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Where do I start? - dmg

I'm just back from a wonderful holiday with my SO and my youngest daughter. I had hoped being away from everything would somehow bring me closer to my SO and maybe the quiet time we had would have given me some answers, maybe clear up some of my confusion. Well, here I am just as confused as ever.

Could someone give me some pointers on listening to myself, understanding myself. Does this sound like I'm a looney? No matter how much time I sit in quiet and try to understand how I'm feeling, to listen to myself, I just seem to go around in circles. I am so tired of feeling so unsettled and unsure. A day doesn't go by without my wondering if I should really be in the relationship I'm in. I chatted with wolfie a bit earlier and began to see that I am really dealing with a lot of my own issues. eg, the fear of being myself and the fear of commitment. I know these things I have to work on but where does a person begin??

How do I stop thinking so negatively about my relationship? It seems sometimes I look for reasons to end it but instead I have stuck with it not knowing what to do to change it.

Our sexual relationship is wonderful (when we find the time). It seems to be the only time I feel really close to my SO. In day to day living I have shut myself off from him. I find I am intimidated by him in conversations (like I'm going to sound stupid or something) so I don't talk much, we rarely touch (hugs, kisses, etc.) His dog goes ape whenever I make any move towards him (even after 2 years), even if we sit too close on the couch. I guess I have pretty much trained myself not to bother any more. There's the sensitivity issue I talked about in my other posting. I am even hesitant and feel uncomfortable giving him a simple shoulder massage because he has told me in that sarcastic way that my daughter gives a much better rub than me. How can this bother me to the point that I feel uncomfortable doing this simple thing for him?

My SO has told me on different occasions that I don't give enough to the relationship. I guess I know that's true. I know I'm not giving him what he needs emotionally. I want to be closer to him but I don't seem to be able to give anymore than what I am now. Telling him all of these feelings I have will result in a break up of some kind (short or long lived) I'm positive, it's happened before when I have tried to be honest. I'm a little afraid of that. Is there such a thing as too much honesty? I seem to have rambled a bit much. Thanks once again for listening. Take care all.

From: mzet

here are my guesses: TALK TO HIM!!! You're going to strain the relationship one way or another anyway, and you might as well do it now while you still love him!!! The longer you wait, the worse it will get. The longer you wait, the higher the risk that one of you or both of you may call it quits or have an affair or both.

What you have going for you is that you have identified many of the issues that bother you. Keep searching for them, both inside of you and in the relationship. That is a huge first step. He probably doesn't even know how serious the situation is and if it blows up he will wonder why you never really told him how you felt until it was too late.

You sound as if you are starting to lose who you are by being with him (i.e., fear of conversing with him, fear of intimacy, the damn dog, etc.) and you may soon find that it is only when you are away from him that you have the freedom to be who you are. This is an alarm bell. And it is a very dangerous condition, in my own mind, if you want to preserve the relationship. Both of you need to find ways to relate to one another that preserve who he is and who you are. Only communication and hard work will get you both objectives. I suggest therapy. A therapist is a facilitator, an independent third party that can give you two the tools you need to explore yourselves and the relationship. He may need a little help in being convinced of how important therapy will be. But don't give up. Tell him you are serious.

Take a deep breath and find the courage to talk to him. But don't wait! Again, my guesses.

From: wolfie

Dearest dmg, It sounds as if you are in a position where you don't feel safe. As you know, your SO is bringing up certain issues within yourself that now - it is time - needs to be healed. When you were a child, did you feel as if you couldn't do ANYTHING right?? It is ok to cry - to get mad - to not want to take it anymore. You see, if you hadn't grown as much as you have, his words to you would feel like truth and you would just go on believing what he says about you.... Instead, a piece of you KNOWS that something isn't right here. I TRULY AM OK and I am doing the best I can and IT IS OK! I am DESERVING of LOVE! And you are!!!! I read a book recently and the woman went on to describe her partner who always always put her down. She kept reacting and feeling bad (was just mirroring her own issues about self) But she was working on herself and taking care of herself and she started to fly, to grow, to feel real good about herself. It got to the point where, when he said something to put her down, it really didn't phase her anymore - it didn't bother her because she was free of it. Eventually she WALKED away from the relationship. In regards to where you are at right now, it sounds like you are not feeling safe - safe to talk, to share, to be yourself and know that you're ok. It sounds as if you feel like you are walking on eggshells and whenever you open your mouth or do anything, you feel put down.

