You are currently browsing all posts tagged with 'true desire'

Relationships: The Art of Listening

  • Posted on July 1, 2009 at 10:12 pm

In 1974, Dr. Virginia Satir presented the concept of mirroring in her groundbreaking book, “Conjoint Family Therapy.”

In 1975 Dr. Thomas Gordon wrote a best-selling book called “Parent Effectiveness Training.” In the book he taught parents to “active listen,” which means to reflect back to the speaker the feelings and information they are trying to convey.

Mirroring, or active listening, is a powerful tool, but whether or not it works depends upon your intent.

If you are active listening to another with an agenda to get them to see what they are doing wrong, or to get them to listen to you after you listen to them, then your intent in listening is to control. The person you are listening to can easily pick up the energy of control and will get angry or go into resistance. Listening with the intention to control backfires and just creates confusion in communication.

However, active listening from a true desire to understand another’s feelings and point of view can be magical. When you listen to learn and understand, rather than to control, you give the other person a great gift.

We all want to be heard and understood. While it is our responsibility to hear and understand ourselves – our own feelings and needs – and take loving action for ourselves, it also feels wonderful when someone we care about hears and understands us. This is the basis of emotional intimacy.

When I work with couples, I teach them that there are only two healthy ways of dealing with conflict:

1. Move into an intent to learn
2. Speak your truth and lovingly disengage

MOVING INTO AN INTENT TO LEARN

When you really desire to understand another, you move into an intent to learn – both about yourself and about them. Actively listening to the other is a major aspect of learning. When you really want to deeply know another, you listen carefully and mirror back to them what you hear them saying and feeling. It is not a matter of agreeing with them, but of understanding them. It is not about changing them or changing yourself, but about really hearing them and attempting to see the world through their eyes – understanding the good reasons they have for feeling and behaving as they do.

For example:

Your partner: “I’m still angry at you for being late and not calling me when you know I worry about you.”

You: “I hear you saying that it’s really unsetting to you when I don’t call when I’m going to be late. You feel I don’t care about the fact that you worry.”

Your partner: “Right. If you really cared about me, you wouldn’t want me to worry.”

You: “I understand. It hurts your heart when you know that I know you worry and I don’t seem to care about that.”

Partner: “Yes, that’s exactly right. So if you understand this, are you going to start to call me when you are late?”

You: It sounds like you believe that if I understand you, then I will change – that I have no good reasons for not calling, is that right?

This dialogue can go on until it feels complete to both of you.

Your partner may or may not want to hear why you were late without calling, and you need to let go of getting him or her to hear you. That’s the hard part!

SPEAKING YOUR TRUTH AND LOVINGLY DISENGAGING

There are times when, even if you are open to learning and really want to understand another, the other is just intent on attacking and blaming you. When this is the case, you might want to speak your truth and lovingly disengage. This looks like saying something like: “I’d love to talk with you about this when you stop being angry,” and then walking away, keeping your heart open. This means that you are not withdrawing in anger or blame. You are staying in compassion for yourself and the other person so that when he or she opens, you have no residue because you have taken full responsibility for yourself.

Once the other person is no longer angry and blaming, you might want to again open to learning and active listening to them – with no agenda that he or she listens to you. True listening is an act of giving with no expectation of anything in return. It is a kind and loving way to interact with someone you care about. It is a great gift.

Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is a best-selling author of 8 books, relationship expert, and co-creator of the powerful Inner Bonding® healing process. Are you are ready to discover real love and intimacy? Learn Inner Bonding now! Click here for a FREE Inner Bonding Course, and visit our website for more articles and help.

Article Source: Relationships: The Art of Listening

  • Share/Bookmark

The Path to a Purpose Driven Life

  • Posted on July 1, 2009 at 10:12 pm

One of the greatest challenges in life is about sorting the direction you’re heading for at any point in time.

Now, direction here doesn’t mean East, West, North or South, we could soon organized a map, a navigator, or as in the old days, the sailors used their compass.

Our Mind is a very vital tool for navigation and helps us organise our direction in life.

How important then it is to channel your mind, so as to direct your path of action towards your lifestyle desires.

The key point here is to start focusing your mind on one major objective at a time, and not too many objectives with no clear direction. So you let your awesome Mind Power work for you to create your true desire.

Now, you may class a major objective as something which requires your undivided attention and focus, something that you really desire on a deeper level and you’re happy to put the required effort into achieving it.

You decide that this is a major objective for you, so that all others become secondary. Only you by inquiring from within would decide how major and important this is to you.

A friend of mine was once set on opening a Retail Store on the high Street and in the meantime as he was finalizing his arrangements, he had a very good opportunity to launch a training program in partnership with some of his other acquaintances.

Now he was faced with the decision on which one to choose and concentrate on, but both his retail store venture and the training program seemed viable to him. Only he had to make the decision on which one to progress with and complete, because both needed some effort and focus within the same period.

So what did he do? Well, he decided to complete his retail store objective because that was really major to him, and delegated the tasks of the training program project to others. At the time he was really keen on the retail store and so allowing others to progress the training program gave him more time to focus his mind power and resources on his major objective.

