Entries Tagged as 'honesty'

Do you need to know where this relationship is going?

Lighthouse“I don’t know what I’m going to do next but I am expecting something spectacular to fall into my lap.” – a friend of PeepJay’s

Three hearts

I’ve once again been thinking about what I want in a relationship. I started to wonder if I had a model of relationship that I was wishing for? At this point in my life, I’ve experimented with a variety of relationship styles, and I still don’t have a vision of what a relationship is supposed to look like for me. But then… do I have to know? Should I know? Is having that kind of vision (expectation?) useful? Am I feeling cultural pressure to be in a certain place (married, having kids, owning a house, etc)?

To find out if what I wanted looked like any particular model, I came up with a list of things that I wanted in a relationship.

I want someone who…

  • is my “partner”. Meaning, someone with whom I have a symbiotic relationship.
  • is honest and inspires me to be honest.
  • is excited about being in a relationship with me.
  • is a good communicator.
  • lusts after me.
  • is confident and inspires me to be confident.
  • is romantic… someone who will feed me wine and read me poetry. :)
  • has a passion.
  • practices good self care.
  • I feel could take care of me.
  • needs me at times… or who is ok with being able to rely on me.
  • makes me feel safe.
  • likes to explore new places.
  • is musically inclined.
  • accepts me.

Of course, these are all things that I “want”… which is distinctly different from having expectations. I am asking for what I want without the expectation of anyone fulfilling those wants. But surely, the more of these qualities that someone has, the more attracted I will be to them.

The Missing Piece Meets The Big O

Does that include marriage? I don’t know. I honestly don’t think about it that much, but I feel like I’m supposed to. Does it include polyamory? I think that what I really want is honesty. I don’t want to be in a relationship in which each person is actively looking for other people to be romantic with. But in the course of living, I know we’re going to meet people to whom we’re attracted… and I envision those situations being handled together. Does it include children? I don’t know (should I know?). I’m not inclined to have kids.

Are my list of wants a relationship model? Is uncertainty a relationship model?

“Being comfortable with uncertainty puts us in he position of not approaching relationships with desperation or an agenda.” says Lexi. “…which I think give the other person an opportunity to come to us as they are and be seen as they are . . . and when there is real mutual attraction maybe it helps us have better relationships.”

One thing I do know, is that not knowing where I or my relationship are going does not mean slacking on moving forward: working on my projects, setting goals, practicing good self care, and developing my sense of self and my relationships with others… yes, this is where I’m going.

“What makes people despair is that they try to find a universal meaning to the whole of life, and then end up by saying it is absurd, illogical, empty of meaning. There is not one big, cosmic meaning for all, there is only the meaning we each give to our life, an individual meaning, an individual plot, like an individual novel, a book for each person.”Anais Nin


A letter to Z

Lighthouse “When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us.” – Helen Keller

Three hearts

Z,

I thought maybe I would take some time while I was on my way to The Club to explain the nature of my relationship with Ex. I know that there is some confusion here and I want to clear that up as best I can. I want you to understand why I made the request I did… and I want you to understand my relationship with Ex.

I’ll just start from the beginning… 1) because it’s easier to start there and I feel like the nuances are important and 2) because I like reminiscing.

Ex asked me out one night at The Club years ago… I’d never really talked to him before. I said no at first… I was dating a few people at that time, and just thought I’d be too busy. But after a while, we ended up going out for coffee. We sat outside a coffee shop and just talked and talked. We ended up going back to his house and talking some more and I stayed the night with him. We had sex that first night… at that point in my life, I didn’t take sex as seriously as I do now so it didn’t really seem like a big deal. He explained to me that he wasn’t monogamous, and at that time, it didn’t bother me at all. I’d just gotten out of a long relationship so I wasn’t really looking to settle into anything with anyone.

It was 5 weeks after that first night together before he asked me out again. I’d sent him several emails, and had gotten no response. I was so mad when he finally asked me out.

We eventually did go out again… and we continued to go out about once every 2 weeks and I saw him in the interim at The Club, of course.

The first time I broke up with him, it was because I had fallen in love with him… and I thought that because he didn’t want to see me very often, that I liked him more than he liked me. I was wrong. A few weeks later at The Club, he gave me a set of CDs that he said explained how he felt about me. I decided to give our relationship another try.

