Monday, 22 February 2010

Boundaryless or full ?

On this rainy UK Monday, slightly jaded, but ready for another amazing week listening to people talk about their love lives, I feel compelled above other love topics, like relationship MOTs, attachment, desire and even sex, to address another fascinating arena in our interactions with significant others. Boundaries. Do you have them ? But more to the point, do you think you should have them ?


As a healer and educator I have seen and see a huge amount of pollution going on in people's lives and energy fields which seems to be reluctantly accepted "stuff" from other peoples baggage and shortcomings. I usually ask people what boundaries they have in place to define the acceptable line "of self" that we all need to function as healthy human beings. Lots of blank looks have come my way on that one.

Boundaries ?...is it not about control and defence and aren't we more unhappy behind them ? Ok, I say, then how do you feel right now knowing you are here with me and feeling contracted and sick and unhappy ? Mmmmmm...ok let's start with a definition....boundaries, say my online dictionary are ..."real or imagined lines that mark the edge or limit of something". We all have a limit ..right ? Beyond that limit is one thing, something that is not right and you feel it and know it, I don't need to teach you that.

In relationship terms, boundaries need to be healthy ones. Let's not muddy boundaries with defences. Defences are usually learned mechanisms from childhood in order to keep us safe and protected from hurt and pain. Defences are a whole nother subject already discussed in "Whats Your New Year Survival Strategy" in December.

Boundaries are essential, initially in preserving and allowing you to be who you really are and then giving others a limit on what they can and can't do in your "you" space. You wouldn't let any Tom Dick or Harry run amuck in your garden that you had spent years nurturing and tending. You would have a boundary in place that says...admire my garden from where you are and I will let you come and have a look round it when it's right for us both. In the same way with relationships, it IS perfectly acceptable to set out your boundaries.

Get this, other people who love and care for you will respect you for defining your boundaries and they will also have clarity on where they stand with you. People who give you hassle are the ones with their own undefined boundaries but who seem happier interfering with other peoples to try and find their own ! One of my clients spent years with a controlling husband, only to end up wrecked on all levels and unaware how to really find the place to exert her boundaries, for fear of physical abuse. How sad that we feel we should just let people rampage in our lives in order to placate them.

But why do we often not have boundaries ? Well in some spiritual teachings, collapsing boundaries is supposed to bring openness on all levels which I assume means freedom within, but then I observe and talk to people who have done just that and they have opened themselves to all sorts of pain. I have been told it can be a feeling of not being defined in human form and of wooliness in relationships with others. Spiritual masters have defined boundaries as a means of control of self and possibly others. So let's look at a definition of control....."to exercise restraint or direction over; dominate; command". Mmmm.....just not the same....it feels restrictive. It is our perception of words and their use to a certain extent and what that means to you, is your use of the word and past meanings. But here I attempt to make good my little word called boundary.

Boundaries are needed ! Boundaries are fun ! Boundaries create and define who you are ! Boundaries help you to have happy healthy relationships ! In Imago Therapy (http://www.gettingtheloveyouwant.com/), the Intentional Dialogue technique attempts to bring whole communication to the other, in relationship. The technique helps you to visualise your partner being an island and when you want to talk you set up a invitation to dialogue where you invite your beau to be fully present on your island for it to take place. This island is the boundary between you and them and it is a place where they visit your business and world. It is NOT their place to own that space in any way shape or form. Controlling, does bulldoze boundaries and yeah ok we are all trying to control our freaks to a certain extent, but you get the picture.

Another reason why we don't often exert boundaries with others and this is a biggie, is the need for love. So many of us compromise ourselves to get our partners to love us and have given up all rights to being whole because the need for love is the dominant force. In my own experience I often morphed to become who my boyfriends wanted me to be, so not only did I have no boundaries but wasn't even looking like the real me...heck !

Many people step way out of themselves in the drive to be loved and there are gazillions of examples here. I have done it and have seen my friends do it all over the place. "Please love me" being the afterthought. Often we are too afraid to say "this is how it is for me and in order for me to feel happy this is where my boundary lies" because we are afraid of reprisals and ultimately being left. Hell...loving is scary enough as it is, without giving someone a list of respectful boundaries, I hear you cry. Often we NEVER communicate them and the trial and error stuff, while to some maybe fun, to others, creates a mare.

But what of not having them ? The majority of people who I speak to feel unhappy and at worst, totally depressed, without boundaries. The instinctive feeling is that living with lack of clarity on where they stand as individuals with their husbands/wives/partners creates a pattern of gradual erosion of a relationship. A friend of mine felt dishonoured and disrespected by his wife and constantly complained about things with her, but when questioned more deeply he knew that she didn't know where she stood with him on a number of subjects... especially when it came to what she expected him to do to help with the kids.

So what do boundaries look like in relationship ? They are the ones that honour and help you grow in relationship and usually fend off bad behaviour and negative emotion that only harm you. Respect is one of the laws of a good healthy balanced relationship and boundaries help create that. If your partner knows where they stand with you and you them, then everyone is happy. Boundaries say, "this is who I really am and if you want to be with me and create a conscious relationship, then this is how far you can go before you reach my limit". Perfectly acceptable ! Think of a time where you exerted a boundary with your partner. What felt right for you ? I sure it felt honouring for you on many levels.

