AFTER A SPIRITUAL DIVORCE
Mending a Broken Heart
by Dr. Glenn R. Williston
- Do you feel sad down deep? Bored? Empty?
- Do you over-eat, over-spend, or watch too
much TV?
- Stay away from home as much as possible?
- Fantasize about having a different intimate
relationship or have affairs?
- Feel indifferent to your partner's needs,
issues, problems?
- Find less and less interest in your partner's
activities and interests?
- Nag, plead, scold, keep a score card?
- Feel sexual coolness or even avoidance and
disgust?
- Notice a lack of small courtesies?
- Feel anger and fear regularly?
- Experience a lack of tenderness and
nurturing?
- Live in a climate of insincerity and mutual
mistrust?
- Relate with superficial communication?
- Feel alone and misunderstood?
- Live each day with chronic tension and
stress?
- Hear sarcasms, insults, and rudeness in
your home?
- Find yourself preoccupied with fantasies
and feelings of resentment, of getting even?
- Put pets first?
- Find you both have lost your capacity for
surprise and wonderment?
- Suffer from persistent health problems,
including exhaustion, low energy, or worse?
If you are among the millions of Americans who
suffer from a broken heart as a result of a spiritual divorce,
you must find a path to recovery before it is too late!
What is a spiritual divorce? It is an "unofficial"
divorce that has not involved any paperwork or agreements or
discussions of any kind. It is not based on man's laws. It is the
unnatural result of a period of unhappiness between two people.
When unhappiness builds, it is meant to be
motivational, urging a solution to the underlying cause of the
unhappiness. Most people enter a relationship with their eyes
half closed and endure a relationship with their eyes completely
closed.
Worst of all, perhaps, a spiritual divorce
causes a broken heart. And broken heart causes passive-aggressive
behavior in dealing with your mate. Such behavior intensifies the
negativity, anger, and frustration. Your mind may create
fantasies of escape and/or revenge even in the midst of "pleasurable"
activities.
You know something is very wrong, but you may
not know how wrong or what to do about it. Because of denial or
resignation, you may have accepted a cocoon existence. You may
have even forgotten the difference between existing and living.
You may wonder how things got so bad but time is
better spent in solution. Clearly, you need ways to mend your
broken heart... by either healing the spiritual divorce or by
getting a legal divorce.
First, all denials, hopes, wishes, and fantasies
must be replaced by fact. You may resist being matter-of-fact
about your pain, about the destructiveness of the relationship,
about what's really going on, but this first difficult step is an
essential building block in the foundation of freedom.
Thinking emotionally gets us nowhere. Facts take
us into solution. Include all your feelings, sensations,
fantasies, thoughts, activities, actions, pains, etc.
We all tend to paint over what we don't want to
see in any painful situation. Nature gave us the ability to deny
pain and chaos so that we may survive for brief periods of time.
Therapy can help you see and feel, thus opening
the door to change. Clarity sometimes requires an objective
observer.
Remember: some relationships just aren't meant
to be. Walking away is the only solution. Others can be salvaged
by following these guide lines:
- don't let a busy career, social pressures,
and a hectic lifestyle get in the way.
- plan time each day developing insight; that
is, listening to yourself in meditation, walking, or
bodywork. Observe carefully and look for the facts, for
the Truth.
- never complain about your relationship to
others; only one close friend or therapist should know.
Well-meaning people will give you bad advice, and
convince you that you are the victim.
- do not tolerate negative comments or
thoughts; heal them instantly with fact.
- deal with fantasies by using a technique I
developed many years ago: F.E.A.T. (fantasy editing and
transforming). Yes, you want to escape or get even or
gloss over the issues, but such fantasies need editing so
that you empower yourself to be solution-oriented.
- be willing to examine objectively the
potential for the relationship.
- avoid blame and one-ups-manship. ("I
knew it all along," "I told you so,"
"You just didn't get it," "You're the
problem.").
- express your needs and feelings as "I"
without any "you" statements.
- be honest, accurate, and focused on the
present and the future; avoid commenting on the past.
- ask for clarification when you do not
understand; remember you are seeking Truth.
- discover your options; work with a
professional in option-analysis and problem-solving.
- set goals in a time-frame, change conscious
and unconscious habits, reduce stress.
- be willing to explore blocks to intimacy
and improve communication skills.
- admit to the value of the relationship to
yourself and your partner (if it has potential).
- commit to work toward intimacy and deeper
love in a monogamous state.
- take responsibility to find ways to fulfill
your needs without expecting your partner to meet all of
them.
- realize you are not responsible for your
partner's happiness and s/he is not responsible for yours.
- practice active listening; assume nothing;
do not interrupt; do not try to fix.
- recognize that everyone is an awakening
being at some stage of awakening; your job is not to
force awakening on anyone, but to simply take
responsibility for your own.
- share, nurture; take time, look into each
other's eyes, touch, caress; make the end of each day a
homecoming.
- come to some agreements on use of time,
energy, and money... and child rearing.
And lastly, remember that you do not have to be
angry or aggressive to get your points across or to prove that
you are strong or right. Always keep in mind that aggressiveness
is the opposite of assertiveness: aggressiveness shows weakness,
fear, and desperation.
"Aggression is the last resort of a
desperate Soul."
Interview, Evening Magazine TV
show, 1988.
This selection
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Internet tm is responsible for the
accuracy of the information.
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