I was reminded this week that love (as unstable as it
may be) is a gift from God that we all deserve to enjoy. Love is a gift . . .
What do
you do when your love, your gift, is falling apart? We fight so hard, for so
long, we search the universe, we pray and pray and pray. Yet, once we have
love, we seem to always screw it up. This person that we couldn’t get enough of
for the first few years, is now the person we hold the most resentment for.
Life is
hard and it there aren’t always easy solutions to the problems we face. We are
by nature selfish, greedy, beings. Over a period of years, our selfishness, and
the selfishness of our partner, can build resentment within us like a brick
wall. Breaking down this wall can seem impossible. So the question is; what do you do when your love gift falls
apart?
Well,
you can’t return it for in store credit so then what? Toss in the towel? Stay
the same and spend your life in a loveless relationship just to avoid the hassle
of a breakup, the fear of being alone, and the effort of trying to heal things?
Ultimately the choice is up to you because you’re the only one that has to live
your life and your relationship, but, here is my two cents. . .
1.
Take responsibility.
You
are contributing to your relationship 50/50, so dig deep and figure out what
you might be doing that could have caused or could be causing resentment in
your partner’s heart. Are you snippy, demanding, mocking, condescending, needy,
pushy? Without changing the good things about yourself, what have you been
doing that could be hurting or pushing away your [partner?
2.
Make a change.
If
you know for certain that there is something you could do to be more
supportive, loving, giving, thoughtful, then do it! If you keep on doing the
same old thing, you’re going to stay in the exact same place. Even if your
change is suggesting counseling . . . change something, but start with you!
3.
Talk to your partner.
An
open line of communication can make or break a relationship. Some of you are
laughing thinking “Ya, right. An open line of communication. That’s funny!” I
know that our partners (even we, ourselves) aren’t always in a place to talk
calmly or rationally about our relationships. So, do your best in opening the
gates to your partner’s heart. Remember; you have built a brick wall of resentment
and so have they. It was built one brick at a time, and will come down one
slow-tedious-brick at a time.
Good
luck my lovely, loveable friends. And remember . . . you’re not alone!
Carmen