It’s Important to Know You Can Choose Peaceful Relationships
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MAUDE: In our post last week, we wrote about the struggles we have all been going through in the tense situation before this country’s election, the raging wars in the world, climate change, and the overall uncertainty and anxiety caused by all this and so much more. We suggested ways to balance this by creating peace through your deep and intimate relationships.
We received feedback clearly indicating that many people could identify with this description of tension and struggle from their own lives. Many people believe that conflict is inevitable. This is not surprising given the state of the world and the apparent divisions between people. It is our experience that when people are presented with stories of hardship, tragedy and difficulty, they often respond with recognition and a propensity to give them their full interest and attention. There is a willingness to discuss them at length and dwell on these negative challenges.
When faced with the suggestion of experiencing peace within their relationships, and how this has the power to change things, a different response is evoked. This is often met with “Well, that’s all la-di-dah”, or “Nice for you, but not all of us are so lucky!”.
These very different ways to relate to the world are not surprising. The response to threat and danger is a survival skill we all have in our genetic makeup. It was necessary to be alert to so many dangers and to always keep them in the forefront of the mind. We are still doing that.
Peace on the other hand, is just a concept or a word to many people. It has not yet become an experience, a visceral reality. It has the element of fantasy to some, or something that is far off and distant to others.
And it will remain so if you do not make it a part of how you live and conduct your deep relationships. Phil and I know that this is possible, and what we want to share is that there is a choice to be made. There is nothing wrong with feeling bad, but when you are consciously or unconsciously attracted and prone to dwelling in negativity, that is a choice. You can choose peace, you can create peace in your own life. There are many aspects to how, and those are the topics of our posts. The real deciding factor is to make the choice to move in that direction, realize you can, and keep choosing it each time you are confronted with a decision.
The real magic is that the pleasure and delight that peace offers is so attractive, that each time you act in peace, you will move closer to choosing it the next time.You can make the choice to have a peaceful relationship #peace #quote #relationships Share on X
PHIL: It is hard to make this choice for a peaceful relationship because of the commonly held belief that relationships are work; that different people want different things, and therefore conflict is inevitable. With such a widely held attitude, it’s hard to accept that relationships can be any other way, but they do exist. Do you know anyone like that? A grandparent? A therapist? A friend?
So here’s the first thing: you have to believe it is possible, but once you know there is a single relationship suffused with peace, it becomes a choice: which way do you want your relationships to be? And if you want a peaceful relationship, you do that by simply not going there: not creating friction, not responding to friction. Of course it takes effort at first; it’s easier to follow the ruts that have been established than change course.
It’s not a question of ignoring reality. What we think of as real is largely how we interpret events—the term is constructed reality. The idea that people in general are inevitably in competition because they have different interests is a Darwinian view of life that appears everywhere in our culture. Heist movies, the stock market, on sale while supplies last; they all push the idea of neediness. There is little emphasis on the way that humans help and support each other, yet it is the way we work together and care for each other that makes society possible. We supply each other with both material and emotional welfare.
The same attitudes turn up in relationships, too. You have to drop that subconscious feeling of scarcity and replace it with a feeling of connection. Your relationships are miniature societies that thrive on sharing and caring. The more you experience this, the more you know it is possible and the more desirable it becomes, until you would have it no other way.
Photo credit: Maude Mayes
Photo note: Phil and Iris
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I love today’s blog! I love it because it allows each of us to see the choice we make as we approach each other. It is always a choice when we enter a dialogue to own what we bring in the moment.
It allows each of us to declare in real time what brought us and where we might have been. This gives us a chance to drop the noise of the day and be present. Or one might declare,”:It’s been a rough day and I am glad to be here now with you” OR share the encounters you’ve experienced and get the support to move along and be present in the very moment. We can let go of all that might have happened before and share the company we are in. I do think we have a full spectrum of possible reactions to each and every occurrence and the awareness of” CHOICE” to chose peace is always available. How great it is to have the power to chose peace and let go of all the noise that might have gotten us here.
I love what you are saying about different conversations and being present for them. I’m reading Julia Cameron’s book “The Listening Path,” and although I find it diluted with a lot of fluff, the practice of paying full attention to what the other person is saying is really important. Too often, we listen at 30% or prepare a “me too” response. Give them the gift of being fully seen and heard.
“There is nothing wrong with feeling bad, but when you are consciously or unconsciously attracted and prone to dwelling in negativity, that is a choice. You can choose peace, you can create peace in your own life.” It’s so important to not fall into the negativity trap, you’re so right. Especially now. Gotta think good thoughts. Think good thoughts. (and say it to myself 3 times…
Jeanine
And don’t forget to click your red shoes!
Maude
Before I moved to Mexico, I used to pride myself in not having any expectations in my relationships. I don’t know what happened to that person, but she ain’t here no more. I find myself getting incensed over dumb things like finding granola in the sink. My partner and I fight all the time and I hate it. I wish we could return to being the peaceful couple we once were. I suspect that adversity has a lot to do with our loss of peace…two years ago we weren’t living in a concrete box in the jungle, in daily battles against bugs, heat, humidity, and the jungle growing over our house, garden, and trailer. We live in hope that someday our solar system will get fixed and we will be able to use our refrigerator and air conditioning at night. But going back to expectations…somewhere in those two years, expectations sneaked in and I don’t like it. Thank you for helping me be more self aware.
Julie and Lurko in Mexico
Dear Julie,
Thank you for sharing so openly. I am glad you were able to take something from this post to help you. It is really good to hear from you.
wishing you the best
Maude