
Tag: wisdom
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How to Tell If Your Relationship is Codependent (and What to Do About It)

“Love rests on two pillars: surrender and autonomy. Our need for togetherness exists alongside our need for separateness.” ~ Esther Perel
Healthy relationships require a delicate balance of intimacy and autonomy, giving and receiving, self and other.
As we struggle to walk this delicate tightrope, we might feel less like graceful acrobats and more like pendulums swaying recklessly from side to side. As I reflect on my own romantic journey, I notice a trend: I got very close to past partners, losing myself in them entirely, and then emerged from the codependent haze terrified and self-abandoned.
“Never again!” I would vow. “I’d rather be alone than lose myself in a relationship!” So I’d spend a few months embracing utter independence —dating sporadically, not getting attached, heart under lock and key—until my loneliness sent me into the arms of another partner.
So wherein lies the balance? The answer can be found in the idea of interdependence: relationships that rely on mutual intimacy and mutual separateness.
Licensed professional counselor Jodi Clark explains that “an interdependent person recognizes the value of vulnerability, being able to turn to their partner in meaningful ways to create emotional intimacy. They also value a sense of self that allows them and their partner to be themselves without any need to compromise who they are or their values system” (emphasis added).
In contrast, codependent relationships exist between partners who rely predominantly on each other for their sense of value or purpose. People in codependent relationships tend to neglect themselves while over-prioritizing their partners’ values, needs, and dreams. The result? A painful and tangible loss of self.
So how can we walk the tightrope of togetherness and separateness gracefully? After all, attachment to others isn’t wrong—it’s natural and necessary. But how much is too much? How can you tell if your relationship is codependent or interdependent?
Here are 7 key points that differentiate codependent from interdependent relationships:
1. Codependent relationships: I use my partner’s love to fill a void of self-love.
Interdependent relationships: I love myself and my partner at the same time.In codependent relationships, it may feel like there’s not enough love to go around —because there’s not. A codependent partner may make up for her own lack of self-love by attempting to fill her empty well strictly with her partner’s love. She may be hyper-vigilant, scouring for scraps of love the way a vulture might.
That’s how I felt before I entered codependency recovery. My love for myself was so scarce that I felt like a starving castaway, desperate for anything that resembled sustenance. My desperation made me more likely to accept meager substitutes for love. I craved attention—even if it was of the negative variety.
In interdependent relationships, we replace that scarcity mentality with an abundance mentality. There is plenty of love to go around. We have a wellspring of self-love and—icing on the cake!—love from a partner who cares for us deeply.
2. Codependent relationships: I under-communicate my own needs in order to prioritize my partner’s needs.
Interdependent relationships: I’m free to express my needs and I am receptive to my partner’s needs.Healthy interdependent relationships do not require partners to shrink, minimize, or subjugate themselves. They allow for free expression by both parties.
This isn’t to say that everyone’s needs are met 100% of the time. However, both partners understand that they are complex, unique beings with a diverse array of needs and preferences. A difference in opinion doesn’t have to threaten the safety of the relationship.
As the saying goes: “Any relationship you have that could be ruined by having a conversation about your feelings, standards, or expectations wasn’t really stable enough to begin with.”
3. Codependent relationships: I use time with my partner to avoid being alone.
Interdependent relationships: I enjoy alone time and time spent with my partner.If we can’t find peace or pleasure in our own company, we’ll place unrealistic burdens on our relationships to be our sole providers of happiness.
Years ago, the stretch of hours that separated the end of the workday from seeing my partner stretched on like an infinite desert. I felt terribly anxious in my own company and used any numbing agent I could to pass the time: shots of vodka at 4pm, binge-watching Girls, whatever. When I could see my partner, my night finally began in earnest. My then-partner could sense this, of course, and felt justifiably burdened by my absence of a private life.
Enjoying our own company allows us to enjoy time with our partners without using that time to escape from our own anxiety. It also allows our partners to feel valued for who they are—not for the negative emotions they prevent us from feeling.
4. Codependent relationships: My relationship is responsible for making me happy.
Interdependent relationships: I am responsible for my own happiness and love co-creating joy with my partner.Can romantic partnerships make us happy? Absolutely.
Will we be happy if our romantic relationships are our sole source of happiness? Absolutely not.