What you can do is exactly what you are doing - you are reaching out - you are connecting with supportive and SAFE people - you ARE growing, even though you don't feel like it. I would still recommend affirmations! Every day - as much as you can - over and over. I am deserving of Love. I am ok the way I am. I am beautiful! I deserve happiness! I love me! I accept me! I AM enough just the way I AM! Perfect or Not, I am OK the way I am. Fill yourself up with all of the love you can. Attend support groups which are very POSITIVE and Loving! And you know what - everything is going to be ok. In regards to you not being enough for him emotionally - Screw that and let it go. It is Not Your responsibility to fulfil him emotionally or in any which way. The ONLY person who can make him happy is HIM. You are NOT responsible for his feelings - he is responsible for his feelings, his happiness, his emotional fulfilment. He is responsible for HIM and you are for you and so continue looking at what you can do for you. There are some wonderful books out there and wonderful support groups. You are doing the best you can and I think you are doing great! another thing you can do is to try and meditate. Just get quiet and listen...........what does your intuition tell you? Your inner voice of knowing will always guide you - just try to listen and hear what comes up. LOTS OF LOVE AND HUGS are being sent to you now! Know that I am with you!

From: Bernd

You mentioned "I know I'm not giving him what he needs emotionally.." My guess is the real truth here is HE'S not giving himself what he needs to emotionally, and he's expecting you to make up the difference. In Lynda's and my experience, this simply doesn't work. Lynda can only help me with emotional needs I'm trying to nurture in myself. If I don't take the MAIN responsibility for my own needs, the holes become too big for Lynda to even partially "fill". We did this with each other thru most of our marriage, and of course, we both continued to fall short. As a result, we also became more disillusioned with ourselves, each other, life, and our marriage. Sound like a recipe for disaster? It is.

However, there's also a gift in what he's telling you. Because partners are uncanny mirrors for each other, my guess is that you have a very similar difficulty nurturing your own emotional needs, and quite likely are looking for him to fill some holes of emptiness inside you that YOU need to tackle more yourself. Wolfie's mention of support groups are ideal places to get in touch with those, and begin filling them safely. If both of you are expecting the other to fill such emotional needs (and it's likely you aren't even aware of this process happening in many areas of your lives), then what you have is a "trade war" going on, where each of you tries to get as much back as you give. That's human. Except your perceptions of what you give, and what you get in return are going to be very different. The power struggles become more exhausting and confusing as time goes by.

You mentioned that he reacts to honesty with threats of leaving, or actual leaving. My suggestion is give him the permission to make whatever choices he feels are best for him, INCLUDING when and if to listen to you when you want to share your feelings and thoughts. Sometimes, we spring "honesty" on others when such honesty scares the bejeebers out of them, because it triggers some pretty strong fears about their own worthiness that they keep buried deep down inside. If you can find a support group or good therapist, practice being safe with honesty with them, so that you can give your partner compassionate honesty. This is not something you do for your partner; it's something you do for you, because you can only give others what you own. Being able to give YOURSELF compassionate honesty about your own imperfections is a powerful healing tool.

In our relationship, I try to remind myself that "everything that Lynda does is what I need". If she threatened to leave because I wanted to be honest with her, it would help me to ask myself "why do I need that reaction from her right now for my own healing?" When I explore THAT question, I find out some very important things about myself, that help me in my recovery. God gives me what I need, when I need it. I pray for the wisdom to see every gift wrapped in barbed wire. Hope some of this helps. I love Wolfie's response to you.

From: mzet

questions, questions, questions: is there room for a middle ground here? if we concentrate on the self so much, and if all the effort is on the self, why do we need a partner? are we loving our partner when we shut down any effort to communicate to the other what hurts us, even if the other is just the trigger and not the source of the hurt? are we loving when we affirm in action that the other can only heal by themselves and that therefore they are not in need of direct feedback from us? is there a framework for compassion toward the other when we only concentrate on healing ourselves? why do I get the sense that we are afraid of risking having our most important needs nurtured by our partners? why are we so afraid of depending on our partners? why can't we be honest with ourselves and then with our partners, particularly regarding those things that bother us in the relationship?