The second time I broke up with him was shortly after I met PaulCreature… it was really just a coincidence because I didn’t know PaulCreature was interested in me at the time. I just couldn’t handle the lack of communication and the infrequency of our dates. I couldn’t accept that he loved me… even though he tried to reassure me that he did (in his own way). I eventually started dating PaulCreature and told Ex that I was involved with someone else (this is before I really understood that PaulCreature was polyamorous and what that meant for our relationship). Ex was visibly hurt when I told him.

Ex and I eventually started seeing each other again while I was dating PaulCreature… In the meantime, he’d met a girl named Payne and I could tell, he really liked her. One night, Ex and I were lying in bed talking and he said “I can’t be intimate with you anymore… it hurts Payne too much”. In a way, it was beautiful – that his heart was so connected to hers, that hurting her also hurt him. I understood – but I was also crushed.

We’ve stayed friends over the years. We always make *some* time for each other when I visit. Our relationship isn’t really sexual… it’s more friendship based – though we are both attracted to each other. We are both highly sensitive Creatures – and there’s a mutual trust that we won’t hurt each other – and that’s a rare quality. All these years our hearts have remained connected. We don’t talk very often but we don’t really need to. We leave each other little crumbs…

I really cherish my time with Ex. It’s rare and very special. So please, understand that by going home with him, it’s not because I want to start a sexual relationship with him… nor am I trying to confuse anything. It’s about spending time with him while he has it, while he’s in the mood for interacting with me, and in a place that he’s comfortable. I would be lying if I said I wasn’t attracted to him – he’s my stereotypical type – but it’s not the driving force in our relationship.

You asked what my goal was in this situation with Ex. My goal is to continue being close to him. We’re the same kind of Creature… So by going home with him – it’s not an ordinary “going home with a guy” thing. It’s a place where we can have space and time to be with each other. That’s my motivation. I know it sounds intimate, and it is… but it’s really just emotionally intimate.

****

Z, my relationship with you is one of the most important things in my life right now. I think about you all the time. I crave you. I look forward to all our interactions. I love the way you smell (as you already know ;) . I love your sense of humor. I love your communication style. I love your sense of fairness. I love how kind and compassionate you are. I love how idealistic you are. I love that you want to make the world a better place. I love how you love to help. Your writing makes my mouth water! I want to integrate you into everything I can. I want you to succeed at whatever you’re interested in. I want to help you with anything I can. I want to be there for you. I want to be there with you. I’m fucking crazy about you!!

I don’t want my love for you to get lost in any confusion about my motivations or my goals. I am fighting my psychology and wedging my heart wide open… standing here as tall and open as I can.

Does any of this help you understand where I’m at and why I’m doing what I’m doing? I want it all to be clear and open. I want you to know me.

That’s all for now. I’m on my way to one of my favorite coffee shops to sit and have a cappuccino and send this to you before heading to the The Club… …And now, here I am finishing up my delicious cappuccino in a warm, artsy space where John Zorn is playing on the speakers, and everyone is bundled in scarves.

Looking forward to seeing you…

<3

*~Lighthouse~*

The Balance of Independence; Part II

Love, in the classical definition, implies ownership. “I love you” – therefore I own you, I possess you. Personally, I am interested in freedom, and “love” for me means I respect you, I like you, I care for you, I am concerned for you. I would like to share my body, my energy, my time, my life with you. I wish to be your friend. -Jim Haynes

If I’m so independent, why do I need or want a man? As I discussed in my last post I can support myself, I have friends to enjoy things with and equality includes being able to have a child on my own or not at all. I clearly don’t need someone to complete me. I want someone to complement me.

Yellow is a whole and complete color on its own, so it blue. Together they make green– and when the lines blur, where yellow begins and blue ends becomes obscured. While this is fine for making colors, in a relationship not knowing where you end and the other person begins can have some unhealthy results, like the expectation of mind reading.

D Hester Flower

The article today is about my experience with balancing independence and being in a healthy relationship, maintaining my blue and his yellow. I’m learning that balance is something that needs recalibration every now and then. I avoided serious relationships because I felt I gave up too much independence. I had to look at my actions and feelings, I did not consider my own needs enough.