Where our happiness or mental health is concerned, we can’t put all of our eggs in one basket. The risks are too great.
I still remember the days when having a disagreement with my then-partner felt like the end of the world. When we were arguing, everything was wrong. The single spout that distributed my happiness was broken! This was not the recipe for a grounded or balanced life.
My tunnel-vision meant that I was more likely to be reactive in arguments, less likely to give my partner space when he needed it, and more likely to respond to small differences of opinion as if they were catastrophes —which leads me to Point 5…
5. Codependent relationships: I cannot tolerate intense emotions. In order to calm down, I need my partner to soothe me.
Interdependent relationships: I can soothe myself when I’m distressed, and I ask for help when I’d like support.Learning how to self-soothe when distressed provides us a powerful foundation of resilience, inner strength, and self-trust.
When I’m distressed, I follow a personal blueprint. Depending on my mood, I might rest in bed and wait for my nervous system to calm, go for a run to release my energy, or journal. I also have a shortlist of folks I feel comfortable calling that includes a few dear friends, my sponsor, my family, and my partner. My partner is one ofmy sources of self-soothing; he is not the only source.
If my partner doesn’t have the capacity to soothe me in a given moment, he knows that I can meet that need in other ways. He doesn’t feel like he must neglect his own needs in order to protect my mental or emotional health. When one partner must neglect their own well-being to soothe another, resentment inevitably follows.
6. Codependent relationships: I prioritize my partner or my partnership at the expense of my own goals and dreams.
Interdependent relationships: I feel free to pursue my own goals and dreams and can build a life with my partner.All relationships require some degree of compromise. However, we can only compromise so much before our sense of self begins to erode. If you find yourself sacrificing the bulk of your dreams and desires to benefit your partnership, you’re probably not truly meeting in the middle.
Sacrificing our goals can have unintended and disastrous consequences on the very relationships we sacrificed them for. Separated from our dreams, we are divorced from a core component of who we are. We lose the lifeblood, the motivation, and the energy that propel us forward in the world. The unique skills and gifts we possess rust and decay from underuse. Like clockwork, our sense of purpose, value, and self-worth decline.
If your partnership is totally at odds with your own vision for the future, think carefully. Your partner can simultaneously be a fantastic person and completely misaligned with your goals.
7. Codependent relationships: I can’t imagine leaving my partner under any circumstances.
Interdependent relationships: I am deeply invested in my partnership and I know that I can walk away if it becomes toxic or unhealthy.Both partners must be willing to leave a relationship should it ever become toxic or unhealthy.
“But wait,” you might be thinking, “doesn’t that mean that they’re just not really committed to each other?”
Not at all. Being able to persevere through a period of disagreement, tension, or stagnancy is essentially a prerequisite for a long-term relationship. Subjecting yourself to an unhealthy or toxic dynamic, though, is another thing entirely. Unwillingness to leave a toxic partnership (when otherwise able to do so financially and logistically) demonstrates a profound lack of self-love and self-advocacy.
Even when deeply unhappy in their partnerships, many codependent folks feel incapable of leaving —or of setting effective boundaries with their partners. This paralysis is often driven by beliefs such as “Life would be meaningless without them,” “I could never find anyone else,” “I’ll be alone forever,” or “It’s better to be unhappily married than single and alone.”
It’s easy to see how a lack of self-love contributes to this scarcity mentality.
If you recognize yourself in the above depictions of codependent relationships, don’t be discouraged. I have been in deeply codependent partnerships before and now find myself agreeing with every interdependent statement on this list. With effort and practice, it is possible to outgrow our codependent conditioning and find healthy, interdependent relationships.
At its core, codependency is a dysfunctional relationship with the self that stems from a lack of self-worth—and is generally the result of being raised in a neglectful or dysfunctional family. When we rediscover our own sense of purpose, value, and self-compassion, we no longer need to rely on our partners for our sole sense of self-worth. We can engage in our relationships in balanced, grounded, other-loving, and self-loving ways.
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The Power of Compassion: How to Make Do in an Unfair World

“A good head and good heart are always a formidable combination. But when you add to that a literate tongue or pen, then you have something very special.” ~Nelson Mandela
Ever thought, “Life is so unfair!”
Is it, really?
