CSummer
08-09-2009, 11:59 PM
~ Eknath Easwaran (the late revered meditation teacher) is quoted as having said:
“It takes a lot of experience of life to see why some relationships last and others do not.
But we do not have to wait for a crisis to get an idea of the future of a particular
relationship. Our behavior in little every (sic) incidents tells us a great deal.”
If we are as predictable as Easwaran implies, then we must be powerless to learn, grow,
heal and change from our experiences. But are we?
Close relationships tend to bring up the needs and feelings of our unresolved experiences,
especially those from early in life. What we do when this happens can make the difference
between a relationship that is unfulfilling or dysfunctional (and that has a predictable
outcome) or one that enables learning, growth and healing (resolving of early-life wounds).
Whenever difficult feelings arise, words or actions may result that can be difficult for
someone who is close to us to hear or witness. These feelings, though, are an indication
that there is something unresolved within us that we may have carried with us most of our
lives and that is almost invariably tied to some need that goes back to our earliest
relationships (e.g., those with our parents). When this happens, one option we have is
to find ways to dance around such issues so we can continue the relationship. This option
seems most likely to result in the predictable outcome Easwaran is talking about.
There is another option, though: we can stop where we are and take all the time we
need to look closely at what's arising within us. It requires a commitment to being true
to ourselves and not ignoring or abandoning anything within us that is calling for our
attention. This option also requires that we release any agendas and attachments we may
have to a particular outcome for the relationship. We need to be clear about whether we
want an intimate connection no matter how unfulfilling it might be, or if we want one that
enables us to learn, grow and heal the emotional baggage we carry with us into relationships.
If we choose to put the relationship in a "holding pattern" and not go to deeper levels of
intimacy until the difficult feelings and needs have been completely resolved - and to
proceed only when we feel fully ready, then I believe healing and growth are possible.
The "little incidents" Easwaran referred to can be opportunities for resolving whatever
has arisen that keeps us from seeing the present relationship clearly, without the
distortions of old unmet needs. Then there are the possibilities of greater intimacy
or of changing to a kind of relationship that fits better the whole, conscious beings
we are growing into.
It may be that most relationships are as predictable and doomed to repeat dysfunctional
patterns until they dissolve as Easwaran's words say they are. I believe, though, that
with caring support and a commitment to deal with what arises up front, we can resolve
the wounds we carry within, release the patterns that make our relationships difficult
and create the joyful connections we desire and need.
“It takes a lot of experience of life to see why some relationships last and others do not.
But we do not have to wait for a crisis to get an idea of the future of a particular
relationship. Our behavior in little every (sic) incidents tells us a great deal.”
If we are as predictable as Easwaran implies, then we must be powerless to learn, grow,
heal and change from our experiences. But are we?
Close relationships tend to bring up the needs and feelings of our unresolved experiences,
especially those from early in life. What we do when this happens can make the difference
between a relationship that is unfulfilling or dysfunctional (and that has a predictable
outcome) or one that enables learning, growth and healing (resolving of early-life wounds).
Whenever difficult feelings arise, words or actions may result that can be difficult for
someone who is close to us to hear or witness. These feelings, though, are an indication
that there is something unresolved within us that we may have carried with us most of our
lives and that is almost invariably tied to some need that goes back to our earliest
relationships (e.g., those with our parents). When this happens, one option we have is
to find ways to dance around such issues so we can continue the relationship. This option
seems most likely to result in the predictable outcome Easwaran is talking about.
There is another option, though: we can stop where we are and take all the time we
need to look closely at what's arising within us. It requires a commitment to being true
to ourselves and not ignoring or abandoning anything within us that is calling for our
attention. This option also requires that we release any agendas and attachments we may
have to a particular outcome for the relationship. We need to be clear about whether we
want an intimate connection no matter how unfulfilling it might be, or if we want one that
enables us to learn, grow and heal the emotional baggage we carry with us into relationships.
If we choose to put the relationship in a "holding pattern" and not go to deeper levels of
intimacy until the difficult feelings and needs have been completely resolved - and to
proceed only when we feel fully ready, then I believe healing and growth are possible.
The "little incidents" Easwaran referred to can be opportunities for resolving whatever
has arisen that keeps us from seeing the present relationship clearly, without the
distortions of old unmet needs. Then there are the possibilities of greater intimacy
or of changing to a kind of relationship that fits better the whole, conscious beings
we are growing into.
It may be that most relationships are as predictable and doomed to repeat dysfunctional
patterns until they dissolve as Easwaran's words say they are. I believe, though, that
with caring support and a commitment to deal with what arises up front, we can resolve
the wounds we carry within, release the patterns that make our relationships difficult
and create the joyful connections we desire and need.