some kind, and we feel it deeply. It certainly has importance in it's own and current time and right, but we may experience it and react to it with more power because of past trauma or past experiences.
It usually helps to know. To shine the light on things a bit because when we can figure it out, we have a better chance of recognizing, healing and living better with the grief. If our past is still effecting the way we respond in the present, then it's shaping our future.
So that's where grace comes in. When we allow ourselves all of our feelings, and let ourselves be curious and studious about whether they are old ones or new ones or some of both. And then we can be open to grace, for ourselves and others.
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Monday, November 4, 2013
Staking Your Territory
Recently I heard the following parable:
A benevolent king was riding through the forest in his kingdom and came upon a poor peasant slumped up against a tree crying. The kind hearted king ordered his driver to stop and the king got out of his carriage and approached the peasant. "What's the matter?" asked the king. "I have nothing," replied the peasant, "nothing to call my own, nothing to my name." So the king pulled out from his carriage four long silver stakes and took one of them and drove it securely into the ground. Then the king said to the peasant "Take the other three stakes and walk as far as you'd like. Put them in the ground as markers and you may keep all the land within them as your own."
With that, the king got back into his carriage and rode away.
The peasant, he walked for several miles and raised a stake high to drive it into the ground, but paused and decided to go a bit further. He walked several more miles and once again picked up a stake and began to drive it into the ground, but again decided to go further.
So as the story goes, what do you think happened to the peasant?
He is still walking.
So I was thinking that there are a few different ways to glean some meaning from this:
First, it's often useful to know - for ourselves - the difference -the line - between ambition and excess. We do have to search, but perhaps, we do have to define ourselves as some point.
It helps us to know who we are, what we "yes" have and when to say when.
More is not always better. Having what we need and needing what we have even if we are not on the leading competitive edge may actually yield us a better inner life: more peace of mind, serenity, knowledge of what gives us meaning and what gives our lives value.
And this: Boundaries often set us free. Free to relax. Free to pursue meaning based on reasonable goals. Free to be satisfied. Free to know what our limits are and how to live well within them and because of them. Free to focus on what we have and what we are and what we can do with what we already have and are. Free to settle - because sometimes settling is the path to peace and joy.
It's not that we should not look for better - it's just that perhaps there are times that we have to be gracious and conscious about defining ourselves and about what we believe better to really be.
A benevolent king was riding through the forest in his kingdom and came upon a poor peasant slumped up against a tree crying. The kind hearted king ordered his driver to stop and the king got out of his carriage and approached the peasant. "What's the matter?" asked the king. "I have nothing," replied the peasant, "nothing to call my own, nothing to my name." So the king pulled out from his carriage four long silver stakes and took one of them and drove it securely into the ground. Then the king said to the peasant "Take the other three stakes and walk as far as you'd like. Put them in the ground as markers and you may keep all the land within them as your own."
With that, the king got back into his carriage and rode away.
The peasant, he walked for several miles and raised a stake high to drive it into the ground, but paused and decided to go a bit further. He walked several more miles and once again picked up a stake and began to drive it into the ground, but again decided to go further.
So as the story goes, what do you think happened to the peasant?
He is still walking.
So I was thinking that there are a few different ways to glean some meaning from this:
First, it's often useful to know - for ourselves - the difference -the line - between ambition and excess. We do have to search, but perhaps, we do have to define ourselves as some point.
It helps us to know who we are, what we "yes" have and when to say when.
More is not always better. Having what we need and needing what we have even if we are not on the leading competitive edge may actually yield us a better inner life: more peace of mind, serenity, knowledge of what gives us meaning and what gives our lives value.
And this: Boundaries often set us free. Free to relax. Free to pursue meaning based on reasonable goals. Free to be satisfied. Free to know what our limits are and how to live well within them and because of them. Free to focus on what we have and what we are and what we can do with what we already have and are. Free to settle - because sometimes settling is the path to peace and joy.
It's not that we should not look for better - it's just that perhaps there are times that we have to be gracious and conscious about defining ourselves and about what we believe better to really be.
Labels:
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Monday, September 23, 2013
Should I Stay or Should I Go?

But sometimes we get too caught up in the first question to really delve into the second one. And the second one is usually what informs the first one.
I'm not just talking about difficult marriages, though most often this is where the first question comes up. But also jobs, communities, housing situations, friendships, houses of worship, therapy. When we are thinking of making a change, and we start to wonder more deeply about what is bothering us, we have to go beyond the externals. If we focus only on what is wrong with the other person, people, environment, situation, we miss out on a lot of good information about our own character, needs and tendencies - information that can help us live better and make changes with a deeper degree of inner peace and certainty.
It usually means unpacking the hurts, the angers, the invisible bricks in the wall that separate us from feeling the connection that we need. Most always there are external factors, mistakes, personality issues, actions of others that contribute to our bad feelings, our ambivalence, but the more we know about our own history, loyalties, needs, beliefs and feelings, the better chance we have of making changes that serve us well.