I know I am projecting when I say this (hey, who doesn't?) but when one partner in a relationship has such clear signals, it seems to me that in addition to being introspective to begin to heal by him or herself, he or she needs to be extroverted if indeed he or she wants to save the relationship. To me, that means starting the painful process of re-making the relationship within a different framework that sustains and affirms each other. Is it necessary to wait for a crisis of catastrophic proportions, such as a separation or an affair, to get to work? I think not, particularly and especially if one of the partners has clear indications that something is wrong. What do you think?

From: wolfie

Dear Mzet, In prior discussions we have talked about communication and how important it is. It is Key - for that matter and I believe it completely! We discussed this in dmg's prior posts. dmg (and please correct me if I am wrong dmg) has tried to communicate and has, in fact, been learning HOW to communicate. What I sensed in this post is that dmg is feeling pretty low about herself these days (the relationship is allowing certain things to come up) and she is unsure her direction. Going within, listening to ones intuition, doing what one needs to do for oneself, reaching out to supportive people, pampering herself with love, are all tools we are offering.

And just for the record, I believe it IS always about US. We cannot change others and we can't really blame them for that matter (we can try but it doesn't do any good) because we are responsible for our own lives and we do these things to ourselves (based on our inner beliefs about self). And people are just really mirroring US. And the only thing we can really do is bless others for what they are giving us and take responsibility and look at changing us. As we change and grow, we notice that things around us change as well. But it is US that is changing. Our beliefs about self have changed, therefore we draw into our lives experiences that reflect that.

From: Susan

Mzet, Well so far this week we have tackled: co-dependency, dead dreams, lack of self-trust, fear of commitment, etc. etc. etc. Does the phrase "Fear of Intimacy" ring any bells here. Thank you for finally putting into words, the very thing that has been nagging at me for a long time. "If I love myself enough I won't need anyone, or anything - I will become my own universe." Empowering thought, BUT VERY LONELY (out there in space, being your own universe, shut off from all HUMAN contact). Thanks for asking some hard questions !!!!!!!!

From: wolfie

Hi mzet, I just wanted to say one more thing and then I'll be quiet. I feel it is always about us but we wouldn't really know "us" if it weren't for the beautiful relationships we have with others! I used to think I was pretty "with it" alone and loving myself but put me into a relationship and I'm a kid again - facing all of my fears. (and seeing how I really feel about myself - not good at all) I also believe that as we treat others, we are really treating ourselves. Relationships are a beautiful way to grow in our self love. We get to know ourselves. We grow spiritually, we evolve. We work on ourselves and change ourselves because we can't change anyone else, and we treat others as I would want to be treated - for as I treat others, I treat myself. It is all about self love and self growth and relationships are incredible tools for that. If I treat my partner with compassion and respect then that says that I have compassion and respect for me. We are all interconnected.

Relationships are truly beautiful and truly remarkable. All relationships are such gifts. Mzet, truly good questions!!!! I used to say "hey I gotta do what I gotta do" and think "hey if you have an issue with it, it is your issue - you are responsible for your life" but I have learned about compassion and acting with integrity and treating others as I would want to be treated - with love, kindness and compassion - for you and I are one. And in regards to communication - as I said earlier, I think it is Key. Having a great communication tool (approach that works) is even better - in other words, a way that we can both share and listen and have genuine compassion...be friends for each other....a way we can successfully find solutions...etc. Mzet, God Bless!!!!

From: Bernd

“If we concentrate on the self so much, and if all the effort is on the self, why do we need a partner?” I can be okay and happy without a partner. But I can have even more joy and transformation in my relationship with Lynda. It’s like 1+1=3.

“Are we loving our partner when we shut down any effort to communicate to the other what hurts us, even if the other is just the trigger and not the source of the hurt?” I don’t shut down communication. I try to make my communication give me the MOST back. If my hidden motives include wanting Lynda to change, then I’m giving less acceptance, and less love, and that is less loving to myself.

“Are we loving when we affirm in action that the other can only heal by themselves and that therefore they are not in need of direct feedback from us?” Another paradox. Lynda doesn’t “need” feedback from me, but she gets it in a number of involuntary ways anyway - my moods, my body language, etc. She can heal fine without me. With me and my recovery, however, her healing has happened more quickly, and her suffering gets transformed into joy much faster. And vice versa.