You see when you first start practicing this Conscious Mind Focus and Direction towards a purpose driven life, you’ll probably find that your mind would want to point you to a thousand other things that require your attention as well. Don’t be too concerned about this, because as you prioritise and focus on your target with determination, knowing that you are working on your very own major objective, you’ll gradually begin to get used to it, and so the wondering propensity of the mind would gradually and eventually stop.

The practice and experience of giving your mind a purpose driven direction will liberate you to become Master of your Life and your Environment, instead of being controlled by circumstances around you. You become the Master and take control, regardless of circumstances with Mind Power driven action steps.

You would have learned that focusing your mind on too many goals in different directions, brings confusion with a destination to go everywhere and get nowhere.

So quite simply, what you need to do is to set your mind to work by:

1] Choosing your major intention carefully, making sure that this is what you really want.

2] Focusing on that intention, with a positive attitude to all the challenges that will come your away.

3] Putting your “willpower” at work with determination and perseverance so that if you get carried off course at any point, you simply turn around, pick up and review any learning’s and then keep heading for your target until you get there.

Success!, you’ve reached your destination and achieved your Major intention which now leaves you to start on another Purpose Driven Life Desire. This way you’ll be living your life’s destiny just as you desire it.

Just think of what you really desire that you believe you can achieve, you then drive the necessary action including all the challenges which will eventually get you there. One at a time, without taking your mind off your course.

One great achiever Peter Cohen once said “There is no one giant step that does it, it’s a lot of little steps”.

As you begin to create your purpose driven life, you’ll grow and understand more of your own personal desires and lifestyle choices. This in turn helps you to become Master of your life on a daily basis, and obstacles or challenges become instruments for your growth and experience.

When you focus in on your true desires, you are working on a deeper level and the inner satisfaction it brings makes it all worthwhile.

As Henry Ford once said “obstacles are those frightful things that you see when you take your eyes off your goal”. He should know, because he built success upon success by focusing on a purpose driven life of his inner desires and aspirations.

Your Mind Power is your best tool for achieving anything that you truly believe and desire from deep within you.

Get the FREE “Winning Your Life Purpose” Range of Resources at the address below and start creating your desires today. Joy Obihara is a Personal Development Practitioner helping people discover their unique Untapped Potential to create Lifestyle Freedom they desire. =>
http://www.joyobihara.com

Article Source: The Path to a Purpose Driven Life

  • Share/Bookmark

What Do My Dreams Mean?

  • Posted on July 1, 2009 at 9:04 pm

For centuries society has been using dream interpretation to determine the meanings behind dreams. There are a lot of different theories about how to interpret dreams and what they mean. From the ancient Greeks and Egyptians to more modern psychological theories, dream interpretation has been around a long time.

Dream interpretation started in ancient times when the Greeks and Egyptians believed that dreams were supernatural and only those with “certain powers” could decipher the meanings. The ancient Greeks tried to use dreams to cure their sick. Sick individuals were sent to temples called Asclepieions to incubate dreams. Incubating refers to the belief that one can will himself to dream a divine dream and thus cure himself of any ailments. The ancient Egyptians used priests to interpret dreams as it was believed dreams came from God.

In today’s world most people refer to psychology to interpret dreams. Sigmund Freud believed that dreams were simply a visual representation of wish-fulfilment. Freud’s works on dream interpretation, The Interpretation of Dreams, was published in 1899. He argued that dreams occurred the day after humans experienced a desire for an object or idea. According to Freud, children’s dreams reflect exactly what they desire without the need to mask it with symbolism. Adults’ dreams, however, become distorted. The original meaning of the dream is lost in imagery and symbolism making dream interpretation much harder.

Freud’s theory on dream interpretation takes into account the ego and super-ego. The unconscious mind is thought to hold desires that never make it to the conscious mind thus emerging in dreams. Because the unconscious does not necessarily want the waking mind or the conscious mind to know its true desires, the dreams’ original “latent content” is hidden using symbols and other images to represent the true desire.

Freud’s former student, Carl Jung, disagreed somewhat with Freud’s theories on dream interpretation citing them as “simplistic and naive.” Jung believed that dreams could represent some wish-fulfilment, but also represented attitudes held by the unconscious that the conscious mind was not aware of. He felt that it would be difficult to thoroughly interpret someone’s dreams without understanding what they were experiencing in life at that moment, since people’s attitudes can change based on their current situation.

Calvin S. Hall offered a different meaning to dreams. He felt that dreams were a collection of thoughts or just one thought that occurred during sleep. Dreams would be a representation of this person’s perception of that thought or group of thoughts.

Yet another opinion on dream interpretation comes from Ann Faraday who in the 1970s published several books on dream interpretation and how to do-it-yourself. Faraday believed that dreams served as warnings of future events or prophecies.

People today seek meanings to their dreams often. Many people feel that there is definite meaning to their dreams and often find guidance in this meaning. There are many published books on dream interpretation that help individuals determine what their dreams mean according to the symbols in the dreams. In addition to books there are several websites and blogs dedicated to dream interpretation.

Keith Ward is the Founder and Director of the Circle of Professional Clairvoyants, which offers Psychic Readings with fully qualified Senior UK Clairvoyants and Psychics.

Article Source: What Do My Dreams Mean?

  • Share/Bookmark