When
Love Feels Weird
By Alan Cohen
At a recent seminar a woman stood and
explained that she had had a long string of painful relationships. One
of her partners even died. "Now I have met a man I really like and
things are going very well," she explained. "But it feels so
weird. Why is that?"
I told her the parable of a princess who
was kidnapped by a group of fishermen and taken to live at the city
pier. The princess soon forgot about her life in the palace and became
acclimated to the life of a fishmonger. She spent her days meeting boats
at the dock, cleaning fish, and selling them. She smelled like fish,
everyone she knew smelled like fish, and she became so used to the smell
that she hardly noticed it.
One day someone from the palace
recognized the princess and rescued her. She was brought back to the
royal castle where she was given her original room with a soft bed, fine
linens, exotic flowers, and sweet incense. The first night home the
princess lay in her exquisite bed and grew restless. After a short time
she arose, knocked on her attendant's door, and complained, "Get me
out of here; this feels weird."
We can become so used to dysfunctional
relationships that when we are finally presented with a healthy one, it
seems foreign. Yet what is normal is often not natural. Our natural
state is soul fulfillment, reflected through rewarding relationships.
Anything else represents a compromise.
I recently had the honor and pleasure of
co-presenting a seminar with Neale Donald Walsch, author of the popular,
Conversations with God series. I found Neale to be a very dear and
generous man, and felt as if I had been reunited with a long-lost
brother. On the evening preceding our first presentation I had dinner
with Neale. His wife Nancy invited me to join her early the next morning
for a swim with dolphins. Although I would have loved to have
participated, I told Nancy I wanted to rest and prepare for my
presentation that evening, so I could show up in full splendor. At that
point Neale waxed impish and announced, "In that case, I'm not
going to show up. I don't think I could handle your full splendor."
Neale was playing on the fact that many
of us have become so used to living at a level less than our full glory
that if we or those around us really let it rip, we would not know what
to do. Marianne Williamson made the point in a popular quote (sometimes
attributed to Nelson Mandela) that it is not our darkness that frightens
us, but our light. We have become so accustomed to identifying ourselves
and our lives with our problems that when someone comes along and
suggests we are whole and beautiful, we doubt or crucify them. Plato
described a group of people living in a dark cave. When they were
released and approached the light, it hurt their eyes and required a
period of adjustment. Like suddenly finding yourself in a relationship
that works.
A good relationship is not too good to be
true. It is good enough to be true. Everything good is true, and
relationships are no exception; they are a powerful avenue to let our
true selves shine. Yet our culture has underscored and glamorized
dysfunctional relationships so much that a healthy one seems like an
anomaly. How many sick "love" songs have you heard on the
radio, crooning about the losses associated with relationships? Sheesh!
And how many soap operas and movies paint love as a struggle? I can't
count the number of videos I have turned off after a short time because
I could not bear to watch two people keep hurting each other in the name
of love. Perhaps Dr. Chuck Spezzano best condensed the message in the
title of his book, If It Hurts, It Isn't Love.
February is the month for lovers. This
month, let's really let our full splendor rip, to the point that we end
up shining magnificently and not running away because it feels weird.
Let's expand our loving beyond romance and sex and embrace everyone and
everything in our life that is lovable. Let's enfold our families,
friends, co-workers, and pets in our circle of celebration. This month
lets define ourselves as world-class lovers, beginning by falling in
love with ourselves. Make that rising in love with ourselves.
Love was never meant to feel weird. Fear
binds the heart and love releases it. In a world of darkness, the light
is not a threat, but our doorway home. The more we grow comfortable with
our birthright to love, the more we will live in its embrace, until it
becomes our abiding condition. This month would be an excellent month
for all of us to begin.
Alan Cohen is the author of 15 popular
inspirational books, including the award-winning A Deep Breath of Life.
For seminar information or a free catalog of Alan's books and tapes,
call 1-800-462-3013 or visit Alan's web site www.alancohen.com
Enrich your abundance by joining Alan for the innovative online, Year of
Living Prosperously. Contact us at 455A Kukuna Road, Haiku, HI 96708,
(800) 568-3079; email admin@alancohen.com.
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