“Is there a framework for compassion toward the other when we only concentrate on healing ourselves?” The amount of compassion I can give others is linked to the amount of compassion I’m able to give myself. But I can fool myself a lot easier than I can fool others, believing I’m being compassionate to myself when actually I’m walling off things I don’t like about myself. How compassionate I am with her gives me a lot more accurate reading of how well I’m doing with myself.

“Why do I get the sense that we are afraid of risking having our most important needs nurtured by our partners?” Because the closer I get to someone, the more emotionally vulnerable I am - and if someone hurts me bad enough emotionally, I become suicidal, and there’s a real risk to my life. My experience in the past has been that the less faith I have in love and God and myself, the easier it is for others to hurt me emotionally, and the more dangerous it feels the closer I get to someone.

“Why are we so afraid of depending on our partners?” Because I know inside it’s dangerous, unless my main dependence is on God and my inner voice. I try to depend on Lynda for help I’m not able to give myself, but only to the extent that she is freely willing and able to give it. I can’t hug myself as well as she can, for example, but if she gives them out of fear or a sense of obligation, they lose their magic, and both of us lose.

“Why can't we be honest with ourselves and then with our partners, particularly regarding those things that bother us in the relationship?” Honesty, for me, is scary. First, I know I’m a long way off from being completely honest with myself - part of my disease of codependency. Honesty needs acceptance and compassion as a safe place to grow. I also accept that I can’t be any more honest with Lynda than I am with myself. This helps me a lot when I do talk to her about things that bother me in the relationship, because it reminds me that such talking will help ME uncover things inside myself I’ve been buffaloing myself about (unawares). Once I see them, I can hand them over to God, and He/She does some neat miracles with them, and my life gets better. That example is the best thing I can give her. When her life gets better, her sunshine radiates and warms me all over. And vice versa.

“When one partner in a relationship has such clear signals, it seems to me that in addition to being introspective to begin to heal by him or herself, he or she needs to be extroverted if indeed he or she wants to save the relationship”. If by this, you mean that the “recovering” partner has to reach out to the other, in our case that’s true, and yet not true. As long as Lynda and I were together, almost every choice I made and emotion I felt had some degree of effect on her, just because we shared physical space so much. Like sharing air - if I opened the windows and breathed fresh air, she’d get some to, without any extra effort from me. If I smoked, she’d breathe in the second-hand smoke.

In the same way, my recovery affected her, without any effort on my part to have it affect her. Now, picture me trying to “get” her to breathe that fresh air from opening the windows, trying to force it into her mouth. Get the picture? Her resistance to that kind of control would be healthy. So was her resistance to my attempts to get her into therapy or alanon. As a codependent, I realize that it’s damn hard for me to know when my efforts have some control wrapped up in them. The best thing I can do for myself and her is to reach out to her when she is receptive, and invites my help, and remind her that her inner voice is her best guide, not me. As far as saving the relationship, for me it’s this simple: if the relationship is the best thing for her, and the best thing for me, then God will show us the way, thru our inner voices. It may take some time for each of us to “get the message”, but if I’m going to support her trusting her inner voice, then I have to give that process whatever time it needs. And I did. If this relationship isn’t the best thing for her, then why would I want to shortchange her? I have implicit faith now (and boy, that was a LONG time coming) that God will lead me to where I need to go, and where deep down I WANT to go, but have a hard time putting into words yet. Lynda is free to share as much or as little as she wants, and to give as little or as much as she chooses. As a human being, SHE wants as much happiness and love out of this life as anyone. That freedom gives her a safe place to find it, and she has done far more healing within that freedom than she did during all my attempts to fix her and the marriage.

Oooooo, reading this over I just noticed there’s not a lot of softness or gentleness in my answers. Looks like you triggered something I need to look at!:) Ya just never know who’s gonna flip open a trapdoor that ya (meaning I) need to look at. I thank you for that. Seriously. Hope this shows a bit more of how this thing on my neck works!

From: mzet

your answers were gentle :) one more question (s): do you think that the paradoxes that those who are in relationships with alcoholics or addicts of any kind and are therefore in potentially codependent situations apply 100% to relationships where there are no addictions present?

