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Free
Relationship Advice Articles |
Wednesday, October 12, 2005 |
Infusing Spirit Into Your
Relationships
By Brenda
Shoshanna, Ph.D.
Health
Articles / Self-Help Title /
Relationships
There
is one sure fire medicine which cures
all pain and difficulty and opens the
way for your greater good. It allows
you to sleep well at night, wake up
refreshed and filled with enthusiasm
for your daily tasks. When you take
this medicine obstacles evaporate and
wonderful meetings with others
proliferate tremendously. This
medicine is abundantly available, has
no side effects and can be taken in
large or small doses regularly. You
need no one to prescribe it. The more
you take, the sweeter it is.
This
medicine is the practice of
thankfulness. Notice, I said
"practice." Thankfulness of
this kind must become more than a
fleeting feeling, it must become a way
of life. This way of life can also be
called the way of doing and giving, of
practicing "deeds of worth."
Although there are endless cures for
anxiety, one thing is impossible - to
be depressed and grateful at the same
time.
Thankfulness
takes many forms, but unless it is
translated into consistent action it
does not have the ongoing impact we
are speaking of. In order to infuse
spirit into all your relationships,
thankfulness must become a verb. You
must find a way to express it daily,
and to become constantly aware of all
you have to be grateful for. You are
not then giving out of obligation, but
out of a full heart. You are no longer
aware of all you are lacking, but all
you are receiving moment by moment.
Now
we are speaking of two prongs of
thankfulness practice, the practice of
doing thanks, and of working with our
attention. We take our attention off
our usual self-centered focus and
habitual complaining mind, and
continually make ourselves aware of
what we are receiving from the other,
and what we can give in return. Most
of our attention is on the giving part
as well. Even if we do not feel we are
receiving anything at the moment, by
giving to the other wholeheartedly, we
will receive a great deal in return -
the joy of living with an open
heart.
When
an individual leaves a relationship,
or is not functioning well in it, the
bottom line is that there has been a
lack of gratitude - they feel
unappreciated, unacknowledged, unknown
for who they truly are and all they
can be. When flowers receive plenty of
sun and water, they grow unabashedly.
Human relationships are no different.
The sun of gratitude goes a very long
way. By doing "deeds of
worth", expressing our
thankfulness through actions, through
giving of gifts, emotional gifts,
physical gifts, service gifts, a
strong foundation is built in any
relationship - a foundation which
allows spirit to live. These deeds
must be performed consistently, much
the way we brush our teeth each day.
In the morning, ask yourself, what can
I do to make this day wonderful for
--------------? What are they needing?
How can I help supply that need?
In
this practice we take our focus off
our expectations of the other and
focus upon how we can help them to
grow. This is not a matter of
self-sacrifice, but a matter of
becoming all we truly are. Through
giving to the other, we also grow. To
do this we must change our focus,
giving up the tunnel vision most of us
have lived with our whole life long.
No
relationship or project can falter
when it is based upon deep caring for
the other and for our true selves. Our
true selves wants to give, it wants to
open its heart and sing songs. Unless
our actions in relationships comes out
of this foundation, no lasting well
being can occur. A great psychologist
"Jourard once said, "We
become sick because we act in
sickening ways." When our
actions, however, are firmly based
upon giving, and deeds of worth, this
is the road to lasting health.
SAVE
YOUR RELATIONSHIP
Discover how to overcome common
relationship problems by working with
the unique self help program by Dr.
Brenda Shoshanna.
www.truthaboutlove.com
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