Often, it takes a little while to understand the complex set of feelings we bring into our decisions. And sometimes, we want to get away from the bad feelings, not the person, or the situation. In those instances, it is especially valuable to learn whether or not the feelings can be resolved or transformed before we make a change, especially if we are feeling urgent (unless we are in real danger).
Sometimes change is the solution, but sometimes, no matter where we go (or who we are with) we will eventually bump into the same bad feelings. When we think that there is even a small possibility of this being true, we have to slow down and answer the second question more fully in order to do a good job with the first.
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Wednesday, September 11, 2013
What About Syria?
Some of us are close followers of world events; some of us less so. And sometimes, things heat up on the bigger scene so much that we almost have to be aware of what's going on. And we have to somehow filter what we hear, see, feel and believe and figure out if we are supposed to act, react, weigh in on it. Sometime we wonder what we can do anyway. Sometimes things seem so overwhelming and so big that we just sigh and do our day. Sometimes we carry with us the burdens of the bigger world.
Personal, private, emotional reactions to world events vary greatly of course. Some folks are moved and distracted, some are grateful for their own circumstances in comparison, some are afraid, compassionate, annoyed, outraged, some all of the above at any given moment. But we still have to live our lives in our own routines. We have our own worlds to contend with, to take care of and to function in.
What do we do with our own world in the context of the bigger world picture? Is there anything we can do that is useful to both?
I'm thinking yes, of course. Because how we react to world events shapes us. Most of us have mixed motives for most of the decisions we make. Sometimes we are selfish, or self protective, sometimes generous, giving. Whether our actions are driven at any given time by our feelings, our beliefs or our thinking, we and others are shaped by the choices we make.
And this is where I think we can combine our efforts for both a better inner world, a better outer world and a better world for everyone. And too, for those in emotional pain, get some relief:
We can give charity (does not have to be big amounts, it all helps)
(check this out)
We can give time (just a little counts)
We can say something kind to someone.
We can work on our own pain.
We can be sensitive to the pain of others.
We can give someone the benefit of the doubt.
We can get curious before we get hurt.
We can smile at someone, compliment them, ask about their day.
We can sit quietly and send good vibes into the universe, or pray, or say a short meditation.
We can give someone our blessing, our good wishes or our attentive compassionate ears.
I'm not saying we are going to bring world peace by working on inner peace or peace in our worlds. But I think it's a win-win when we try. Even as we deal with our own fears and angers and difficulties, when we are willing to open a dialogue with ourselves, or with someone with whom we need more peace and take a deeper more curious, gentle look, we create new hope, new possibilities, new energy.
Doing these things shapes us for the better. Doing these things adds good vibes to the world. Doing these things adds to the collective good will in the world.
Some of us are called to do more, much more. But for most of us, we can help by being awake to ourselves, and taking a good action (even if its small) that will bring us better feelings about ourselves, and send good karma into the world. And maybe even create stepping stones for bigger change.
Personal, private, emotional reactions to world events vary greatly of course. Some folks are moved and distracted, some are grateful for their own circumstances in comparison, some are afraid, compassionate, annoyed, outraged, some all of the above at any given moment. But we still have to live our lives in our own routines. We have our own worlds to contend with, to take care of and to function in.
What do we do with our own world in the context of the bigger world picture? Is there anything we can do that is useful to both?
I'm thinking yes, of course. Because how we react to world events shapes us. Most of us have mixed motives for most of the decisions we make. Sometimes we are selfish, or self protective, sometimes generous, giving. Whether our actions are driven at any given time by our feelings, our beliefs or our thinking, we and others are shaped by the choices we make.
And this is where I think we can combine our efforts for both a better inner world, a better outer world and a better world for everyone. And too, for those in emotional pain, get some relief:
We can give charity (does not have to be big amounts, it all helps)
(check this out)
We can give time (just a little counts)
We can say something kind to someone.
We can work on our own pain.
We can be sensitive to the pain of others.
We can give someone the benefit of the doubt.
We can get curious before we get hurt.
We can smile at someone, compliment them, ask about their day.
We can sit quietly and send good vibes into the universe, or pray, or say a short meditation.
We can give someone our blessing, our good wishes or our attentive compassionate ears.
I'm not saying we are going to bring world peace by working on inner peace or peace in our worlds. But I think it's a win-win when we try. Even as we deal with our own fears and angers and difficulties, when we are willing to open a dialogue with ourselves, or with someone with whom we need more peace and take a deeper more curious, gentle look, we create new hope, new possibilities, new energy.
Doing these things shapes us for the better. Doing these things adds good vibes to the world. Doing these things adds to the collective good will in the world.
Some of us are called to do more, much more. But for most of us, we can help by being awake to ourselves, and taking a good action (even if its small) that will bring us better feelings about ourselves, and send good karma into the world. And maybe even create stepping stones for bigger change.
Monday, July 29, 2013
(Can You?) Get Curious Before You Get Hurt
It's easier said than done of course. But it's a good mantra to keep in mind.

When couples come in to work out all the various bumps and bruises - some serious and some less so - that are part of growing, deepening and maintaining a solid relationship, getting curious can really go a long way.
