Wednesday, 17 July 2019

Conscious Uncoupling: 5 Steps to Living Happily Even After (How to Break Up in a Whole New Way) by Katherine Woodward Thomas





PART ONE 


Love's opposite is not hatred, it's indifference.



A poorly navigated loss, and its resulting poorly healed heart, can make you a lifelong victim to the darker side of love, and keep you locked into a lesser life with a diminished capacity to love and be loved moving forward.



At the heart of all attachment is fear regulation, and our closest relationships serve the purpose of calming us down when we're in danger of spinning out of control.



In the Tibetan language, the word karma is literally las.rgyu.abras, which means "action-seed-results".



With all of the darkness you may be walking through right now, it's good to remember that where there is no light, you have the choice to become it.



We human beings are actually a pretty needy bunch -- biologically and psychologically predisposed to bond in ways that make us strikingly reliant upon those we are close to, and particularly helpless when it comes to regulating our own emotions independent of each other.



In the aftermath of a traumatic event, our first task will be to restore a sense of safety.



When you're willing to be with your experience, simply naming your feelings and needs without frantically trying to get rid of them, you're practicing what Buddhist s call "mindfulness".  It is neither passive non active, but a deep honoring of your own humanity as you come to terms with the vulnerabilities of having a heart that loves.




Ineffective grieving happens when you allow your pain to calcify your heart closed and fixate your identity as someone who is alone, unwanted, or abused.  It threatens to doom you to living a contracted, lessened life for months or years to come.  Effective grieving, however, turns the love you've been giving another towards yourself.




You might think of your feelings of depression as life's way of preventing you from moving away in haste from your loving connection; it's an existentially enforced waiting period that mandates you to take downtime for reflection on the actions you're taking, the choices you're making, the changes needing to be made, and the lessons needing to be learned.



Though we may believe that slipping into a depression is bad, it can actually mean you're heading in the right direction by grappling with life on its own terms, as you crawl your way toward grief's final resting place: acceptance.




Release unconscious and habitual patterns of people pleasing; self-abandoning, overgiving, or tolerating less than you deserve, and begin showing up in ways that are reflective of your true value.




Learn how to make amends to yourself in a way that frees you from the residue of resentment and regret.




This question, where is my attention? needs to be your mantra as you continually turn away from the finger pointing that your mind will automatically gravitate toward.