Has life given you circumstances that keep you in a deep, dark hole of disadvantages that seem impossible to clamber out of?
Has life decided that you need to live in abject poverty and watch everyone in your life suffer from being denied everything a human needs to be human?
Has life put you in a position where you wouldn’t dare to dream of something better, for yourself, for your family, about anything, ever?
My story is specifically about my home, Cape Town, South Africa.
A place so breathtaking, it reminds you constantly that a higher power must truly exist.
A place filled with the friendliest people, with a strong sense of family and community.
People who smile easily and see the bright side of even the darkest realities.
And, under it all, we have all been touched by the far-reaching hand of hardship.
Elders have seen extreme poverty and prejudice, while raising large families as best they could under unrelenting circumstances.
Families have lost loved ones in struggles for a better world at the southernmost point of the African continent.
And the struggle continues.
In 2020, the struggle persists.
Sixty million voices go unheard every single day, with a slew of injustices hurled at them every so often, for good measure.
Senior citizens have no means to support their modest lives, and no one to care for their needs.
Unfair, with a lifetime of regrets.
Able-bodied, competent, grown men and women are forgotten by the system, and left as easy prey to life-shattering temptations.
Unfair, with daily desperation.
With an unemployment rate pushing 30%, what will they do, and what will become of them and their families?
The youth stare a bleak future straight in the face.
Unfair, with overwhelming depression.
Children lack the little they need to blossom into the future of this world.
Unfair, with blissful oblivion.
How long must they be happy in the little they all have?
Every family has a story to tell.
And sadly, the vast majority all sound like a broken record, playing the same tune over and over again.
My family’s story is no different.
Grew up in poverty, shared a home with ten other people, had very little to eat, had no gas or electricity, no vehicle, walked long distances in harsh conditions just to get to school every day, no telephone, no television, no appliances, no hot water, problematic plumbing in an outhouse, no healthcare, no dental care, one pair of shoes per person, worn until their soles were irreparable, clothes made from offcuts by the matriarch of the family, left school before the age of fourteen, helped support the family by taking on manual labor, stayed home to take care of eight to fourteen growing children…
And the list of unimaginable challenges goes on.
Sounds like a village situated in the remote parts of an undiscovered jungle somewhere, forgotten by time and progress.
Yet, they survived.
And tragically, so did the circumstances.
In the age of social media, digital business, and limitless telecommunications, harsh circumstances still exist.
While some miraculously overcame unbelievable odds, beat the system, and thrived, others were left at the mercy of history chasing its tail in a vicious cycle.
And today, millions of people in South Africa still live this way, with no way to step out of the madness.
As a kid, I remember both my mother and grandmother employing domestic workers who lived in an informal settlement (either with their families, or apart from their families who lived in a faraway state), in a makeshift dwelling that could go up in smoke, literally, at any moment, from a neglected candle.
As an adult, I do the same as my mom and gran before me, and the very same set of criteria exists that has existed for four whole decades.
No one has come to the rescue.
Delving into the lives of those loyal domestic workers, it is not hard to imagine that the younger generations of their families walk the paths they always have.
Unfair, hopelessly so.
Same story goes for the gardeners, and brick layers, and handymen, and janitors, and security guards, and petrol attendants (who?), and car guards (huh?), and caretakers, and garbage collectors, and…
But wait, there’s more. Devastatingly, there’s more.
Add to the list, that layer of society who, until now, have managed to live marginally above the breadline (living pay check to pay check) and have a relatively “comfortable” life, who have now lost their gainful employment and don’t know where to start to earn a living wage to keep their families fed, clothed, and cared for.
How do they get to win and rise above these life-altering, unexpected curveballs?
The only immediately viable solution for them all that I can see is compassion, kindness, and generosity.
Compassion from others, kindnesses from strangers, generosity of family and friends.
And let me just assure you right now, in case you’ve ever wondered, that there is enough to go around on this magnificent planet.
Interest in the well-being of others—the children, the youth, the family men and women, the seniors.
Thankfully, this place called Cape Town has scores of beautiful people who practice compassion as a part of everything they do.
Parents and siblings protect each other from the wolves at the door.
People make the best of their dire conditions, and are grateful for all that they have, even if all they have is their health.
Families and friends check that their family members and friends are “okay.”