Be careful though how you communicate a boundary to your sweetheart. This is all important. Telling your partner what they are not doing to make you happy is not a boundary but a controlling behaviour full of blame... here's an example :

"Honey you have no right to shout at me with bad language. You aren't going to get anywhere with that attitude" - this serves only to inflate.

"Honey when we fight I feel hurt and upset when bad language is used. I can't accept communicating in this way. Can we try another way please ?".  See the difference.

Use "I feel" language and "I can't accept...when.." Know that is it ok..OK !

When I see people exerting them and using them properly, hey presto, a happy and respectful relationship is the result. So I urge you to practise, practise, practise. If you are not sure what I mean, get in touch and we can talk it through !

Lastly and in the name of opening to grow, for those of you out there with no boundaries in your relationship...how has is it been for you ? I would love to hear from anyone who has got along admirably with their loved one, without them. Above I state theories in practise, but everyone is beautifully different...joy ! 

Have a wonderful week
Blessings and joy x





Wednesday, 3 February 2010

Your Relationship Space - Beirut or Bliss ?

Welcome to the month of love ! I hope you are feeling loved and are approaching 14th February with excited anticipation. How does your relationship look ?

Your relationship consists, you may think, of just you and your partner, but in therapy terms the "relationship" is often referred to as the  "space" between you which is filled with all of your actions and situations, good or bad that either serve to help or hinder you both. It is here where your children and pets live and how much love is in this space, determines the health of your family and partnership. 

To make it a little clearer, visualise for a moment a space between you like a garden or an oil painting that is the resulting picture and nature of how you have treated each other to date. One of my clients, when asked to look at this space he and his wife had created said "oh my god, it looks like a bomb site". They had spent so much time harming each other, that the space looked desolate and war torn.

To actually SEE what that space looks like can be a shock for some. It serves to get people to wake up to the state of the relationship and what they have done usually to harm the delicate beauty of this place where the seed of love was planted at the beginning but then ended up trodden on. 

People, EVERY time you take from this space you harm your partner and the relationship and you effectively yank out all the delicate seeds of love that really need your attention, presence, nurturing and kindness. As a garden needs to flower, so does your relationship and it stands to reason that gardens don't flower if bull dozers run riot in them. Get the picture ?

So take a look. What does your relational space look like right now ? Are there some flowers but heavy boot marks through some areas ? Perhaps you feel your side of the garden or space is perfect and your partner's is like Beirut. Whatever you see IS telling you what you have been doing to build this relationship.

If you are looking for examples of what I mean by harming your relational space, then in simple terms I will spell it out for you :

  • Bad communication - talking over your partner, arguing, not listening to their point of view. Obvious really !

  • Needing to be right - yep it's common one, but why feel good about being right if your partner is left deflated and the underdog ?

  • Affairs - sounds an obvious one but it is pretty much the biggest bomb you could ever throw into your relational space. In my entire dating history and listening to hundreds of people talk about relationships over the years, I only know of one relationship that lasted after an affair. The odds are stacked I am sorry to say. We all know what happens so why do we do it ?

  • Not SEEing your partner and not being truly present with them when they speak to you.

  • Spending too much time engaged in what you want to do and not spending quality time with your partner in the "space". Remember your garden needs attention from both of you.

  • Getting your needs met - this can appear as bartering for love. Mentally you are giving to your partner BUT really you want something in return. Oh this is so common and the TRUTH is we constantly want to get our needs met, by pulling on the tug 'o war rope. "You have to love me otherwise you won't get any love from me".

  • Defences - when we feel hurt we keep our partner out with defences to try and get them to react. This only appears as trench warfare in the relational space. Not attractive !
The list is endless to be honest but I think you get the picture. I have no suggestions for you of "how to" to get it sorted because you are all adult and very capable of looking at this and knowing what is right for you and your partner to make your relational space the garden of Eden you so desire. You and they are unique in this Universe, so you KNOW what is good and what isn't. Its' not difficult.

What drives you to get your needs met comes from a largely unconscious drive from childhood, a huge subject for another day, but I can say this with assurity, that it is what you give to your relationship that helps you heal in the long term. As you breathe love into your relational space it surrounds you and your partner with endless possibilities for recovering and healing from the past. Taking will only set up bad energy between you where if you are strong mirrors for each other's short comings, your relational space will ever be ailing and poor quality.

Deep down we are all a huge bundle of love and can't wait to give it and feel it in return. We are created that way in a Divine sense, but relational spaces often reflect the remnants of our battle field scenes gone by as we grew through childhood into adulthood and the picture of the space you create now with your partner is a reflection of who you have become. And just maybe as you look into that mirror you can begin to see it.

If you are stuck and want to want to help each other create a beautiful healed space where deep and sacred love is allowed to blossom with purity, then please get in contact with me. I am currently developing the "Relationship MOT" which is a one off session that will help you see your relational space with clarity and from there we can work together to help you plant the flowers of love and remove the weeds that have strangled your relationship.

Finally, I wish you a beautiful love filled Valentine's Day. Make it a day of planting new and good things in your relational space. Wherever there is love, hope follows.

Namaste x