I guess I am concerned that this may not necessarily be the case, that we run the risk of applying a set of paradigms that work on a co-dependent situation but may not all the time on a non-co-dependent situation. I mean, we all have addictions to one extent or another, but sometimes the addiction may be temporary as in the case of an affair, and once the affair is over, is the correct attitude one of total detachment and reliance on self? And if the problem is not related to addiction at all, as it seems to be in the current series of postings, are we using the right framework in relying on co-dependency methods?

Like you, I believe, too, that a life of celibacy is also a potential way to sanctity. However, I am not so sure about a life of promiscuity. It's either marriage or celibacy, regardless of your sexual inclination, maybe because both require a commitment, and are difficult..

I recognize how important it is to heal ourselves independently of our partner. But once that process is underway for BOTH, compassion should be what it means, literally, to suffer together. And in my own experience, that is accompanied by an urge to help the other in an intentional way. To take your example of breathing clean air by opening a window a step further, doesn't compassion urge me to perform mouth to mouth resuscitation if my partner has stopped breathing? Opening the window so I can breath better does not help my partner much, does it? Once breathing is restored, then continuing artificial respiration will be a detriment, and that's when you step back, true love demands that you do. The question to me is how to discern when to step in and when to step back.

The fear of risk of depending on our partners is very real. You put it in very stark language. At one point, I forget where, you spoke about a type of dependency on the other that was not addictive. You called it something like "mutual dependency" or something like that. To me, the parable of the prodigal son speaks to the type of perfect love that I am talking about, where both dependency and independence co-exists. Again, the question seems to be how to develop a relationship where both co-exist.

I also get something very important from your posting that I need to continue to remind myself: that only God, perfect by definition, can fulfil all of my needs perfectly. So when God is at the center of a relationship, i.e., when we love the other because their God is our God, because they simply are rather than because of what we get out of him or her, and when both partners recognize this experience, then it is truly heaven on earth, and that little phrase in the Our Father which says that God's will is done on earth as it is in heaven becomes a reality, and we really get a glimpse of Heaven. But if I insist on having all of my needs met by my partner, or a series of partners, I will fail miserably. I have a feeling that it is in sharing this road to God, in walking with our partners holding hands, helping each other along the way, that we can all become saints, in the broadest sense of the word, i.e., fully human beings.

One of the reasons I have come to appreciate Christian spirituality is because it has a strong communal component to it. If you think about it, the mere fact that we share a common language points to community. This web site is another clear example of that principle. The love that we discover inside of us once we become aware of God's presence inside of each of us and, in fact, inside of everything that is, tends to pour out of us into the community, sometimes effortlessly. The real questions this post struggles with, therefore, is how you discern your place in the community, particularly the community of a marriage, in the face of suffering, or, in other words, how compassion interfaces with love and action.

I appreciate your thoughts on the issue of saving a relationship. They make a lot of sense to me, and, as you know, it is the same thing I discovered: essentially, to love is to love unconditionally. But in my experience, that unconditional love is only possible when it is not ME loving, but God loving thorough me. It is humanly impossible to love unconditionally for more than a few days when one is getting nothing in return. I found that when God gave me the gift of really feeling her presence inside of me, I had the strength and I could go on, but that when that gift was withdrawn (as God sometimes does), then loving my partner unconditionally was just not sustainable. I have the strange feeling that it was during one of these moments of feeling God's absence that I gathered the strength to start the divorce process, and that that happened so that I could really and truly become a being independently of my spouse. In addition, that seemed to have been the 2X4 that our relationship needed for us to give it one last real effort, which is what we are attempting to do now, in the midst of incredible difficulties.

Anyway, most of the time I have more questions than answers, or guesses like you say. I love this web site!!!!!

From: Bernd

The guesses I've been writing are like trying to describe what the colour blue looks like to a blind person. Love is infinitely complex, as well as very simple. I'm trying to become more simple, and with all my past reliance on my head, it's a very hard process for me.