And would you believe that, even though you now know almost everyone’s story, they’ll do all that they can to convince you that they actually are okay?
There’s a term for that: “making do.”
They make do with what they have, they make do with what has been given to them, they make do with what they receive, they make do with what you can spare them, they make do with how they live, they make do with what they get paid for their hard, often physical, work. They make do.
Their dignities are intact, in their minds at least, if not in reality.
Unfair, to you and I, definitely.
To them, it’s just life.
And it’s in all of our hands.
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Dear Childhood Friends, Thank You and I Miss You

“Sweet is the memory of distant friends. Like the mellow rays of the departing sun, it falls tenderly, yet sadly, on the heart.” ~Washington Irving
Why is it that the older we seem to get the more and more we miss friendships from days long past?
You know the ones…
The friendships where you felt 100% happiness being in their presence.
Where you felt as if you could be your true self—goofy, silly, honest, and real.
Where you would get lost in conversations, imagination, and being fully present in the moment.
Where you went on adventures, told them your secrets, and laughed until your bellies hurt.
They knew you, and you knew them, and it just… clicked.
You swore you would be BFF’s forever, maybe even got one of those adorable half-heart necklaces, but somehow along the journey your paths drifted.
You wonder what happened; but you know what happened. Life happened. They went one way, you went another.
Leaving a sadness in your heart, you may or may not have been aware of at the time, because life simply went on.
You met other friends, classmates, co-workers, acquaintances, and as you began to juggle all things life, career, and family the years passed by.
Until one day, a photo of them pops in your social feed and the floodgates open up as you reminisce on the memories of a simpler time.
Remembering how important that person was to you.
How their friendship helped shape who you are today.
How you truly were 100% yourself around them before life experiences dimmed your essence.
You think about how much you miss that person in your life.
About how you wish you hadn’t let the bond of friendship drift as your heart literally hurts.
You think about reaching out to say hi. To tell them how important they were in your life. How grateful you are for the friendship you shared.
That you miss it.
That you miss them.
But you fear it would be weird.
Justifying to yourself:
They are too busy.
They have their own life.
It has been “too long.”
And as your mind talks your heart out of reaching out, you breathe a heavy sigh and keep scrolling.
—
We have all had these friendships.
And maybe not just one.
At various stages in our lives we have those special friendships that go that ‘next level.’
Whether it was your childhood friends, high school friends, college friends…
There is something about the bond of growing through a time of transition with someone that creates an unshakable foundation.
And it is not until you find yourself lost in the throes of adulting, longing for connection, that true-authentic-next-level connection that you reminisce and reflect on how special those bonds truly were.
Because no one tells you, when you transition into adulthood, parenthood, and midlife how badly you will miss those friendships more than you ever knew was possible.
How creating authentic, soul-connecting friendships seems to be harder than it once was.
And how these special friendships will forever be embedded in your heart.
If you are like most, you may look back and feel some regrets.
Regret for letting those friendships drift.
Regret for not saying the things you wanted to say, or saying the things you wish you didn’t say.
Regret you did not tell them how important they were to you and how they have shaped who you are today.
Regret for not recognizing the specialness of the bond you shared.
But the thing is, it is not too late.
To tell that friend how much they meant to you.
To apologize for something that you may still regret.
To tell them how much you valued them.
To tell them how much you cherished all of the laughs, the trials and tribulations and memories which were made.
Because although you both may have grown separate ways through life, your roots are forever entwined.
So today, I challenge you to choose love.
To choose bravery.
To choose vulnerability.
To choose connection…. re-connection.
If you have a friend who’s been on your mind but have been hesitant to reach out and tell them how much they impacted your life, tag them in this post. Send them a little note. Add them on one of your social media platforms. Reach out and let them know you are thinking of them with no expectations, but simply to share a smile, a memory, a reminder of how much you value them.
For what I would give to have one more conversation with one of my best friends who is no longer here.
To tell her how much I admired her resilience, her dedication, her strong morals.
To tell her I’m sorry for not being a good friend when I was consumed with my inner demons.
To thank her for some of the best memories I could have asked for.
To tell her I valued her friendship, honesty and love more than anything and I only hope my daughter can have a friendship like we had.
To thank her for giving me an empathetic ass kicking when I was in the throes of an eating disorder and binge drinking and saving my life.
