I think most women run into
issues and confusion in their love lives because they don’t know what a truly
healthy relationship looks like, and is supposed to feel like. And it’s not
surprising given the very unrealistic portrayals of love in movies, TV, and
music. There is this idea that we have one soul mate and that real love stories
are supposed to be filled with obstacles and drama. While this makes for good
entertainment, it isn’t real life.
Most of the love stories we see in
pop culture are rooted in infatuation…not
real love. Some degree of infatuation is fine, but a relationship entirely
rooted in infatuation is usually doomed. It’s usually based on an obsession, or
idealization, more than a genuine appreciation and acceptance of who the other
person is.
There is a tremendous difference
between real, true love and unhealthy obsession or fixation… but it doesn’t
always feel like that.
What do I mean by love and fixation?
Well, when you love someone, it is
pretty effortless. It is true and pure – you don’t need
them to be any
certain way. Heck, you don’t even need them to be your boyfriend or lover. You
just simply enjoy them as a person and you’re happy with them just being who
they are. You don’t need to possess them. You don’t need a title from
them. You just love having them in your life and they love being in yours, whether
it’s as friends, as lovers, or as life partners.
Again, I have to emphasize that it’s
effortless and characterized by you just simply enjoying each other. You
really “get” each other. You laugh together. You don’t need them, but
rather, you just enjoy them.
That’s love. That’s compatibility.
Fixation, on the other hand, does
not feel pleasant. It does not feel good, but it does feel very urgent,
very important, and very stressful.
When you’re fixated on someone, it
feels more like you’re suffocating. It feels like you need them… like you must
have them treat you a certain way, give you a certain relationship title, or
somehow prove their commitment to you. You feel like until you have this, you
are not OK and will not be OK.
When you’re fixated on someone, your
relationship ceases to be about enjoyment and effortlessness. Instead, it is
more like you are gasping for air, desperately hoping they’ll give you whatever
it is you think you need from them.
Granted, even good relationships
have a little bit of fixation mixed in with them (I must emphasize a
little bit), but it is only during very occasional occurrences like
arguments or when one or both partners are stressed. In general, though,
compatible people have very little, if any, fixation in their relationships…
People who have good relationships
observe how they themselves feel in a relationship with another person (whether
it’s a lover, a friend or a co-worker). They observe if their connection
to the other person feels like love (good) or obsession (bad).
If it feels like obsession, they
drop it like it’s hot.
Unfortunately, though, the majority
of people don’t do that. I blame music and Hollywood for propagating this
mindset, but for whatever reason, people today have the idea that relationships
are supposed to be hard.
This simply is not true. If a
relationship with someone makes you feel bad, that is your mind screaming,
“This person is incompatible with you! Get away and stay away!”
If a relationship feels like
suffocation, that’s a huge clue that you’re not in a relationship with someone
who’s compatible with you. Good relationships are effortless (well, 99% of the
time within a good relationship is effortless with the occasional 1% of the
time where you have to put in effort to make sure things stay in a good place).
I can’t stress this point enough:
Good relationships are effortless. You don’t feel like
you’re walking on eggshells, worrying that you might screw something up.
You don’t feel like you have to make it work. You don’t feel
like you’re suffocating, wishing and hoping to finally get some sweet relief
and get to breathe. You aren’t afraid to lose them. In fact, you never even
think about possibly losing them because you don’t feel you need to
possess them in order to experience the love you have for them.
Love is not meant to be a struggle.
Yes, popular songs it sound like it’s supposed to be. Yes, movies
make it seem like it’s supposed to be. But movies and music are wrong,
love is meant to be effortless and easy. When it’s not, you’re doing it
wrong!
Why is breaking your fixation
essential to having success in your love life?
OK, so I talked earlier about what
fixation feels like and how it’s the biggest warning sign that you’re trying to
have a relationship with a bad match (that is, a match that isn’t going to work
out in the long term and will drain your life, heart and soul until there’s
nothing left…).
However, I didn’t explain the
incredibly damaging toll this takes on the relationship having a chance.
Let’s talk about what a relationship
actually is, since the majority of people blindly want, crave and chase the
idea of having a relationship and yet, very few actually understand some
essential points about what a relationship is…
A relationship is not a possession,
like a stone or a purse or a car. A relationship is not a thing at all.
A relationship is simply the interaction you’re having with that person
as it’s happening and the general, overall tone of your interactions.
A relationship simply is.
Society doesn’t see relationships
this way, for the most part. Our society tries to make relationships into
a thing – a thing that can be worked on, fixed or broken. Lost or gained.
Had or not had.
Relationships are living and
experienced in-the-moment, like music.
