Love is the only
reality and it is not a mere sentiment. It is the ultimate truth that lies at
the heart of creation.
- Rabindranath Tagore
- Rabindranath Tagore
In
most of our human relationships, we spend much of our time reassuring one
another that our costumes of identity are on straight.
–
Ram Dass
Why
do we enter into relationships? What are
we looking for? Too often we are seeking
someone else to convince us to love ourselves.
We wander around at a masquerade party of soul’s hoping to find someone
who feels safe enough for us to let down our facade. At the same time we are completely invested
in that mask and are afraid to look behind it.
We feel separate and estranged and can only accept the “safety” of
someone who can be a comfortable masquerade partner. Thus ego-centric “love” can never be anything
other than a counterfeit.
We
are all wounded and vulnerable. We all
suffer. We feel unworthy of love and
thus cut ourselves off from our essence.
Then we look for it in someone else: Mom, Dad, husband, wife, child, lover,
whoever. And do we get righteously
pissed-off when they can’t or won’t give it to us! This seems to be the nature of our human existence. We feel our individuality so strongly that we
live in fear, no absolute terror of crossing our imaginary ego-boundaries. Then we blame it on someone else. True love cannot be limited to a particular
relationship, is not based in need and desire and is non-attached. As Marianne Williamson writes,
The love in one of us is the love in all
of us.
‘There’s actually no place where God stops
and you start,’
and no place where you stop and I start.
Love is energy and infinite continuum.
Your mind extends into mine and everyone
else’s.
It doesn’t stay enclosed within your body.
(A Return to Love)
This,
of course, is not just “mysticism” it is verified by modern physics.
As
a relationship therapist I get to see over and over again how we project our shadows,
our wounds and fears, onto another and then call it “love.” And it is in this sense that our
relationships can possibly lead to the healing of our souls; however it can do
so only when we are able to look at ourselves in the mirror of self-reflection. Open, honest and non-judgmental
self-reflection is the awakening of true love within us. It opens the pathway to conscious
consciousness evolution, or enlightenment.
Buddha
referred to this kind of self-reflection as “maitri,” or “loving-awareness.” It is a common cliché that we need to love
ourselves first before we can love another.
The problem is that like with most clichés we pay no attention. Your loving acceptance of yourself,
paradoxically opens the door for growth and change. When we are able accept and allow ourselves
to be who we are, we discover that we are beings of evolving conscious,
unfolding love. There is no actual
effort involved. All effort is simply
resistance. “Resistance to the
disturbance,” writes Vernon Howard, “is the disturbance.”
Relationships
are an interesting kind of mirroring process.
We see ourselves reflected in each other and the things that we seek to
change in the other are aspects of ourselves.
When we seek to change the world, it is often like cleaning the mirror
to get rid of a blemish on our own faces.
To truly love another one has to be at peace within oneself. One has to be free and non-attached. It is the recognition of both of us as sacred
and autonomous beings, individual expressions of Divine Unity. We are beings of love. Any need to change ourselves or the other is
really an impulse of violence. “The
ultimate state of Love is freedom,” writes Osho, “absolute freedom and any
relationship that destroys freedom is not worthwhile. Love is a sacred art. To
be in Love is to be in a holy relationship.”
Often
times we turn our relationships into functions.
We put out ads where we want someone who is such and such height,
weight, etc. Or maybe we want a sense of
humor, intelligence; someone to share our interests. In this sense relationships seem to be about
fitting a job description rather than opening up unconditionally to another
being who essentially, deep down, one’s Self.
We forget sometimes that the tradition of marriage is really based in
ownership. It is a barely disguised form
of mutual slavery. As we awaken however
we might be able to create a new kind of relationship based in mutual respect
as sacred spirit beings; relationship based in freedom rather than control,
love rather than need.
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