I come from a life-style where single-hood and casual relationships were the norm. My mother told me “Be sure you make his life easier.” I was able to do this without losing myself by sticking to casual relationships that did not require much interaction. I thought part of my role was to “make his life easier!” I did this by putting my own needs aside and staying silent. Being in a casual relationship where the amount of time I saw the person was appealing to me because it meant I could meet my own needs and make “his” life easier in the time I spent with “him.”

Making his life easier means many things. To me, it meant anticipating his needs and doing things for him before he asked, it meant not asking for what I wanted the relationship; it meant trying to be the perfect girlfriend, rather than being myself. Throw in the normal human response to not getting your needs met because you’re not talking about them, and you have a disaster.
As long as I did it part time, I still had time to be me when I wasn’t around “him.”

When a relationship went “serious” I would often panic and sabotage so that I could hold on to part of myself. Sometimes I would sabotage from the beginning of a relationship by choosing men who were planning to leave the city or explicitly did not want a serious relationship.

When I met my current boyfriend, he lived 1,300 miles away. It seemed like the “perfect” relationship. I’d get to do whatever I wanted in my city, and we’d see each other a couple times a month, where I could, be “perfect.” He “ruined” my plans when he moved to Los Angeles.

Fortunately for both of us, I had friends rooting for this relationship and me staying in it to work through my fears. I also had been learning a lot about relationships in school. Between those things and some other events, I realized that I had put former boyfriends, including this one on a pedestal.

If I wanted an honest relationship with him, I’d have to take him off the proverbial pedestal, stop being “perfect,” start being me and including more of myself in the relationship.

I’ve talked about this with friends too, and based on our experiences, here is what seems helpful in balancing independence and a healthy relationship:

1. Communication. This includes disagreement and realizing a disagreement is not the end of the world, or the relationship. If you make plans, tell them. If you make plans that you’d like to include them on, tell them. Maybe create a joint calendar.

2. Remembering I always have a choice. Choices have consequences. What kind of relationship do I want? What am I doing to get that? What am I doing that prevents that?

3. Be free from resentment. Being independent isn’t so much about what the other person does or says, but how you treat yourself. If you don’t take responsibility for your needs, they will remain unsatisfied.

a) Asking for what you need and want can help prevent resentment of self. Whether or not the other person is able to meet your needs is less important than the message you give yourself when you ask. By asking, you give yourself the message that your needs matter enough to voice them. As a wise friend said: “Woman or man, injured or whole, in the end we are the only person who knows what we need.”

b) Accept that other person has limitations. No one is perfect. If you’ve voiced your needs and the other person is unable to meet them, accepting their limitations will ward of resenting them.

c) Meet your own needs. If you are unwilling to ask for what you want or the other person is unable to meet your needs. It is your responsibility to get your needs met.

d) Honor your agreements to yourself and your partner. Follow through is important, as behaviorally it gives the message that what you say can be counted on. While people do slip up now and then, it is no big deal. If a person is inconsistently reliable often enough, it too contributes to the development of resentment.

4. Stay in touch with friends and maintain your own hobbies. This helps remind you (and everyone else) that you exist outside of the relationship. It contributes to maintaining independence.

5. Listen to your own feelings and the other persons. Often times feeling heard is the path to diffusing uncomfortable feelings. If you aren’t respecting your own feelings, the other person doesn’t have the chance to. If you aren’t listening to the other person’s feelings, this can escalate a situation. Getting this balance takes communication.

6. Forgive and Apologize. People make mistakes. Welcome to being human. Balancing independence with a healthy relationship takes some trial and error. Because no two people are exactly alike, no two relationships will balance the same way. Toe stepping is inevitable. Be prepared to forgive someone and sincerely apologize.

7. Be flexible. Sometimes you will think you are okay with something and you are not. Sometimes this will happen to your partner. People are notoriously bad at predicting the things that will make them happy. Be willing to talk about it, and maybe change something.

8. Recognize that you are different people. Your idea of independence may mean going out with friends while his is playing video games. You don’t have to like everything that the other one does, nor do you have to do everything with the other person.

