Posts Tagged ‘relationships’

The First Wives Club.

Monday, April 12th, 2010

I am writing today to the few women who believe that their ex is financially responsible for them. For them as women. Let me be absolutely clear.  I’m not talking about his responsibility for the children you share. Nor am I talking about those of you who are stay-at-home-moms with babies or small children. I’m talking about women who believe they are entitled to their ex’s earnings by virtue of being in a past relationship with him. I’m speaking to the women who choose to hold their ex responsible for them – for their basic existence – even though there are no barriers to making an income.

I know this sounds tough. I am being tough. Because I fear you are in danger. Danger of becoming invisible. Of living a life uninhabited. Danger of selling out on abundance (financial, emotional, love, creativity, etc) in exchange for a dependency. Danger of failing in life because of your choice to make another man responsible for you. Not your kids. You. Doing so sets a tragic limitation on your life.

I know there are all kinds of obstacles and barriers to making it out there as a single parent. It’s hard for everyone actually. But that doesn’t mean we are justified in making someone else responsible for us. We find ways to overcome the barriers. We find the courage, fortitude and ways to fight off fatigue. With an education, or creativity, or straight up passion – single moms can and do make beautiful lives for themselves. But most of all, success in life  comes down to a choice.  It’s the choice to be his dependent or not. It’s the choice to do the hard – gruelling work of balancing parenting and working. It’s the choice to assume full responsibility for your life and face it head on, or hide behind a crippling sense of “he owes me.” Whether he owes you or not is a pointless argument when we are talking about the quality of your life being at stake. The point is are you willing to give up so much of your womanhood and your livelihood to continue to collect from him?  Are you willing to keep your accomplishments small enough as to fit them within the “he owes her” legal jurisdiction?

I worry about your self worth. It must be very difficult to feel proud about the woman you are when you claim zero income year after year so that support is ” justified.” It must be heartbreaking to forfeit making a life for yourself in order to keep that check coming in the mail.

Perhaps you are angry. But while you are spending your life on anger or a sense of entitlement, what is he doing? Making a beautiful life alone or with someone new, while your life is being held back by the evangelist in your head. The one crying “he owes me! I’m entitled!”  And what about your new husband? Asking his wife to live off another man. What does that say about where he is at with personal responsibility and accountability?  The dependency is debilitating all the way around. 

And what does your ex loose at the end of the day? Money? That doesn’t touch him where it counts: His new love. Family. Friends. Joy. Creating experiences. Living purposefully. That’s what matters – and you can’t take that away from him. No matter how sizeable the check.

For yourself, for the sake of all that is possible for you in this life time- show up today as a grown up woman who is capable of taking responsibility for herself. Wean yourself from his pocket book. It may require taking work for financial means. It may require working on your dream career from 8pm-10pm while you work 9-5 to pay the bills. No matter what occurred between the two of you in the past, no matter what the story is, making yourself responsible for yourself is the only way to recovery.  It’s the only way to a better life and real happiness.

Until you free yourself as his dependent, creating your dream life and becoming the fullest expression of your womanhood will haunt you like a bad dream.  Refuse to stay small in order to collect his check.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

  • Share/Bookmark

“Don’t judge a man until you’ve walked two moons in his moccasins.” Sharon Creech

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Whether we take a glimpse or a long and lingering look into someone else’s life, at best all that is ever available to us is what poet Rumi described as “idle speculation.”

Because we are severely limited to “idle speculation” I think advice giving or diagnosing is perilous. Not only dangerous, I think advising snuffs out all the possible creations that take on life when two people listen outside of their judgments.

What I’ve treasured about one of my closest friendships is that no matter what we never told one another what do to. No matter how treacherous the landscape became, we showed up for the moment free of judgment, full of camaraderie. “I will walk or run this mile with you because I believe in you” was the unexpressed philosophy of our friendship.