Be brave.
Choose love.
Choose connection.
“Growing apart doesn’t change the fact that for a long time we grew side by side; our roots will always be tangled. I’m glad for that.” ~Ally Condie
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If You Think Contentment Will Make You Lazy and Unproductive

“To be content doesn’t mean you don’t desire more, it means you’re thankful for what you have and patient for what’s to come.” ~Tony Gaskins
There’s a thought I want to share with you that used to keep me up at night.
It’s a toxic idea that caused me stress and burnout and actually got in the way of my productivity and creativity (and more importantly, my happiness).
Nevertheless, I hung onto it, and eventually came to see that it wasn’t just me. It was actually prevalent in many developed societies.
The thought went something like this: If I accept who I am, where I am, and what I have, then I will become unproductive and lazy.
Unconsciously, it boiled down to the following misconception: acceptance = contentment = laziness.
A few years ago, I may not have admitted to you that I believed this, but I certainty acted as if it were true. I was by no means lazy; I was self-motivating and self-employed, working day in and day out. But at the end of the day, no matter how much I had “achieved,” no matter how many things were crossed off the to-do list, I would still find myself sitting at home with two thoughts.
1. I didn’t do enough today.
2. I need to do more tomorrow.
These thoughts never allowed me to truly relax, and this caused a cycle of anxiety and tension. At some point, like many of us, I came across the idea and practice of self-acceptance. But no matter how much I tried to tell myself that everything was okay, I simply couldn’t feel that this was true. I couldn’t shake the thoughts about not having done enough, not being enough, not being content with the moment.
Unsurprisingly, this was terrible for my mental health.
Finally, I was talking about this with a friend of mine, and they casually asked me the following question.
“What would having done enough actually look like to you?”
And then it dawned on me. I had absolutely no idea. In truth, there was no such thing as enough—it was a constantly moving target. “Having done enough” was just a vague notion I used to fuel this myth of anxious productivity that I’d bought into.
I didn’t need to be anxious to be productive, I didn’t need to be productive to be content, and being content would not make me lazy.
I even started to realize that the opposite was true. When I accepted whatever was happening, I would be more content, and when I was more content, I would have more energy and confidence, which translated to more productivity.
Humans are creatures of habit, and it was ritual and routine—not fear and anxiety—that would determine what I achieved. The worry that had driven my life for years was a complete falsehood!
I’ve learned it’s possible to be both content and productive—no anxiety required. Here’s how.
5 Ways to Be Content and Productive
1. Start small.
If you’re stuck in the habit of feeling you never do enough, don’t try and challenge it all at once. Try letting go of your attachment to a couple of ideas and see where it gets you. For example, maybe you feel that relaxation is something you only deserve on days where you’ve completed your to-do list. You could reframe this so relaxation is something on your to-do list that is a priority rather than a bonus.
2. Run an experiment.
If you’re convinced that feeling content with some aspect of your life could be detrimental, why don’t you try it out?
Why don’t you try a week where you don’t stress yourself out about eating clean, going to the gym, or working on some non-essential project. Record what you do anyway, then compare the difference in outcome between weeks where you are allowed to feel content regardless of whether you meet all your expectations, and weeks where you anxiously push yourself. You may find that you do more than you expected you would without the internal pressure.
After a while you may also find that your sense of contentment doesn’t hinge upon your day-to-day achievements—but if it does, then maybe you need to look at reward-based motivations, rather than punishment-based motivations.
3. Focus on the process and not the outcome.
This is time-tested wisdom, but it’s not always easy to follow. Think about it as a value you have, rather than something you do or a skill you acquire. To value the process over the outcome is to place your attention on what you are doing rather than why you are doing it.
Fixating on the end result or outcome makes it easy to get trapped in cycles of future-oriented rumination. This is not only unpleasant, but also takes up energy that you could devote to the task at hand. On the other hand, if you focus entirely on the immediate task—the what and not the why—then you are more likely to fall into the flow-state, and less likely to fall victim to worries and mental chatter.
4. Less desire, more trust.
There are two ways we can look at the idea of hope. One is the hope you have when you want or desire something. Like when you hope for a promotion or a bigger car. The other is a more general and vague sense of trust that you have. Like, I have hope that things will turn out okay.