9. Open to growth. People change over time. Avoid “frozen images,” where you get an idea of who someone is and then lock them into that idea, by assuming they have stayed the same rather than being open to the idea that they have changed.

10. Recognize your own worth. It will make 1-9 a lot easier.

I will leave you with one of my favorite stories about relationships. “The Missing Piece” by Shel Silverstein.

The Missing Piece by Shel Silverstein

Until next time,

Lexi*

Mess Of Mine

“If you are pained by external things, it is not they that disturb you, but your own judgment of them. And it is in your power to wipe out that judgment now.”

-Marcus Aurelius Antoninus

Last week I said, “We are all born into some kind of mess for which we are not responsible, and if we want something different, we must become responsible for making that happen.” In order to have a healthier relationship with others, and myself I’ve decided it is time for to walk my talk and work on a mess that has nagged me for years.

Essentially, I have a little gremlin on my shoulder constantly nagging me about my appearance. While appearance is important to a degree, the degree my gremlin nags me is irrational and unacceptable.

At 5′8″, I have weighed between 115 and 155 pounds. At any weight, I would look in the mirror and see myself as a huge beast. I would hone in on areas that had fat (as they should) and upset myself because I was not thin “enough”. Usually the lighter I was, the more I would obsess. I have no realistic desire to weigh less than 125lbs again, anything less than that is unhealthy for my frame.

I was not willing to starve myself to be “perfect”, nor was I willing to binge or purge because I was also interested in being healthy. For several years, I hit the gym six days a week. Many people complemented me on my physique; it didn’t count, because I didn’t see it.  While I was smaller, because muscle weighs more than fat, I still felt fat.

Golden; By: A Softer World

Eventually I would give up the healthier lifestyle.  I would get tired of always working at looking better, and not seeing any results.  I would give in to eating more, eating poorly, and not exercising. Eventually I would start again, when I was tired of being heavier and less healthy than I would prefer.

Over the last two years, I tried again, and started to appreciate my results.

Ten months ago I had been consistently eating well and excercising regularly for a while.  Then I, or maybe my gremlin, became hyper-focused on other things. My hairline? Was my hair getting thinner? My skin, was that a new blemish? Was I wrinkling? My nose, perhaps it was swollen on one side, was it getting bigger? This last one was somewhat of a wake-up call, as up until then I perceived my nose as one of my better features.  These kinds of thoughts are not ones I share often; I tend to keep them to myself. 

Another irrational thought that I managed to put to rest a while ago was that other people were lying to my when they complimented me.  At some point, I chalked it up to their lack of standards.  While I no longer think either of those things now, reassurance from other people does not actually shift my self-perception. 

Then I stressed out in March and gave myself a “break” and many excuses as to why I could stop eating well and exercising regularly. I gained weight, and stopped obsessing on my other perceived appearance issues, which was interesting, and went back to obsessing on weight being the primary one. By October, I started encouraging healthy habits in myself, again.

I’ve noticed a pattern over the years– no matter what, I don’t like how I look more often than I appreciate or like it. At any point in time when I looked at pictures of my past self, my present self sees them as better looking than I remember feeling. Although I remember feeling as bad about myself then as I do.  This was a clue into my pattern.

The relatively recent beliefs that other things were wrong with my appearance when I was okay with my weight was another wake-up call.  I would obsess on my skin, and check in the mirror to make sure nothing had gotten worse. I looked at every photo someone took of me so that I can veto it if I think I look too ugly. I spent $6,000 dollars on a dermatologist to fix my rosacea.  After everything was done, I still sometimes cannot perceive a difference in my skin.  Yet others can. I had a mole removed on my arm that was not particularly noticeable. If I have acne, or a perceived blemish, I pick at it, increasing the likelihood of scarring or infection!  I actually feel embarrassed talking about my inner irrational beliefs.

I recently helped some friends with a conference.  I was on stage in front of an audience and a camera.  My thoughts were dominated by my gremlin.  How did I looked on film, what was the camera noticing? Was my hair a mess? Did it see my pooch? Was my skin red? Could it see that zit on my chin? Was my skin too shiny? Was my posture good enough?

I know at some point in my life, I want to do public speaking, and if I have that noise in my head, it will affect my ability to convey my messages. I didn’t have this problem in improv, because it was a small class, not a big audience.

