For many years I was conflicted in my former marriage. I knew in my heart that something was wrong but I avoided taking a definite stand. I didn’t want to hurt my husband. I frequently hear this same concern when assisting others with relationship challenges. On the surface it appears compassionate and kind; a “higher-road” position. I’ve learned that this thinking is actually quite arrogant, irrational, unkind, and dishonest.
As I began to unravel layers of beliefs that supported my inaction, and got to the heart of the matter, I realized that I had been holding onto concepts that did not serve me and were simply not true. Here are a few:
– Being assertive and being kind are mutually exclusive. In my warped way of thinking I believed that someone else’s feelings were more important than my own. My role was to tread lightly so I didn’t ruffle any feathers; to put another’s needs before mine. Really? When the frustration and resentment of not acknowledging my feelings overwhelmed me, I would “blow up” and all kind of crap would come out of my mouth. I overcompensated and became a bully. Being kind was the last thought on my mind. To hell with that! My idea of being kind entailed a sacrifice I didn’t want to make at that moment.
The breakthrough came when I questioned what assertiveness really meant… without the shadow of “something bad” around the phrase. It simply means to communicate honestly–to myself first–what I am feeling and to state what I want and need. There is no need to defend and build a case to support why I feel the way I do, or to “rationalize” being assertive. My job is simply to acknowledge what I’m experiencing and to communicate honestly, without being attached to an outcome. I have found that when I do, I am not nervous or fearful; I’m not worried about rocking the boat or about a negative reaction. I’m simply stating what is true for me. This is empowering. It’s clean, simple, respectful, and kind—to myself and all involved. I acknowledge the 800-pound gorilla in the room and I take the necessary first step to deal with it.
– There is a winner and a loser. Someone is right and someone is wrong. The idea of a win-win is appealing yet our world is wired for competition. Learning to look for a solution that meets everyones’ needs took me time. A Course in Miracles teaches that no one wins if anyone loses. When I deny how I am feeling, I am lying to myself. Coming from dishonesty, I cannot possibly be honest with anyone else, despite telling myself it’s because I don’t want to hurt them. This is not in anyone’s best interest. How could it be? Both of us lose.
I’ve found the only way everyone wins is to completely trust and honor the still, small voice within. It’s not necessary to understand how this works. It’s enough to recognize that love extends and joins; it doesn’t reinforce separation and conflict. It may appear that truth divides and hurts, but how can I possibly know what someone else’s life path is? My honesty may be the catalyst and opportunity someone needs for making better choices, a gift of growth. It might not. But by following my heart, in spite of my mind’s resistance and outward appearances, I’m giving myself an opportunity to grow and strengthen truth and love within me, and I’m offering that opportunity to another.
Dating after my divorce helped me practice honoring myself in an assertive, kind way without making the other person wrong. There are three strategies for resolving differences. The first, very common practice, is to change the other person. Been there, done that. Without their consent and motivation, you’re waging a war you can’t win and you believe you’re doing it “for her/his own good.” How can you really know what’s best for them?
The second strategy is to change oneself. Depending on how highly you value what you’re changing, this, too,can be a non-starter. What to have for dinner is one thing, but compromising how I show up in the world is something vastly different. Compromising might have me out of alignment with my nature, core values, or both. I know the pain of this path well. Because of my self-doubts, I didn’t raise the bar high enough for the relationship I thought I could have, and so I compromised myself almost to the point of extinction.
There is a third option: no one is “wrong.” It’s acknowledging that there’s a difference that is irreconcilable. We agree that we’re simply not a match. No harm, no foul. If my five years taught me anything it was how not to settle or try to fit myself into a situation that clearly isn’t a fit.
– I can hurt another person’s feelings. When I think like this, I assume a power I don’t have. I let myself believe that I know how another will feel and that I can override how that person chooses to think and feel. If hurt, it is a direct result of his or her thinking; a story they craft based on their perception and interpretation. The cause is always our own thought process, not the projections of others.
So why do so many of us stay in unhealthy and difficult relationships? “Stinking thinking.” We’re afraid. Afraid of being alone, afraid that this is as good as it gets, afraid our hearts will steer us down the wrong path, afraid that we’re unloving, afraid of what others will think, and on and on. We don’t stop and question our thinking.
We can love and say goodbye. Following my heart, not my head, and letting it guide me is love in action, and the most loving and respectful thing I can do for another. I know everyone wins. How? Not my business. My task is to be aligned with my truth and love will take care of the rest.
Keith says
Marguerite,
So true! Very nicely written.
Keith xxxooo
Marguerite LaDue says
Thanks sweetheart! Glad you think so :-))
Matisun says
Wow sis! So powerful and thank you for your courage in being honest and raw- real and insightful. You provide a door for us to walk through in seeing things differently, in honoring ourselves and trusting truth to bless everyone even if at the time it might not appear that way. I have witnessed how you honoring the truth of your heart has brought you a beautiful love and I am so happy for you both! Blessings dear sis!
Marguerite LaDue says
Thanks sistaface! I wouldn’t be here today without your encouragement and support and complete belief in me. So glad we’re walking this life together. I love you xoxoxoxo
Jay says
This is such a profound and deeply- layered writing, Marquerite. It touched me deeply when I first read it three weeks ago and I continue to sit with it. Such a great mirror! I can see how much I have learned about loving myself by being honest enough a year and a half ago to end a relationship by saying “I love you and goodbye”. It was ( and still is) so beautiful and empowering.
At the same time, I saw all the relationships in my past where I over-stayed for all the wrong reasons until I collapsed and said “I don’t love you anymore and I have to go now.” I felt this enormous sadness and confess there has been some unexpected grieving taking place as I have been fully accepting that it was really myself I didn’t love. It’s weird… it’s like Ouch! I did that and oh yeah…it’s okay, Honey, all in the same breath, do you know what I mean? Such a great reminder you are, my dear friend. Thank you. There is no right and wrong way or time to awaken, only this moment to love and give ourselves grace.
Marguerite LaDue says
Jay please pardon my late reply to your very beautiful and honest commentary…I’ve been asleep at the wheel!
I’m honored my writing touched your heart so profoundly – it certainly came from a place deep within me. It’s been so freeing to get to this level of understanding. If everything is energy then what we’re simply doing is detaching our vibration from one that is operating at a different frequency. Simple..yes, easy…no! Kudos to you for the courage to keep on keeping on. And happy that my work is assisting you in yours. I love you!