Sharing with you another Declaration from the readings given to us during the HAIN RGS in Bohol.
- All factors in relationships pass through phases: intimacy, affection, sexual interest/energy, commitment to children and family, compatibility, self-disclosure.
- Only at rare moments is the love in one partner the same as that in the other.
- Priorities are continually changing for each partner. The integrity of the union may not always be a priority.
- No truly loving relationship takes away – or can take away – even one of your basic human rights.
- Intimate relationships survive best with constant permission for ever-changing ratios of closeness and distance.
- What creates distance in your relationship you may be using unconsciously to get distance;
- The best relationship includes space for you to pursue individual choices and to be compassionately attentive to any threat your partner may feel.
- No one can control or change someone else nor is it necessary.
- No one is loyal or truthful all the time.
- No expectations are valid and not even agreements are reliable.
- Your partner may not always be a trustworthy friend, consistent, or nurturing (and so are you).
- You are ultimately alone and ultimately able to make it alone.
- No relationship can create self-esteem. It can only support it.
- There is no one person who will make you happy, keep you fascinated, or love you as yourself.
- Most people in relationships seldom know what they really want, ask for what they really want, or show what they really feel.
- Most people avoid or fear intimacy, consistent honesty, intense feelings, and uninhibited self-disclosure.
- Beneath every serious complaint about your partner is something unowned in yourself.
- Letting go of blame and the need to be right heals a relationship most efficaciously.
- Jealousy and possessiveness, though not desirable, are normal human feelings.
- “Goodbye” is rarely said clearly. Most people ease away wordlessly and avoid full confrontation.
- No one is to blame when a relationship ends.
- The end of one relationship will always require a space before another relationship can begin healthily.
- It is normal for memories, regrets, the wish for revenge and a recurrent sense of loss to far, far outlast the end of a relationship.
- One of your (or your partner’s) parents is a phantom, but active presence at the beginning, middle, or end of your relationship.
- The powerful appeal of somehow new may tell you more about your neediness than about the charms of the other person.
- Relationship is a spiritual path since it consists of a continual shedding of illusions.
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