But I'm getting more insights, and clearer ones, in the process. My suggestion is maybe try the same path, and see what happens. When I want to check an insight, I used to try to analyse it from all angles. Now I'm trying more just to say it, and feel how calm and solid it feels inside. I've got to learn how to love and understand like a child again. Lynda's very good at it. A kid might not say things in the same ways adults do, but boy, when they call things like they see it, it reaches me in ways the longest explanations never can. The adult in me might "know" certain things, but the kid in me "understands". Simplify, simplify, I try to keep repeating to myself. I guess I'm a long way off from doing that yet, eh????:)

From: Frightened

Bernd, I believe you have hit upon the very thing, the very definition of something all of us have been disregarding for a very long time. The difference between 'childish' and 'childlike', to view the world with the same wonderment as one finds in the eyes and heart of a child. Thank you, I have been missing this connection.

From: mzet

I guess my real concern regarding self-reliance has to do with a recognition on my part that I was like an onion, and the more layers I peeled the closer I get to who I was, which, ultimately, it was, like an onion, NOTHING!!!! When I got to that point, I said, there's got to be something else there. And out of despair, that's when I opened myself up to the experience of the real presence of God inside of me for the first time in my life.

Within that framework or proposition about my own life, which I recognize is not shared by everyone, exclusive talk of self reliance and healing my self, and concentrating on my self, and loving my self, etc. tends to remind me of my old atheistic perspective, which I won't go into, but ultimately, as you can imagine, relied exclusively on my own efforts.

Love of self is necessary, but I see it as only a moment within a continual dialectic process of the love of god and love of others. Love of self without love of god or others is love of nothing because without god and others we are nothing. And love of nothing is hell. Hope this clarifies my concerns.

From: wolfie

Hi mzet, I hear what you're saying. It is just that my philosophy of God may differ from others here. I feel that God is not separate. I feel that others are not separate. I feel that nothing is separate. I feel that there is Only God - this one Mind - this One spirit - and we are all One with It - all that is. Therefore, I feel that if I love ALL of my self - I will most definitely love ALL others (everyone and everything) in the world - for we are all One. It is a New Thought philosophy which I believe in and has helped change my life. It has taught me that I am not Separate from God, but one With it (I have a higher Self, inner voice of knowing) which guides me. But it has taught me about co-creation and self mastery and that we are the masters of our own ship, based on our inner beliefs of self. In other words, I believe we are ALL powerful - not powerless. We are co-creators and we are constantly creating, minute by minute, with our awareness (consciously, as I choose to) or unaware (sleeping and allowing out deep seeded beliefs run our life). This is what I believe. I could go on but I have said enough. I hear what you are saying - I do - but the difference is that I do not believe that God is separate from me - that anything is separate from me. I believe there is only oneness. That is why - what goes out, comes back - what I do to others, I'm doing to myself, etc. That is why the mirror factor is what it is. Basically, my beliefs are one of: Metaphysics. Take good care to you also Mzet - It has been fun talking with you.

From: Bernd

The long answer to a short question (mzet's question: "do you think that the paradoxes that those who are in relationships with alcoholics or addicts of any kind and are therefore in potentially codependent situations apply 100% to relationships where there are no addictions present?").

From the reading I've done and the insights I've been getting into my own diseases, I think there are 2 main ingredients to addiction: 1/ a genetic disposition 2/ a well of past dysfunction that's gotten buried inside of us (childhood pain and shame, etc.). The genetic connection has been really highlighted in studies of identical twins that were separated at birth, and raised by different families. Researchers found that past family history had a MUCH larger bearing on whether someone became an addict, than what kind of home they were raised in. Recent research with anorexics and bulimics has also found that some anti-depressants have a major impact in turning around these diseases.

So if there's no genetic disposition to addiction, past family dysfunction can be masked extremely well. Which, in my opinion, makes it easy for some couples to fool themselves into thinking that they really have no deep down problems, when in fact their self-deception is doing a terrible number on their kids. If you want some real insights into this area, read M. Scott Peck's book "People of the Lie".

My reading is the addictive "predisposition" is like a trip wire. Once someone's level of inner pain and struggle has reached a high enough level, we "trip" that wire, and the addictive process begins. Usually, the addiction itself - in masking that pain - actually adds even more to the struggle and pain, which makes getting back to the other side of that trip wire harder and harder as time goes on. The addiction spirals downward.