Here's what I mean:
Most of time when someone - especially someone we love/need/want/rely on - says or does something that hurts us - we get bad feelings. Especially if we feel misunderstood, betrayed, disrespected, or unimportant.
We feel the bad feelings and we act or react, and often things spin out from there.
But if we can slow ourselves down, just a bit, and get curious first, we can often get relief. It doesn't mean we should not feel how we feel, or should not allow ourselves to know and have all of our feelings - but there is something to be said for learning more about ourselves and about the person who has hurt us.
As we are feeling our feelings, we can ask some gentle questions like "What may have set the stage for his/her (comment, behavior, feeling)?" Or "What is bothering him//her that may have led to this?" Or "What fears, doubts, insecurities does s/he have that may be operating under the surface?" "What may I have said or done that might have contributed to the circumstances?" "What am I afraid of that may be blocking me from responding differently?"
The answers are not necessarily excuses or allowances, but sometimes when we are willing to get curious first, we can see a bigger, deeper picture - a picture that is often true of the human condition and of the power of our unconscious minds. It can bring us some understanding, And sometimes that may help us respond and feel differently. It may make all the difference in what happens next.
Sometimes it also may mean that we have to acknowledge that we are not always who we want to be, and that people we love may not always be able to give to us the way we want them to or think we deserve. But when we get curious we can often work with ourselves and with those we count on and look to new and better ways of being and feeling.

When couples come in to work out all the various bumps and bruises - some serious and some less so - that are part of growing, deepening and maintaining a solid relationship, getting curious can really go a long way.
Here's what I mean:
Most of time when someone - especially someone we love/need/want/rely on - says or does something that hurts us - we get bad feelings. Especially if we feel misunderstood, betrayed, disrespected, or unimportant.
We feel the bad feelings and we act or react, and often things spin out from there.
But if we can slow ourselves down, just a bit, and get curious first, we can often get relief. It doesn't mean we should not feel how we feel, or should not allow ourselves to know and have all of our feelings - but there is something to be said for learning more about ourselves and about the person who has hurt us.
As we are feeling our feelings, we can ask some gentle questions like "What may have set the stage for his/her (comment, behavior, feeling)?" Or "What is bothering him//her that may have led to this?" Or "What fears, doubts, insecurities does s/he have that may be operating under the surface?" "What may I have said or done that might have contributed to the circumstances?" "What am I afraid of that may be blocking me from responding differently?"
The answers are not necessarily excuses or allowances, but sometimes when we are willing to get curious first, we can see a bigger, deeper picture - a picture that is often true of the human condition and of the power of our unconscious minds. It can bring us some understanding, And sometimes that may help us respond and feel differently. It may make all the difference in what happens next.
Sometimes it also may mean that we have to acknowledge that we are not always who we want to be, and that people we love may not always be able to give to us the way we want them to or think we deserve. But when we get curious we can often work with ourselves and with those we count on and look to new and better ways of being and feeling.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Unconscious Allegiances, Forbidances and Fear of Success
I've often written about how we are shaped by the emotional imprints of our early life, and how freeing, useful and purposeful it can be to take a look at those imprints in order to help us have more of the life we want.
I wanted to bring you an interview that writer and book publisher Lynne Klippel did with Judith Shervin, Ph.D and Jim Sniechowski ,Ph.D, who wrote What Really Killed Whiney Houston. It will speak especially to writers, but really it's a message for all of us about what holds us back from moving forward in our lives - especially in our creative outlets. I think their message can be universally applied as well to any endeavor we are contemplating, as well as to our relationships.
Drs. Shervin and Sniechowski discuss the idea of releasing internal permission and what holds us back from doing and having and creating. They speak about what we give our heart to and why, as well as the voices we hear that make up our belief system.
Here in the office when we unpack the obstacles to our success and contentment and shine the light on what gets in the way of recovery from addiction, satisfying relationships, healthy livelihoods, creative energy, we often uncover old loyalties, beliefs and ideas. And while these may have protected us in the past and helped us to survive, now they hinder us.
This short interview gives a good, clear and enjoyable synopsis of how this happens and how to begin to do things differently. Have a listen and you'll see what I mean.
I wanted to bring you an interview that writer and book publisher Lynne Klippel did with Judith Shervin, Ph.D and Jim Sniechowski ,Ph.D, who wrote What Really Killed Whiney Houston. It will speak especially to writers, but really it's a message for all of us about what holds us back from moving forward in our lives - especially in our creative outlets. I think their message can be universally applied as well to any endeavor we are contemplating, as well as to our relationships.
Drs. Shervin and Sniechowski discuss the idea of releasing internal permission and what holds us back from doing and having and creating. They speak about what we give our heart to and why, as well as the voices we hear that make up our belief system.

This short interview gives a good, clear and enjoyable synopsis of how this happens and how to begin to do things differently. Have a listen and you'll see what I mean.
Labels:
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bingeing,
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Depression,
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Grace,
Honesty,
hope,
Money,
Passion,
Pleasure,
relationships,
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