Some things that have prevented me from being totally debilitated are: I believe that well groomed trumps ugly. I don’t care (often) what other people think of me. Some guys are not that picky when it comes to looks.  I would remind myself that I do not have the ability to judge my own appearance accurately.  I would focus on healthy as more important than underweight.  I would remind myself that my friends value character over appearance and would be honest with me (one of the virtues of hanging with a technical crowd).  I don’t have to live up to society’s standards.  I know that some of my beautiful friends think they are less than too.  I know that among millions of women and men, I’m not alone in my lack of appreciation for my body when it is healthy.

XKCD: FIrefly

Where did this irrational way of thinking come from? A tiny bit from some of the very strict rules the media and society has over what is considered beautiful that leaked in before I could think rationally. More importantly, my mother was a huge influence.

Growing up as a child, my mother was always thin, youthful in appearance and well groomed. She dressed to impress men.  She constantly asked my younger sister and me if she was fat, or if she looked old. Even now, at nearly sixty, she doesn’t look a day over forty-six and a half.  She has stopped asking.

I was always extremely effortlessly rail-thin as a kid, and my sister was a cute baby-fat kid, but not actually an overweight child.  I looked at childhood pictures last night, and my sister was a normal looking kid.

Unfortunately, because of whatever demons haunted my mother, she would pick on my sister’s eating habits.  This heavily skewed my sister’s perception of herself.

While my sister got the brunt of it, both our perceptions of reality were skewed. For me a child who did not see my mother or sister as fat, I was constantly being told my perception was wrong.  This reinforcement from an authority figure damaged my ability to think of my body in a healthy way. 

The good news is this is not as bad as it could be.  The better news is I can change this.

I’ve been passively fighting this skew in my perception of reality most of my life.  I blamed my mother for it.  I forgive her now, realizing she did the best she could. 

I realize that while my life would be easier if not for this inter-generational transmission from my mother, it is solely my responsibility to help myself, regardless of what my mother does.  Taking ownership feels more active. 

My goals are:

  1. Help my inner gremlin be a helpful rather than hurtful
  2. To replace or eradicate my behavior of picking at blemishes
  3. To appreciate my body, rather than criticize it.

Amazon: Gremlin Good 

The first step for me has already been taken, acknowledging that a part of my inner world is in need of recalibration.  This is something that I need to work on, as I improve my diet, exercise levels, and other markers of good health.  If I do not work on my inner-self, I will continue the pattern of being healthy, giving up, and becoming unhealthy.  Rinse and repeat. 

The next step for me is to have a very frank conversation with my mother, telling her that I don’t want to talk about appearance with her anymore.  When the topic is broached, to remind myself, it is not issue.  I’m fortunate in that this does not come up often any more and that I can have a conversation like this with my mother, not everyone can. 

Another is to stop picking at my skin.  I asked the dermatologist if he had any suggestions, and his solution was to put me on Wellbutrin.  I was suprised he didn’t just say something easier said than done, like stop it!

I declined the perscription.  Instead I used the idea of wellbutrin and my lack of desire to take it to help reduce the amount of picking that I did.  When I felt the impulse to pick, I would remind myself of wellbutrin, and then often I would do something else instead.

I recently remembered that giving people alternative behaviors to choose from when they wanted to reduce an undesirable behavior was sometimes helpful, so I decided my alternative behavior would be to floss my teeth.  I may add more.

I don’t know how to effectively create a helpful gremlin so I will educate myself with some books on the topic.  The first one I will read is Feeling Good About the Way You Look, if that is not enough I will read The Broken Mirror.

In addition, I will also seek therapy on this specific issue.  I know that is something that works for me.  Research shows that Cognitive Behavioral Therapies are most effective with this cluster of symptoms.

I am also curious about the readers of Sophisticated Relationships who have had similar issues.  How did you get there?  Where are you now?  What has helped you?  What has not? 

I know I won’t “fix” this overnight.  It will take some time, and patience with myself.  I do know that I will be able to have a more realistic relationship with myself.  I hope for a closer relationship with others– especially without all the chatter from gremlin.  This is a process.

Lexi*