Advising is easy, judgments are a dime a dozen. But taking time to truly understand is priceless. I think we all need someone to take the time to understand life in our shoes.  We aren’t aching for another “you really should do this and that.”  We don’t need someone who hasn’t walked a minute in our day to tell us how it is. I think we benefit each other in the most meaningful ways when we forbid the delivery of our own limited speculation and venture beyond.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

 

  • Share/Bookmark

More on He’s Just Not That Into You.

Monday, July 27th, 2009

I have received several inquirires for more information regarding my post He’s Just not that into you.  Today I am going to blog a little more about this one central idea: 

“Every choice a woman makes is on board with the relationship she has formed with herself” Debra Ollivier

I invite you to begin to bring more mindfulness to the choices you are making in your life, in particular to those in your relationships or dating experiences.

If  you were to string your past decisions and actions together, as a collection what would they tell about your relationship with yourself? Is it based on self respect and a deep caring for your life? Does it reflect the most highest regard for yourself? Does it boast an abundance of self worth? Does it demonstrate practicing discretion – for example making choices and taking action that is in pursuit of all that you wish for?

I believe until you stand up for your worthiness and until you make choices that form an alliance with your heart and your values, all of your wonderful qualities will remain invisible to men.  This is why cultivating a relationship with yourself that is founded on a commitment to yourself is necessary in order to attract the quality of men and experiences you desire.

In the interest of cultivating a relationship that reflects a woman who is first and foremost dedicated to herself, here are a few questions you can ask yourself going forward:

What does doing x say about my commitment to myself?

What does doing x reveal about my level of interest in protecting my worthiness?

If I do x, will I be taking a stand for all that I am?

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Breaking Up Doesn’t Mean Falling Apart. A New Blog Series.

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

I firmly believe that agonizing, falling apart and hating ourselves is not the only way we are capable of navigating a breakup. I have observed certain choices, attitudes, beliefs and behaviors women give themselves over to while facing a breakup. It is these reactions and choices that cause us to fall apart. 

For the next few months I will be posting a blog series called Breaking up doesn’t mean falling apart. (In addition to this series I will continue to blog on non breakup related topics.)  The series will put forth the more common reactions or holes women tend to fall into after a breakup. Within each post I will offer you an invitation. I might invite you to read a particular book, or participate in a new practice or accept a challenge that I believe will assist you in side stepping the  forces that lead us into long term despair. 

Please feel free to comment, ask questions or just express.  I hope you find  this series helpful. Thanks for reading, Carrie

Breaking Up Doesn’t Mean Falling Apart

Clinging to the belief that “he is The One for you.”

Everything from the sight of an unmade bed, to the smell of coffee, to the silence of a still home, echo that your loved one is gone, that’s it’s over. Your new reality refuses to mirror your belief that he is The One, and despair sets in.

The only way I know how to keep despair at bay is to merge your thoughts with what you feel in the moment rather than with what you believe (he was the only one for me, I wasn’t good enough, I will be alone forever).  Thoughts which mirror your feelings of sadness or grief will facilitate recovering.  Thoughts such as “he was the one for me“  distance you from your authentic feelings, impeding your healing, and forcing you to live out a story line. 

I believe every relationship is leading up to and preparing us for what is yet to come. But we have to do the work. The work is learning to sit with your feelings straight up (no story lines) on Friday nights. Sitting with the pain will allow you to discover yourself  rather than inadvertently discovering the slow but sure process of becoming an unhappier, heavier, shadow of yourself.

Giving yourself over to the shadow flies in the face of all that is true about you. The truth is you are perfectly designed to stay with your pain without the song and dance of falling apart.

An Invitation:

Over the next seven days become aware of the story lines you entertain. For example, I wasn’t enough, he didn’t want me, I am or will be alone, he betrayed me.

When a story line becomes active, connect with the feeling underneath. Move away from your thoughts and into your feelings. Use deep slow breathing to connect with your feeling. Let it well up – don’t push it away.  Stay with it – don’t distract yourself.  The pain often comes in waves, let it rise up, roll over you, and deliver you closer to healing.

I believe the pain lasts just long enough to transform us. The impact of story lines on the other hand, can last forever.

On living up to yourself,

Carrie

 

 

  • Share/Bookmark