If you can reduce the first type of hope, the desire for something else, while increasing the second type of hope, trust that everything will be okay, then self-acceptance will become a habit, not just an ideal.
5. Approach goals indirectly.
Economist John Kay calls this process obliquity. Sometimes when we strive aggressively to achieve a goal, we can trip over our own feet. This is why some goals, such as happiness, are best achieved by taking an indirect route.
For example, instead of saying, “This year I want to meet my soul mate,” you could say, “This year I’m going to meet more people and be curious about what they all have to say.” Instead of saying, “This year I want to be happier,” you could say, “This year I’m going to put aside thirty minutes a day for things I enjoy—like writing songs—and give 100% of my attention to those things for thirty minutes.”
If you feel that you need to do more, but that feeling is never going away, maybe it’s time to try experimenting with the feeling that you can try and do less?
How have you struggled with feelings of self-acceptance and the belief that you’ve never done enough? Let us know in the comments, we’d love to hear from you.
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How I Stopped Blaming My Ex for Our Painful Relationship

“To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.” ~Lewis B. Smedes
When it came to my ex-girlfriend, I had difficulty letting go.
She was a girl I’d had a big crush on for a couple of years. Funnily enough, once my crush on her began to fade, she suddenly started taking a liking to me and made it known that she was into me through our mutual friends.
I had my doubts about our compatibility from the start. We hardly shared any common interests, and I found it hard to connect with her in conversations. But my friend said things would be different once we started dating, as had been the case for him and his girlfriend, so I decided to give things a go.
We broke up after a year of dating, yet we kept coming back to each other over the next two years. Like so many couples, we didn’t know how to be together, nor how to be without each other. We weren’t just incompatible; we were toxic together, and our relationship was full of drama.
When our turbulent relationship came to an end, it wasn’t letting go of the relationship that I had trouble with; it was letting go of the negative thoughts and feelings that I held toward her. I blamed her for what she had put me through during our time together.
Though I could go on blaming her, I knew that on a deeper level that the fault didn’t lie solely with her.
I would get irritated with her for the littlest of things. And though I have always been an optimistic person, during the relationship, I was very negative.
I was convinced that we couldn’t last even a week without fighting. And like a self-fulfilling prophecy, it always came to pass.
We eventually parted ways once we each moved to different parts of the country.
However, the feelings of blame and resentment I was holding from the relationship still bothered me long after it was over.
Years ago I came across a quote from Buddha that went like this:
“Holding on to anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one who gets burned.”
I wanted to let go of these feelings since I knew holding on to them was doing me no good. Yet an intellectual realization alone is often not enough; to let go of negativity, we often need a practical step to take.
And that’s exactly what I found in Rhonda Byrne’s book The Magic.
Her book contained an exercise on healing relationships through gratitude. She said that focusing on what we are grateful about the other person could help heal and eliminate feelings of negativity.
As I started looking for things to be grateful for, I noticed that there were indeed lots of things to appreciate—things that weren’t immediately apparent because my mind had been fixating on all the negatives.
Like the times when she could be really sweet and caring, and the wonderful and thoughtful birthday gifts she gave me over the years. And most importantly, she never judged me and helped me accept parts of myself that I had trouble accepting.
The relationship made me realize how judgmental I could be, something that wasn’t apparent to me earlier. It also taught me how powerful the thoughts and feelings we put into a relationship are, whether positive or negative.
The feelings of resentment I held toward her did not magically go away overnight, possibly because I had stubbornly held on to them for so long.
It took me a few times of writing them over the years before the blame and negativity started fading away. And I’m glad to say that those feelings are no longer present.
As I see it now, it’s impossible to change what happened. The only thing I can change is the perspective with which I look back upon the relationship.
True, we didn’t have the best of relationships, far from it. But I wouldn’t have learned the things I did if everything had been perfect. I guess relationships are like that. There are no failed relationships. The only failed relationships are the ones in which we fail to learn anything.
Changing my perspective has brought me a lot of peace and helped me let go of the thoughts and feelings that were bothering me.
I hope if you hold feelings of resentment toward anyone, you can let go too by shifting your perspective and finding some way you’ve learned, grown, or benefited from the relationship. In the end, we are doing ourselves the biggest favor by letting go.



























