Thursday, June 21, 2012
Scabs and Scars
Recently I have been learning to be okay with just being alone. At one point I thought I had to immediately get back into the swing of dating rather than to just focus on me and where I can learn and grow from past experiences. I have to be honest, I'm still struggling with that as I'm not really allowing myself to spend time alone, I've packed my schedule tightly so that there isn't much time to think about the fact that I'm alone.
But I have been thinking about it. There are steps I've had to take to help me in the healing/moving on process.
Here's the biggest thing I've learned recently - trying to remain friends when you break up with someone is like having a cut and picking at the scab every day. That's no way to heal, rather it's a perfect way to slow the healing process down and leave a scar.
I'm not saying that you can never be friends again, but this brings us to the second thing I've learned, relationships typically go full circle. If you were friends before you dated, there's a higher possibility that you will be friends in the end. If you jumped right into a relationship upon meeting then you will likely end up strangers or acquaintances in the end. It makes sense really - if you knew how to be friends before then you know how to fall back in to that. But if all you ever knew was a romantic relationship - how do you down grade?
There is a song by Goyte called "Someone That I Used to Know". I like this song, not because it speaks to me as the victim, but as the person who has to be the jerk because it's for the common good. "Dear Goyte, she had to cut you off, because if she didn't she would be stuck in cyclical self destruction." Sound dramatic? You don't know what I've been through as I've tried to hang on to something that has long been dead. Some of us can't just turn off the romantic stirrings and go to buddyland instantly.
In companionship to that song, there's a song called "Ugly" by Garrison Starr. It's almost a reply to "Someone That I Used to Know". She says, "I'll be ugly so you don't have to." I'll be the jerk so you don't have to be.
I'm also working on securing the feeling that while love keeps failing me, it will ultimately win out. I'm not going to give up on love, just that particular instance of love.
I've been reading this book and to be honest I didn't think I would learn about romantic relationships, but there is a chapter devoted to it. It talks about how sometimes people expect love to just be perfect - they expect to click or mesh instantly and that if things are meant to be they wouldn't need so much work - this is called a "fixed mindset" (the book, by the way, is called Mindset). The opposite is the "growth mindset" and people see their partners as people who are just like them, able to learn and grow continually. See, with the fixed mindset, things are as they will always be. It's very limiting. I'm a person who believes in individual growth. If I want to learn something, I know I can do it if I work hard at it. It's the same with relationships (so the book says). If you think that you aren't meshing maybe you just aren't communicating well. Speak up about things that bother you instead of assuming that your partner can't change. You do a disservice to both of you when you just stay quiet and assume they cannot learn and develop.
I need someone who is willing to work as much as I am, because I believe it can work only if both parties are willing to roll up their sleeves. But I'll admit, I was a fixed mindset - I knew it would take work, but I still assumed people would remain the same. This is contrary to how I feel in most aspects of my life, so it was eye opening to realize I do this in relationships.
There is no easy way to maintain the feelings of the heart, it's like everything else in life, we've got to work to achieve and keep working to maintain, but it's worth it. We've got to learn to talk about things that bother us, because we owe it to them and to ourselves to give the other person the chance to try, especially if we thought at one point that we were a good fit for each other.
You're two people giving 100% to make a relationship reach it's full potential. I believe in this kind of love, I want this kind of love, but in the meantime, I'm learning to be content to wait and not rush things. I don't want to fall into a trap where I grow willing to settle for less and I now realize by "less" I mean someone who is fixed and doesn't think I (or themselves) could change certain things even if I wanted to.
All I really wanted to say today was that I'm in a drought, but that's okay, and probably for the best right now. I guess I had more on my mind than I realized.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Just Believe
For example, you can control when you purchase a home, you save, clear up your credit, talk to a financial advisor and a realtor, get a loan, etc. But you cannot control when you will find someone to share that home with.
It's an interesting situation, basically the question is - how do you not lose hope for those desires which are good, but are kind of out of your immediate control?
I don't feel qualified to answer that question as in my experience I have constantly wavered. Twice now I have thought I found what I was looking for only to realize that it wasn't. I have had my bumps and bruises along the way and things have "blown up in my face". Each time there is a disappointment or an upset, I falter. I can tell you that not having hope is debilitating. It makes you pull in to yourself, makes you unable to bear anything good and happy in the lives of others because you feel like you'll never have that for yourself. It's undesirable, so I can see why my friend would like to avoid that.
I answered as best I could, not sure if it helped at all. I later took the same question to a different friend of mine. Basically he said, "just believe." Which seems so easy to say but harder to do. However, I've been thinking about it, I've thought of belief as something that someone just has, for me, believing is a struggle while others don't even bat an eyelash. Believing, like happiness and so many other abstract things, comes down to a decision. You choose whether to believe or not.
As I have thought about it more, I realize that I apply different levels of faith to different things. In a month, I will need a new roommate, there are no prospects for a roommate at this time, but I'm not worried, I know someone will come along. Why can I believe so strongly that that situation will work out, but I falter when it comes to believing that I will find someone to be with?
I met up with my friend again last week and amended my answer to her. I still stood by my original answer, but added to it that it takes faith, it takes choosing to believe because we want to believe. I also told her that people are attracted to confidence and to people who make them feel good about themselves. (I know that I can't be the only one who wants to hang out with someone who genuinely makes me feel good about myself). It may take some time to feel reciprocation from people, but eventually, if you make it your goal to make others feel good, without expectations of return (because people can sometimes sense that), then you'll start to get it back. Maybe not from everyone, but from those who matter most.
Always take "advice" I give with a grain of salt. Remember that no two people are the same, there's no set "formula" for finding someone to date (or getting them to date you). I'm still figuring things out just like the next person and to be honest, I don't know how I get from one boyfriend to the next. But even if I'm wrong, and focusing on making other people feel good about themselves doesn't help you to find someone to date and possibly marry, how could you really go wrong? You'll still be a person people like to be around.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
You are chocolate, lots of people LOVE chocolate - I don't
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Thursday, April 12, 2012
A Cynic’s Thoughts on Love
As Tina Turner once asked, “What’s love got to do with it?”
How does one know that they are in a good relationship? It’s not love, for you can love any one and you love many different people. Love is a chemical reaction. As defined, love is “an intense emotional attachment, as for a pet or treasured object.” Just because someone says that they love you, doesn’t mean that they will stay with you. Just because they say “I love you” doesn’t mean they won’t break your heart in five minutes.
I don’t know if there is anything worse than breaking-up with someone you love. When you love someone you start to imagine what a future might be like with them. You integrate them into all aspects of your life and you stop thinking about what else might be out there.
They tell you they love you and then almost in the same breath they tell you that they’d be happier with someone else and try to convince you that you would be happier too. And what of love? It’s insubstantial. Love fades or grows with the lovers, it is not a constant, but ever changing. Love can leave you feeling like you can do anything, or leave you at the bottom of the pit feeling like nothing. Love is what can make a break up so difficult. Love is what leaves you feeling like you can’t eat, or like you just want to sleep your life away. It is easier to sleep away the hours than to try to believe that you can’t be with someone you love.
Love is just one component of a relationship and one that is best left until the end. It gets in the way of seeing what is really there. It makes you hold on longer than you should, makes you accept things in the other person that you never thought you would accept. It can change who you are, for better or for worse.
But in all honesty - love is what I want right now and I don't understand why I can't be with the person I love.