A song is a song as it’s playing. If it’s sitting on your MP3
player and you’re not playing it, then it is simply data. You can say you
have the song or own it, but saying you have a song on your iPod has nothing to
do with your experience of the song as it’s playing.
I don’t care if you have a million
songs on your iPod. If you’re not listening to the music, you’re not
experiencing music.
Yes, I realize I’m speaking in
metaphors, so let me tie this up: I don’t care if you have a
relationship. I don’t care if you have a title like “boyfriend” or
“husband” for your guy. The title is not the relationship. Your having of
them is not your relationship – it is simply a thought in your head, completely
irrelevant to the on-going music of your relationship.
So if the “music” of your
relationship is a bitter, hateful ballad of pain and inner suffering… you need
to change your tune, so to speak.
Back to my point about fixation…
When you fixate on a relationship,
you are choking the joy out of your own experience and that negative vibe
transmits into your relationship and very quickly poisons it, fatally.
Instead of your guy feeling relaxed
around you, he feels pressure (like he’s afraid to offend you or upset you).
Instead of you being his sanctuary and escape, you become a person (or
vibe) that he wants to escape from. Instead of him feeling like your
presence fills him with joy and peace, he will feel like your presence drains
him of joy and peace.
This is a bad thing…
I don’t point this out to blame you
or make you feel bad. Just the opposite in fact. This is good news
because I’m telling you: This is 100% under your control.
So what’s the root cause of this
destructive force of fixation? How can you completely banish it from your
love life, so love has a chance to flourish and grow?
The cause and solution are both
simple. Simple, however, does not always translate to easy.
The root cause of fixation comes
from you perceiving that the present relationship situation could somehow lead
you to lack or loss in some way. And, as a response, you feel a fear
of loss. So, in short, the root cause is your perspective and the fear
of loss you feel as a consequence.
This fear of loss is entirely based
on how you’re looking at the situation.
Similar to a good, loving
relationship, a healthy perspective feels effortless and feels good. When you
are living within an unhealthy perspective, your thoughts on that subject will
feel bad.
It’s really that simple. One
thing that took me nearly 20 years to fully grasp is this simple truth: If
the way you’re thinking about things makes you feel bad, you’re on the wrong
track.
If there’s any area of life that
feels the impact of your beliefs the most, it’s relationships.
You can get by financially,
physically, and even socially with negative, self-defeating beliefs haunting
you every step of the way.
But love… love dredges up all
that is unloved within ourselves. If you have a negative perspective
or negative beliefs haunting you, your love life will drag all of these issues
to the surface and force you to deal with them, head on.
Most people in our society are not
educated in inner or outer love. And what’s worse is that magazines and books
are often designed to make you buy more solutions (be it make-up,
hair products, clothing, liposuction, etc.) so that you’d somehow be good
enough for a relationship or love. So a lot of so-called resources
end up leading the thirsty further into the desert.
The truth is, the path out of
self-sabotaging habits in your love life is simple. All you have to do is
remember this: When you feel bad or disturbed about something, that is your
mind’s way of letting you know your perspective is off track and will not lead
you to a good place.
When you think about something in
your love life and you feel good (or, more accurately, you feel at peace and
undisturbed) with your thoughts, then you know you’re on the right track.
One of the biggest areas where this
is apparent is: The major difference between not caring and stressing over
your love life.
In order to get to a place where
your relationships work for you (instead of work against you), you need to
arrive at a point where you stop caring.
I want to make clear what I mean
there when I say, “Stop caring”…
What I really mean is: Stop
stressing over it.
Most people confuse caring with
stressing about things. I care very much about my parents, extended
family and siblings. But I don’t stress about them.
When I am looking at things in a way
where I perceive that I could lose something, then I feel that fear of
loss feeling and I start to stress over it. That stress feeling can
end up turning something small that would normally have me feeling only
slightly bothered, to instead experience full-blown, long-lasting
depression and anxiety.
Like I’ve been saying,it’s all under
your control. It all roots back to the perspective you take on things.
If you look at things in a way where you believe you could lose something
and you’re afraid of losing it, you will always experience a fear
of loss and, as a result, you will invariably end up creating a self-fulfilling
prophecy (that is, your negative emotions and mindset will have you behave or
make decisions in such a way that bring about exactly what you don’t want)…
One of the biggest differences
between people who are successful in an area of life and those who aren’t is
that the unsuccessful people take on a perspective that causes them to stress
over that area of life, whereas the successful people don’t take on a
perspective that stresses them out.
I understand you might say, “But
Eric, how can I not stress out over my situation? It’s not like taking on
a different perspective would make my current situation any less real or true.”
