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The Mastery of Love Part 4 of 10: The Man Who Did not Believe in Love

March 19, 2009 by · 11 Comments 

falling_starThere was a man who did not believe in love.  He simply said, “Love does not exist.  It is an illusion.”  He likened most relationships to what goes on between a drug dealer and an addict.  The drug dealer gives the addict what he/she needs, and the addict craves that addiction.  Similarly, in many relationships, there is one member who is needy for love and the other one who really does not need love but gives love out and thereby controls the relationship.  This unhealthy relationship is very prevalent and leads to mutual destruction or lingering dependency.

One day this man encountered a woman sitting on a park bench.  He saw that she was visibly distraught.  He asked her what was the matter.  She said, “I have been married for many years to a man who no longer loves or respects me.  I do not believe in love.”  The man who did not believe in love responded, “Yes, love does not exist.”  Then, the man and woman who did not believe in love became steadfast friends, and that friendship blossomed into a burgeoning romance.  They both could not believe in fact that this time what seemed to be love was founded on respect and mutual admiration.  There was no petty jealousy or negativity like from the past.  

One night a shooting star came from the heavens, and the man gave that star to the woman.  The woman became afraid of the overwhelming love and dropped the star, which then broke into a million pieces.  Whose fault was it that broke the star?  It was the man’s.  He thought he could give another person happiness.  However, in any relationship, we are only responsible for our own happiness not the other person’s.  We cannot make that person truly happy but we can simply exude our own happiness every day.  When we start to become responsible for another’s happiness, we can lose our own.  As my mentor always said, “Happiness comes from within.”  We cannot live in the shadow of another’s happiness.  We can only be responsible for living our own happiness.

When we have the responsibility to make someone else happy, we create internal anxiety within us for that responsibility, which ultimately leads to failure.  Our fear that we will lose that love and our anxiety to please our significant other can ultimately ruin that relationship.  Focusing on our own happiness, peace, and contentment will radiate to our partner without necessarily being explicit in our desire to make that other person intentionally happy.  Just be responsible for your half of the equation.

Ruiz divides relationships into two distinct categories:  fear and love.  Too often 95% of the relationship is based out of fear with only 5% given to love.  Fear is conditional:  I only love you if…; whereas love is unconditional.  Fear is selfish and controlling; whereas love is generous and filled with respect.  When we start to let go of fear and focus on our own half of the relationship and the success of that half, our relationship can flourish.  When we are gripped by fear of how to make the other person happy or we feel that we must be in charge of that person’s happiness, we allow fear to dominate that relationship and move it toward a lower state and possible disintegration.

The Mastery of Love Part 3 of 10: Self-Abuse

March 18, 2009 by · 4 Comments 

worriedteenWe are always punishing ourselves.  We play the Victim because that is the role that has been assigned to us during our period of domestication.  We always feel that we should be punished because we see ourselves as imperfect:  ”I am not good enough.  I am deserving of this abuse” so I will abuse myself.  Ruiz perceives us as domesticated animals.  We respond in ways that reflect our domestication.  The only difference with an animal is that we will punish ourselves a thousand times for the same mistake.  We are convinced that we are imperfect and must therefore be subjected to punishment.

As I have said in a past blog, I have tried to stop saying that “I am imperfect.”  It brings to light our own self abusive tendencies to play judge and jury so that we can become Victims again.  Ruiz calls the indoctrinated belief system that society (aka, the Dream) has imposed on us as the Parasite that sucks on our emotional wounds.  The language that the Parasite uses is fear.  Fear grips us and paralyzes us and distorts our relationships.

Many times we wonder when we see others, “How does she live with that abuse?”  The answer is simple:  she already is abusing herself (I’m not good enough or worthy.  I deserve this.) and therefore accepts as only natural abuse from another.  With the emotional poison that is there, she gives it back to them, and he accepts it because he is used to thinking of himself with that same level of self abuse.  Ruiz’s insight (that I have mentioned in a previous blog and is worth repeating here) is that we will only tolerate an abusive relationship as much as we tolerate our own abuse.  When that relationship exceeds our own level of self abuse, we will flee.  However, many individuals live in such a sustained level of self abuse that they can tolerate many levels of abuse and will remain in that relationship.

When we can begin to clear the storing house of false thoughts that the Parasite has made us believe, think, and really fear, we can then escape those abusive relationships because we will stop abusing ourselves.  When we begin to love ourselves without self condemnation and without judgment, we can then have the prospect of entering a healthy, loving relationship.

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