Monday, April 02, 2007

205. What he described as care and concern she described as feeling stangled by love

Seeing danger signals in a dating relationship can prevent a great deal of suffering in the future. I’ve met a number of men and women who have been hurt when the man or woman of their dreams turned out to be someone different from the person they thought they knew. When they discussed what happened virtually all of them said there were warning signs they should have heeded but ignored because they didn’t want to see them.

A few months ago Annie, a woman I know, was telling me about a man she’d been seeing recently. “He’s a really nice man,” she said, “but I feel strangled by love.” She could have said, “strangled by false love,” and we’ll see why. This man was a widower in his 70s and had lived a life of achievement and success, well-educated and accomplished – a strong Christian. Yet Annie felt constant pressure from him. Not pressure for sex but pressure to let him take care of her and be the partner and protector in her life. He wanted her to carry pepper spray when she walked, for instance, and even gave her some and asked if she was using it. She didn’t feel a need for it but he wanted her to use it anyway.

One day she was telling him of a volunteer job she had that caused her to drive a long distance on the freeway. He tried to dissuade her from making that drive. He pointed to statistics describing how driving more miles on the freeway leads to more risk of being in an accident, and eventually said to her, “You know, you owe it to the people who love you not to take risks like that.”

She was dismayed and immediately knew didn’t feel good in her gut, she said. The problem with a statement like that is that while it doesn’t feel good it can sound so much like love that it’s sometimes hard to figure out what’s really going on. The statement can feel like love because it seems to say, “Oh, look how much he cares, he doesn’t want me to be hurt.” But since it didn’t feel good to Annie let’s look behind the words and see what’s really being said.

A little inquiry can bring some clarity. The statement this man made was: “You owe it to the people who love you not to take risks like that.” First, he clearly puts himself in the group of “people who love you” so we can narrow his statement down to, “You owe it to me….” Now we can see he’s not really taking care of Annie’s friends and relatives, whom he doesn’t even know, he’s taking care of himself. So let’s just be clear about that first.

Next, his statement is actually saying, “You owe it to me not to live the life you want, but to live the way I want because, after all, I love you and I know what’s best for you.” That may sound like a harsh assessment of his statement but we’re here to look at reality not to whitewash it. We also don’t need to judge him or think he’s wrong. In a confused view of life this is what love may appear to look like. But why, then, doesn’t it feel good to someone like Annie to hear this?

When you consider his statement more thoroughly is it love or is it control? He’s really saying, “It’s up to you to take care of my feelings and I worry (my feelings) when you drive long distances and risk being in an accident so please stop it (take care of me).” Control is always nothing more than that – someone trying to get us to live their way so they can be happy. This man’s statement to Annie is a huge, neon sign flashing: “Control! Control! Control!” If there’s control in this aspect of life isn’t it likely – about 100% likely – that this man will also try to control in other ways? If he wants Annie to take care of his feelings in this instance he’ll surely want to make her responsible for his feelings in other areas. (“It’s your job to visit my adult children with me,” for example.) All this is in the name of love, of course.

Love isn’t controlling. Love is about freedom and care without control. It doesn’t say, “My love demands that you take care of me.” No, love says, “Because I love you I want you to live your way and if I’m worried that’s my problem, not yours, and I’m the one who needs to take care of it.”

In any relationship, where one or both people are dependent and needy, there will be obvious signs of trouble if we just pay attention. How do you see these danger signals? It’s easy – your body will tell you. Our deeper wisdom knows when something doesn’t feel right, even if we can’t put our finger on it consciously at first. A little deep inquiry will always show us the light.

Then all we need to do is move away from that controlling behavior, without judgment or condemnation. You may even feel compassion but you don’t get unwittingly sucked in with behavior that wears the mask of love and concern but is really manipulation and control when you peer under the mask. If you don’t see control early it’s a guarantee that you’ll pay the price later in a relationship, when the clinging, needy behavior begins to feel like being “strangled by love” – false love masquerading as real.

Copyright © 2007 Chuck Custer

204. When we trust our deeper wisdom mature dating becomes a romp in the park

All things change, all the time. In the physical world things change because creation changes. Something decays, something else is born. In the thought world too, things change constantly. Even who we think we are changes, just in the space of a day, or even a minute. One moment we see ourselves as loving, a moment later we’re angry and spiteful. One day we love ourselves, the next day we loathe ourselves.

In our dating and partnerships things also change. At one time we think we know exactly who we want as a partner and moments later we’re not so sure. Yet, when things don’t go the way we want them to go we’re upset. We’re in pain. Why? Because we’ve decided we know what’s best for us. With all that uncertainty within us does it make sense to actually believe that thought?

The mind that believes it knows what’s best is a closed mind – inflexible, fixed, stiff and stuck. It’s not open to the wisdom of the way things are. “Out there,” which includes our thoughts, is always changing. But that simple awareness that is the source all things spring from is always waiting in the background as the open, accepting space that allows all things.

That infinite wisdom never changes. It’s what you could call the heart wisdom, the beloved. When you stop believing all your thoughts the heart wisdom is there, reminding you what you’ve always known – that the way life is is the truth. As you question your thoughts, your assumptions, your interpretations, and your judgments, your beliefs of resistance fall away because you see through them. You see they’re not true.

You begin to see life with an open heart. And until you come to life with an open heart and mind you’ll suffer. Through clear investigation you see reality. Almost magically you’re happy, peaceful and free of pain simply by observing life as it is, trusting that the beloved knows its way. You can start by asking yourself, “Do I really know the way life should be; do I need to resist what is and create suffering for myself?”

After all, it’s only when we think something should be different that we suffer. Rather than thinking, “My partner shouldn’t have left me,” we can notice reality and say, “He should have left me and I know that because he did.” That’s seeing life the way it is rather than fighting it, which is crazy. And it’s only that craziness that makes us hurt. In fact, could it possibly be that “what is” is actually best for us?

Copyright © 2007 Chuck Custer