Miad's Princess Posted July 3, 2008 Share Posted July 3, 2008 Relationships, love and in particular jealousy and present each of us with a unique opportunity to better understand ourselves. Jealousy is most often the result of attachment and expectations, beliefs, projections, delusions, envy, guilt and low of self-esteem. What do you do when you're jealous? You may try to find out if your lover has been with someone else. If he or she has, you might go into a rage. It is a fairly common and immediate response. You are angry. You feel violated. You want revenge. You want to stop what is happening, control the situation, and manipulate whatever you can to protect yourself. If you can cool down, if you can control this internal, knee jerk reaction, you just might discover that you have an alternative. Often, what feels like jealousy really is a lack of communication. When we leave our needs unspoken, they can lie in wait like a crouching tiger until someone, something or some event exposes them. It is essential to communicate very clearly and explicitly with your partner about your needs and expectations. It is important to understand the distinct difference between loving and being attached. It is an important distinction because so frequently what we call love is really attachment. Loving someone means loving the uniqueness of that person. Attachment is quite different. You can love your partner and want to see them thrive, enjoy, and grow. You want to see them become more of who they are. That's the truth of love. On the other hand, you may want your partner conform to a preconceived idea of what you think they should be or perhaps to what is convenient or comfortable for you. That is Attachment. This is a distinction that needs to be understood before you can understand your relationship or what needs to be done. If your relationship is based on Attachment, you will quickly discover and experience the pain of jealousy. Our life, our surroundings and the people around us mirror what is going on inside us. If you are angry, you will find yourself living in an angry world. You will see the anger in all the people around you and you will feel it. Perhaps in your situation it isn’t anger, but instead it is depression or fear or jealously. What you focus on is what you get. Wouldn’t it be far more enjoyable to feel and focus on joy, happiness, fulfillment and love? Mirrors are a good thing because they give us an opportunity to observe what is going on in ourselves and take care of it. Whatever illusions you may have as to who is to blame or who is at fault, the jealousy is within you, a mirror of what is going on inside you. Attempting to manipulate and control your lover is a poor solution. Manipulation of your partner is an external attempt to “fix” an internal problem. Looking inward, you can use the situation that caused the jealousy to bubble up into your consciousness as an opportunity to clarify communication between the two of you, to better understand yourself and your partner. Jealousy is like an onion, layers of misunderstanding, misperceptions and misleading which can be overwhelming and so difficult that it makes you cry. When you attempt to blame and control your partner, you refuse to acknowledge that these layers are within you. If you work at peeling off the layers, you can reach the core of the problem, you can achieve the possibility of self-understanding and freedom from the hurt and pain. The first layer is your subconscious ideas and feelings about how one is supposed to act in a relationship. What do you believe and where does this belief come from? Do you believe that your partner is your possession? Can one person actually be the possession of another? Should they be? If you believe that you must possess the other person, then you are not in a loving relationship. Whatever control you think you exert over your partner, you cannot really touch the inner uniqueness that comprises a human being. You may occasionally control your partner, but you cannot make a person love you. As you continue to go deeper inside you reveal even more layers of this “onion” including projection, envy and guilt. By peeling away these layers, you can reach awareness. Projection, envy, and guilt are nothing more than pointers to the truth behind your feelings. Becoming aware of what you are actually feeling and discovering the source behind it can give you the power to alleviate the pain. If you can reveal the true feelings, separate them from the perceived jealously, it is possible to relieve the pain. Link to post Share on other sites
Stockalone Posted July 3, 2008 Share Posted July 3, 2008 The only thing I agree with is that one should not be consumed by any emotion. Other than that, I think that article is total BS. Anger, fear, jealousy, possessiveness, hatred are all valid emotions that serve a useful purpose if you know how to use those feelings. Those feelings are a part of who I am. Invalidating or ignoring the useful purpose of those feelings in a relationship would mean to compromise my inner core and change who I am. And I am certain that I am a better person with those emotions. Link to post Share on other sites
angie2443 Posted July 3, 2008 Share Posted July 3, 2008 Other than that, I think that article is total BS. Anger, fear, jealousy, possessiveness, hatred are all valid emotions that serve a useful purpose if you know how to use those feelings. The so called darker emotions are actually there to protect a person. You walk down a dark street, something doesn't feel right, and your fear kicks in. You are now more alert to danger and have more adrenaline to run if there is really danger. If you partner starts putting someone ahead of you, you become jealous. You become more attuned to the clues that you are bieng mistreated by your partner and, hopefully you take action. I don't know why people are so afraid of the so called negative emotions. Unless you let them over run you, they are there take care of you. Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts