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How Long Should Marriage Vows Last? 2

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Hello Lovely People

I was married once, and I ended the marriage against much objection and prejudice after I had faced the wrong end of a fire-arm.  I had to struggle for years with the guilt, the sense of failure and the programmed prejudice that was targeted at me and making my life one great misery.

Did I gain from the marriage and the divorce?

Of course I did.  Even during my marriage I had to rely on my own resources, and that made me realise that I was emotionally much stronger than anybody gave me credit for.  I had to find solutions for problems that were not described in any textbook.

After my divorce I was a “sinner” and an outcast.  That forced me to reach out to people who otherwise would have been off-limits to me for ridiculous reasons such as a different religion, language or marital status.  I made great friends and learnt about unconditional Love.

When my 10-year-old son ran away from home in the night, I could not talk to anyone that I knew – not even my parents – to get help, because that would have provided proof of my failure as a single parent – which was predicted all round as part of the culture I grew up in.    It was part of the burden of being a divorced woman in a culture where the institution of marriage was (still is) worshipped.

I found my son within half an hour – and he was quite embarrassed and happy to be home again.  That brought us closer and I learned to listen more to what he was saying, and also to what he was not saying – a skill that has been invaluable throughout my life.

And the other day my boy spontaneously told me that he is very happy to have me as “the oracle on parenthood” now that he is becoming a father.  That was a humbling experience and it made more than 20 years of being a single parent worth every minute.  Without my “failed” marriage I would never have had that experience.  And I can write a book about the other wonderful discoveries I have made about myself and other people over the years since I got divorced.

The Celtic hand-fasting ceremony is far more realistic than any religious marriage vows that I have encountered.

I will quote selectively from the vows that go with the hand-fasting ceremony – if you want to know more, contact me and I will provide a link to the full wording.

“Will you cause him/her pain?
I May
Is that your intent?
No

Will you burden him/her?
I may
Is that your intent?
No

Will you cause him/her anger?
I may
Is that your intent?
No

Will you take the heat of anger and use it to temper the strength of this union?
We will.

The knots of this binding are not formed by these cords but instead by your vows. Either of you may drop the cords, for, as always, you hold in your own hands the making of breaking of this union.”

These vows do not create any unrealistic expectations.  They consider the fact that we are the masters of our own destinies, and that when things “go wrong”, there is not necessarily malicious intent.  Life is about positive and negative experiences, and all these experiences are meant to provide balance.

And above all, the vows are not based on the assumption that “failure” implies guilt.  There is no such thing as failure.  There is such a thing as being blind to the insights we are meant to gain from the relationship.

The lessons we learn and the wisdom we gain from ending a relationship are forever.  The legal and religious paperwork attached to a relationship are not forever.  The guilt and sense of failure may be forever, if you choose to hold on to that for the rest of your life.

Click here to ensure your seat on the seminar planned for 3rd June 2010.

Love and Light

Elsabe

PS: I am a professional transition coach. I help individuals and businesses to achieve their personal and commercial objectives.

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How Long Should Marriage Vows Last? 1

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Hello Lovely People

I recently wrote an article in which I explained that any relationship has a natural duration, after which it ends – unless the people in the relationship hold on to the relationship for dear life.

This raised a question about marriage vows.  Divorce statistics prove to us time and again that despite the religious and legal pressure on us, marriages do not last for ever – they do not even last for a lifetime.

And even where a marriage lasts for a lifetime, people often tell me that they have been desperately unhappy in their “long and happy” marriage because they were forced to stay in it for health or financial reasons or because of social pressure.  In these situations, even though the marriage certificate is there, the marriage did not last for a lifetime.  Who are we trying to fool?

Why do we have marriage vows?

The earliest marriage vows were not between two people.  The vows were between a person and the village that this person joined by means of a ceremony.  The person undertook to help watch over and protect the tribe and the village, in exchange for their protection.

During the Middle Ages marriage vows became a legal contract between families, and it was meant to protect the interests of the two families that were tied together by the union between a man and a woman.  There was not necessarily a religious aspect to this.

Later on the church got involved and insisted on having a public ceremony where a couple made promises to each other “until death do us part”.  Sadly there is so much religious pressure on many marriages that those words become the sentence people have to live with – mostly emotional death, sometimes physical death.  If you are still trapped in a marriage that has technically ended long ago, you will know what I am talking about.

Someone said to me the other day that even though he is divorced, he still believes that a marriage should last “for ever”.  He said that when you get married, you do not decide whether you take the 10-year or the 15-year deal.

Of course you don’t, and even if you could, it would not make sense to choose any duration for the marriage in terms of time.  The marriage – that is the relationship, regardless of its legal status – will endure for as long as the couple teach each other what they undertook in their soul contracts which they entered before they were born.

The religious view on marriage vows has caused a lot of heart-ache, violence and emotional damage.  People are expected to buy into the fantasy that a relationship will last “for ever”.  When reality destroys the fantasy, the church and society heaps guilt onto the “guilty” parties for failing to live up to the fantasy.  When the relationship eventually ends – legally – too often the partners walk away with a sense of failure, rather than with a sense of achievement.  This sense of failure in fact keeps them in the relationship well past its sell-by date.