Well, OK, but you would have to
agree with me that setbacks in your life take much less of a toll on you when
you’re in a good mood than when you’re in a bad mood, right? Your
mood is the most important factor in how life feels and how prone you are
to stress over things.
In that way, it’s essential you
learn to protect your mood and do everything in your power to live your life in
a way where you’re in a good mood as often as possible.
When I adopted this line of
thinking, my life (and love life) improved tremendously. If something
makes you feel bad, it’s OK to drop it.
I’m not necessarily saying to drop
people if you feel bad around them (though sometimes this is a great move), but
I am saying that there are many things you can give yourself permission to
drop.
You don’t need to win an
argument. It’s OK to drop it.
You don’t need a certain person to see you a certain way. You can drop that desire (or, in some cases, drop the person).
You don’t need a certain person to see you a certain way. You can drop that desire (or, in some cases, drop the person).
You don’t need to live your life in a certain way to make others happy or to be worthy/good by someone else’s standards. You can drop those beliefs and do what makes you happy.
Yes, do what makes you happy. That’s what I’m getting at with all this.
This is why, over and over and over
again, you see Sabrina and me advising you to live a life that makes you happy.
A life where you feel good, inspired, engaged, full and happy. It
is essential and if you are not there, then the best (and most important) thing
to do is get to a place where your life is happy and full. That is the
best thing for your love life.
Stop worrying about being
dumped. Instead, occupy your time with dumping negative ideas, negative
thoughts and negative influences.
Dump everything that makes you feel bad. Dump all that drains the color
and joy from your life and fill that space with everything you love, regardless
of what anyone else thinks.
That, in essence, is what loving
yourself looks like. And that’s what you need right now – that is all you
need.
the inner journey now and finally
give yourself that permission to love yourself. That is the secret that
nobody has told you about love. This world will send you spiraling into
your life, looking for love. Craving it and chasing it. Needing it.
You can love yourself. It’s
OK. You can finally give yourself that permission.
You may have been treated badly in
your life. It’s still OK to love yourself now.
You may have had your heart broken
in the past. It’s still OK to love yourself now.
You may have felt, no matter how
hard you tried to love other’s that ultimately, deeply, somehow… you are unlovable.
And I’m telling you, now, you can
drop it. You can let it all go know. It’s OK, I’m telling you… you
can love yourself.
And this is how, finally, all the
empty cliches can make sense.
When people say to follow your
heart, they are telling you that you can give yourself this permission.
They are telling you that you can love yourself. They are telling
you that you can drop all of the ideas that you’ve been fed… those ideas that
make you feel bad, depressed, or anxious… and simply just believe what makes
you feel good and at peace.
There’s nothing dramatic or
glamorous about taking on a perspective that makes you feel good… and happy…
and at peace. It’s not a big, loud, ostentatious performance.
It’s more like letting go and
finally being OK with following that simple path inside that makes you feel
happy and at peace. It’s not a booming declaration that you shove in
people’s faces to prove how happy and whole and strong you are… it’s just a
quiet and invisible letting-go of all that makes you unhappy, stressed or
afraid.
Once you live that path, love really
will effortlessly flow to you.
It’s important to note, this is not some tactic that you can do to get love to
come to you. That, again, would be the wrong perspective. I’m not
giving you some means to an immediate end… I’m giving you the way out of
self-sabotaging your love life as a whole, so that finding and having love is
no longer a struggle, ever.
You need to stop trying to shove a
square peg through a round hole, though. This isn’t some thing you can do
a bit of and then, the moment that you see it starting to work, go back to your
old perspectives that fill you with fear, stress, and anxiety. You have
to go “all in” on this.
You wouldn’t reserve a spot for
weeds in a garden and, in that same way, you must always remember that there’s
no place for thoughts that make you feel bad in your love life.
I believe the human emotional system
is engineered brilliantly. Granted, we live in an imperfect society with
many imperfect paradigms, but we have a guidance system built within all of us
to let us know if we’re on the right track or not. My bottom line is that
if you don’t feel good right now, you’re not on the right track and it’s time
to shift your perspective.
There is no such thing as happiness
in the future. If you’re not happy right now, you need a perspective
change in your life before your love life will improve. Your own peace
and happiness leads your love life success.
There is no lesson in love more
important or essential than that, so if there’s anything you take away from
this message, embed that into your consciousness, every moment of every day.
If you really, truly and fully
follow what I laid out for you in this message, you’ll find that once you find
that happiness within your own life and perspective, your love life will be
effortless.
Hope it helps,
Oluwalana Samuel
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