Addicts usually don't stop using their "drug" until 1/ it stops working as much as they need it to 2/ they hit bottom, and the pain of their addiction hits them like a locomotive 3/ they find a better "drug" (change addictions) 4/ they find a healthy. natural pain reliever that works better than their drug (recovery), usually by being smitten with someone else's example or healthy intervention. Without a visible addiction present, it's usually a lot harder to find the motivation to do the painful work of really finding out how much crap we've been carrying inside.

Codependency is one of the "invisible" addictions. My drug is other people, and I try to get my drug to give me the most pain relief possible. Because many of the things I do as a codependent look so much like "love", it's easy for me - and others - to mistake many of my choices as "love". For example, giving Lynda flowers on Mother's Day seems like a loving thing to do. If I do it in hopes of getting laid later on that day, and resent Lynda when she doesn't come thru, my hidden motives aren't visible to anyone. Visitors to our house might see the flowers, and think "what a nice guy", and we also might put on our masks (and often did) that made us appear like a normal, married couple. One day, Lynda has an affair, and if I've been doing all the "right loving things", our friends roll their eyes in horror and say "how could she do that to such a loving husband?" By having an "invisible" disease, one that I could hide fairly easily, it would be easy for me to take the moral high ground. Maybe I'm really better off having a "visible" addiction. At least then, it would be a lot harder for me to hide my own dysfunctions. If I was an alcoholic, there'd be something to point to, that others could say "no wonder the marriage crashed, look at how much he drinks". It would be a lot harder for me as well to deceive myself into thinking "she" was the one with the problems.

The lack of visible addictions in a relationship doesn't equal lack of pain and dysfunction in each partner. It just makes it harder to see, and to find. It makes it harder to hit bottom. Yes, there are probably many marriages that don't have addiction, and are truly loving relationships. The ones that have made the most impression on me are those that reach out beyond the marriage to embrace other people's suffering. The transformation of suffering to joy, I believe, is one of the main truths about how love works. If we don't have enough suffering inside of us (i.e., if we were raised in a genuinely loving environment), the only way we can keep love flowing thru us is to reach out and help others transform their suffering, sharing it. Dunno if that answered your question, but I tried to take a good stab!

From: mzet

Good stab!!!! :) I like your reading on addiction, pain and dysfunction. I'm no expert, of course, but what I like about your view is that so much of it can be applied to my own spiritual life. In retrospect, my addiction may have been to my self, in the form of excessive self-centeredness disguised as love, like you say. Sex had a lot to do with it too. I couldn't get enough of it from my wife. And when I didn't, I used pornography, which I eventually was becoming addicted to and so quit about a year ago. And now, even sex is secondary. In fact, I don't know what I'm going to do if my wife ever offers to make love (not

I did have to hit bottom through the hell of my wife's affairs, to recognize all of this internal crap I was carrying. And to be able to transform it. That's why I am so hopeful that if we can work this "little" problem of the affairs, our relationship could be so good....

I like your reading on suffering. But just because there are no addictions does not mean that there is no real suffering there. Fully human beings suffer married or single, even if they were raised in loving environments. Look at the life of Jesus. I'm not sure his family was too dysfunctional, well, maybe a little, we don't know. But I think the capacity to suffer is directly proportional to capacity to grow. And the more God loves us, the more we suffer and, in turn, the more we grow in our capacity to transform that suffering into joy. And then reaching out with compassion into other's lives is even a higher form of love.

From: dmg

Thank you so much for all of your comments. They have given me a lot to think about. I know I am going to have to talk to my SO sooner or later but that frightens me alot right now. I'm afraid he is a little tired of me not feeling the way I would like to be in this relationship and I have to accept the reality that it could be his choice to end it at that point if he can not understand what I am trying to do for myself. I guess the right time will present itself. In the mean time there is SO much for me to think about. I know I have alot of self healing to do and accepting me for who I am is a big priority right now.

Went shopping last night and bought a couple of your recommended books. "Conversation with God" and "The Road Less Travelled". Can't wait to start. Your words have helped (ALL of you) and have given me a starting point even a sense of calmness I haven't felt for a long time. Never have I met such a warm supportive group of people. Thank you.

From: wolfie

You sound great dmg!!!! I'm glad you are in good spirits and I know things will all work out for you. They always do! I think you will really love Conversations with God! Always feel free to contact me.


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