Do we achieve anything from a broken relationship?  Of course we do.  We just do not acknowledge our achievements.

To be continued

Click here to ensure your seat on the seminar planned for 3rd June 2010.

Love and Light

Elsabe

PS: I am a professional transition coach. I help individuals and businesses to achieve their personal and commercial objectives.

What is the one thing which is consuming all your energy at the moment?

Skype ElsabeSmitUK

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Letting Go of a Relationship 2

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Hello Lovely People

Who is wrong?  The person who is “wrong” is not the one who cheated.  The person who is “wrong” is the one who does not at the end of a relationship step back and do some introspection.

What did you learn from this partner?  In what way did you grow from the relationship?  What was the most valuable thing you gained from the relationship?  How did the relationship make you wiser and stronger?  In what way was your partner the best teacher you could ever have had to learn that specific lesson?

Life is about balance.  For every light side there is a dark side.  And this is the blatantly obvious bit that we like to overlook:  for every dark side there is also a light side.

The closer we get to the natural completion of a relationship, the more we focus on the dark side and the hurt from the relationship.  This hurt gets so intense that we completely forget to look for the light side – the gain from the relationship.

Often a relationship ends on the surface, but that does not mean we get closer to the natural completion.  Think about divorces where the hurt and pain drags on throughout the divorce negotiations – and often for years afterwards, long after the divorce was finalised.

As long as we get stuck on the part of the equation that focuses on “me, myself and I” and “the things they did to me”, the relationship drags on.

Dealing with the paperwork or dividing possessions does not end a relationship.  Getting into another, more fulfilling, loving relationship does not end a relationship.

The only way to end a relationship is to acknowledge how that relationship changed you for the better, and then to thank your partner for being a valuable part of the experience.  Then let go of the relationship and hold on to the learning experience.

Yes, it is possible to thank any partner for their contribution to your growth, even if the partner raped or abused you, or was an addict.  You had that experience not so that it would destroy you, but so that it would help you heal a division inside of yourself.

The secret of gaining from ending a relationship is to acknowledge the nature of that division, and to move from division to wholeness, gratitude and Love.

As long as you hold on to the division and look for someone to blame for your hurt, you will remain divided, hurt and in a dark place.  Understanding yourself comes in small portions.  Accept the small portions and grow from them.

Click here to ensure your seat on the seminar planned for 3rd June 2010.

Love and Light

Elsabe

PS: I am a professional transition coach. I help individuals and businesses to achieve their personal and commercial objectives.

What is the one thing which is consuming all your energy at the moment?

Skype ElsabeSmitUK

Twitter ElsabeSmit

LinkedIn Elsabe Smit


Letting Go of a Relationship 1

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Hello Lovely People

Why is it that we hold on to relationships long past their natural end?

Think of a friendship that no longer exists.  Do you still remember how your friend insulted or deserted you?  You gained new friends, but you still feel that hurt.

Remember that supervisor who made your life such hell that you left to get a new job?  You smile every time you think what a sad sod that supervisor is, and how much better off you are now.  Or you still resent the opportunity that you missed as a result of that person, even though you gained much more from the new job than from the old one.

Then of course there is your marriage.  You have known for a long time that there is nothing left of that relationship, but you still hold on.  You cannot get a divorce – or so you have convinced yourself.  You are dying a slow death every day because your partner refuses to change.

Probably the most destructive relationship to hold on to is a marriage, because of all the social and cultural restrictions against divorce.  Somehow we share a belief that a marriage must last for ever, even if statistics confirm that most marriages do not last for ever.

If you end a marriage, does that mean your relationship has failed?  That depends on what you take away from the marriage.

Let’s assume that you decided to end the marriage because you discovered your partner is cheating on you.  Of course the cheating partner is wrong and should carry all the blame.  Or maybe not?

Let us take a step back and look at the situation from a different angle.

You had particular expectations of the relationship.  You made those expectations clear to your partner, who obliged and live up to your expectations.  Everyone was happy and all was well.  You were very pleased with yourself.

Then you discovered that your partner was seeing someone else.  This of course was devastating.  When you confronted your partner they had nothing to say, or they said “it did not really mean anything”, or they said “you won’t understand”.

Did you listen to that?  Did you hear what your cheating partner was saying to you?

It is not pleasant to realise that the relationship was all about you and your expectations.  It takes much effort and sometimes a large leap of courage to look at the face in the mirror and see who carries 50% of the “blame” for a relationship where one person cheated.

Cheating is only the symptom of the lack of communication in the relationship.  Did you ever listen to your partner?  Did you ever ask and discover what your partner really values?

Of course it is quite disappointing to discover that a person does not live up to your expectations.  But in any relationship there are two people and they both have expectations.  One person may have the vocabulary to express their expectations and values, while another person uses their behaviour to express their expectations and values.

More to follow.

Meanwhile, click here to ensure your seat on the seminar planned for 3rd June 2010.

Love and Light

Elsabe

PS: I am a professional transition coach. I help individuals and businesses to achieve their personal and commercial objectives.

What is the one thing which is consuming all your energy at the moment?

Skype ElsabeSmitUK

Twitter ElsabeSmit

LinkedIn Elsabe Smit