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MarkParticipant
Nathan, It does hurt when you dwell on regrets. I can understand the current pain of missing what you don’t have. To be blunt Nathan, you are living the consequences of your unmindful actions. You have broken trust. Trust is a fragile thing and it takes a lot to regain.
What can you do? I will not give a “how to win back” advice but instead I will recommend sitting with yourself. Get to know yourself, your desires, your wants and needs better. Understand why you acted the way you did and not understand on a superficial level but deeply into your true Self. How can anyone trust you until you really know yourself and not repeat those same actions the next time? Your four year engagement without marrying your son’s mother tells me how you don’t really know who you are or what you want or value.
I use to hate when I read in self help or relationship or spiritual books that meditation is one of the key activities in living a fulfilled and self aware life. Now I find that it is true. Have a meditation practice and sit with yourself.
You can address your hurt by breathing into the emotion, the pain, the feeling. Our breath is fundamental to life. Use it to help care for yourself.
Metta,
Mark- This reply was modified 10 years, 11 months ago by Mark.
MarkParticipantI wonder what being addicted to love really means. I invite you to examine what love really means. Try using other words or phrases when you say that you love him. What are the conditions for this love? What do you value about him? The fact he is willing to be a co-conspirator in this affair, what does that say about his values? You already know that he was not the right man to marry since he enjoys the company of lots/other women. Did that change?
I also invite you to apply that to yourself first. Can you love yourself the same way? Doesn’t really start with ourselves?
I am curious about your assertion that you love about being in love. So it is not loving him so much but the fact you can love? Can feel love? Use another word besides love. Can feel infatuation? Can feel that sense of liking someone’s charm? I like what Annette says about how easy to be in the passion stage if you don’t have to deal with the day-to-day “loving” with smelly socks and all.
Mark
- This reply was modified 10 years, 11 months ago by Mark.
MarkParticipantMarkParticipantHi Keri,
Let me know how I can support your own efforts.
I see how we have relationship comes from our family-of-origin patterns.
I first became aware of that and now I am very conscious (rather than unconscious) of how I choose people in my life.Metta,
MarkMarkParticipantlovinggirl,
My personal view is not to live together. I see that as a halfway commitment. I would marry. I have known a lot of women who want to get married but could never get their man to do that since he is so comfortable living with her. I have lived with my wife for 3 years before we married and I don’t see any advantage in doing that.Regardless, you have already communicated that you wanted to live together and now your boyfriend’s behavior has changed radically. Yes he may be a great guy but he is a *married* guy. Unless he is willing to get off the dime and get a divorce then he will never be in a legal or emotional place to really commit.
He has been very clear to you that he is not willing to “start over.” I’m not sure what “trauma” he is referring to but if that is the case then all the more reason why he is not ready to have a relationship with you.
Mark
January 3, 2014 at 3:49 pm in reply to: Admitting I've been in a co-dependant relationship…please help! #48314MarkParticipantYou don’t even need to tell him to leave you alone if you block his calls, texts, and emails or don’t answer.
Keep breathing and have a loving kindness mantra for yourself to be strong for yourself.
First and foremost love yourself.
Metta Jenny,
MarkMarkParticipantMadiePie, I suspect you were raised with such expectations. It is hard to let go of our family-of-origin programming. It takes time, mindfulness and sometimes therapy or some other healing modality like Body Talk.
Insofar as dealing with your constant thoughts, then mediation is the practice to work with that.
Mark
MarkParticipantThis is a YouTube by my BodyTalk practitioner
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jiDKbwARUiwHere is Sid’s website http://www.synergywellness.org/
I believe that she does distance sessions.
Let me know what happens.
Mark
January 3, 2014 at 8:07 am in reply to: Admitting I've been in a co-dependant relationship…please help! #48235MarkParticipantYou can get better Jenny. Right now you are still reeling from the aftereffects. Give yourself compassion, grace and time to heal. Can you look at yourself with caring as if you were someone else?
Melody Beattie has a classic book called “Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself” you might want to read.
Take care,
MarkMarkParticipantIt takes time to heal and move on Jan. Best to break all contact with him, block his texts and emails and focus on the present moment. Live your life. I like what the Dalai Lama said, “If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.”
Focus on others rather than dwell on your pain. Go and help and be in service. Volunteer.
MarkParticipantJan,
So I wonder what is keeping you from either talking to him about the emails or to leave him?
I assume that the emails have something about how he thinks of you and/or the relationship?Mark
MarkParticipantFloella, It sounds like you really are not in sync with your husband. Do you share and collaborate on finances? budgeting? Do you talk honestly about how you are feeling? Know what is going on with him?
If you really want to be in partnership with him and be in the marriage you want then I suggest you two sit down on a regular basis and not only share the hard, day-to-day stuff but to have that fun time together as well. Remember when you two were dating? Why you got married in the first place?Metta,
MarkJanuary 2, 2014 at 10:25 pm in reply to: Letting go of the past when you don't fill like you are strong enough to forgive #48214MarkParticipantMy guess is that since you broke trust with your wife then it makes sense you cannot trust her. If you could not be trusted then how can you trust others?
The 4 Noble Truths tells us that our suffering is being attached. It sounds like you are attached to your pain and lack of trust.
Rich areas to deal with in your counseling sessions!
Meditation brings us to the present moment as well as being mindful in our day-to-day life. If we are present then the past will not be here giving us pain.
Metta,
MarkMarkParticipantI am sorry for your pain Karen. It probably is too raw and too early to really “do” anything about your situation except to give yourself compassion and time to heal. Have you tried the Loving Kindness Meditation? Check on YouTube or the web to find out what that is. I believe that is a good tool to be able to cope with your situation.
We all make mistakes and do the best we can with the knowledge we have and who we are at the time. I know it is easy to say but very hard to do but to dwell on your regrets and your past takes you out of the present moment. Our thoughts create our pain. Sitting with ourselves and be with the present moment helps to get out of that.
Take care.
Metta,
MarkJanuary 2, 2014 at 12:05 am in reply to: Letting go of the past when you don't fill like you are strong enough to forgive #48158MarkParticipantI am unclear what exactly what is your pain Anthony. Is it that sometime in your past that someone broke your heart and now you are married?
What are you working on to be different?Mark
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