27
May
11

* Love is never a relationship, it is…

Love is not about relationship it is about relating.

A relationship is a noun; it means something has finished, completed and closed; the full stop has come; the honeymoon is over. There is no joy, no enthusiasm. We can carry it on, just to keep our promises; or we can carry on because it is comfortable, convenient, cozy or because there is nothing else to do, and if we disrupt it, it is going to create much trouble for us.

Love is a verb, and is never a relationship; love is relating. It is like a river – flowing, unending. Love has no full stop; it is a continuum and is an ongoing phenomenon.

Why do we reduce the beauty of relating to relationship? And why are we in such a hurry to reduce it? Osho believes that it is because to relate is insecure; whereas relationship is a security, and it has certainty. Relating is just a meeting of two strangers; and nobody knows what is going to happen tomorrow. We are afraid of uncertainty, hence we want to make it predictable; we would like tomorrow to be according to our ideas, and we do not want our freedom to have its own say, therefore we immediately reduce every verb to a noun.

This is exactly what happens to our love. When we are in love, we will start to think of getting married immediately, and making it a legal contract. Why is that so? Ever wonder how does the law come into love? The law comes into love because the love is not there. It is just a fantasy, and we know that fantasy will disappear; so before it disappear, settle it down quickly, and do something to it so that it becomes impossible to separate.

If you enjoy being with somebody, you would like to enjoy it more and more. If you enjoy the intimacy, you would like to explore the intimacy more and more. There are flowers that take years to bloom, and there are flowers that keep blooming for many years to come. The longer it takes, the deeper it goes.

Love has to be a commitment from one heart to another heart. It should not even to be verbalized, because to verbalize, it is to profane it. It has to be a silent commitment, eye to eye, heart to heart, being to being. It has to be understood, not said.

Forget relationship and learn how to relate. Once we are in relationship, we start taking each other for granted. That’s what destroys all love affairs. The women thinks she knows the man, the man thinks he knows the woman. Nobody knows (actually)! It is impossible to know the other; the other remains a mystery. And to take the other for granted is insulting and disrespectful.

To think that we know our partner is very ungrateful. How can you know the woman? How can you know the man? They are processes; they are not things. The woman that we knew yesterday is not there today. So much water has gone down the Ganges; she is somebody else, totally different from yesterday. That is the different between a thing and a person. The furniture in the room is the same every day; but the man and the woman they are not the same everyday. Hence relate again; start again. And don’t take it for granted.

Relating means you are always starting, you are always trying to become acquainted. Again and again, you are introducing yourself to each other. You are trying to see the many facets of the other’s personality. You are trying to penetrate deeper and deeper into the realm of his/her inner feelings, into the deeper recesses of his/her being. You are trying to unravel a mystery that cannot be unraveled.

That is the joy of love: “the exploration of consciousness”.

If we relate, and don’t reduce it to a relationship, then the other will become a mirror to us. When we’re exploring the other, unknowingly (and unawares that) we are exploring ourselves too. Getting deeper into the other, knowing his/her feelings, his/her thoughts, his/her deeper stirrings, and we will get to know our own deeper stirring too. Lovers become mirrors to each other, and then love becomes a meditation.

Relationship is ugly; relating is beautiful. In relationship both persons become blind to each other.

Hence Osho says relate. By saying relate, he means remain continuously on a honeymoon. Go on searching and seeking each other; finding new ways of loving each other; finding new ways of being with each other. And each person is such an infinite mystery, inexhaustible, unfathomable, that it is not possible that we can ever say, “I have known her.” Or “I have known him.” At the most we can say is “I have tried my best, but the mystery remains a mystery.” In fact the more we know the more mysterious the other becomes. Love is a constant adventure.

Love should be a reality in our life, not just a poem, nor a dream. It has to be actualized. It is never too late to experience love for the first time.

Learn to love. Very few people know how to love. We all know that love is needed; we all know that without love life is meaningless, but we don’t know how to love. And whatsoever we do in the name of love is not love; it is always something else. It is a mixture of so many things; jealousy, anger, hatred, possessiveness, domination, and ego. All these poisons destroy the very nectar. To love means to get rid of all these poisons and then slowly we will see a new quality of love arising in us.

Love cannot be learned; it cannot be cultivated. The cultivated love will not be love at all. It will not be a real rose; it will be a plastic flower. When we learn something, it means something comes from the outside; it is not an inner growth. And love has to be our inner growth if it is to be authentic and real.

Love is not a learning but a growth. What is needed on our part is not to learn the ways of love but to unlearn the ways of un-love. Love is our natural spontaneous being. The spring of love is always there – hidden behind those rocks; it is our very being. Once those obstacles are removed and the rocks thrown out of the ways, the flow of love starts.

For further reading, refer to “being in love: how to love with awareness and relate without fear” by OSHO.

22
May
11

* the new dimension about “love”…

Osho, one of the most revolutionary thinkers of our time, challenges us to question what we think we know about love and opens us to the possibility of a love that is natural, fulfilling, and free of possessiveness and jealousy.

With his characteristic wit, humor, and understanding, Osho dares us to resist the unhealthy relationship patterns, which we’ve learned from those around us, and to rediscover the meaning of love for ourselves.

He reckoned that most of us by the time we are ready to explore the world of love, we are filled with so much rubbish about love that there is not much hope for us to be able to find the authentic and discard the false.

Once we are not in love, we will be lonely…

One should understand that if we are NOT in love, we are lonely; if we are in love, really in love, we become alone. This is a very intricate and complex thing which one ought to understand before we begin the journey to search for the authentic love.

It sounds so abstract and confusing to say that once we are in love, we become alone… How many of us can really understand this concept? Is that the reason why so many people falling out of love these days and feeling hurt…?

Loneliness is….

Loneliness is sadness, and is a feeling of incompleteness; we need someone, and the needed one is not available. Loneliness is darkness waiting for someone to come and kindle the light.

Aloneness is…

Aloneness is not loneliness, and it is not sadness. Aloneness means the feeling that we are complete; nobody is needed, and we are enough.

The myth of the relationship contract…

Two persons (they are not lovers) can deceive themselves by making a contract to come together; because the present of the other, they don’t feel the loneliness anymore. This kind of love is nothing but a deception to deceive themselves that “I am” not lonely, somebody else is there, and that’s all.

Osho also observed that most people when they are not in the relationship they feel lonely and they will go on to search for somebody to be related to. When they are related to somebody, the misery starts; then they feel it was better to be alone, and the cycle goes on and on.

Why it happens this way?

The effect of two lonely people meets…

This is because when two lonely, gloomy, sad, miserable persons meet, their misery is multiplied to many folds. How can two “Uglinesses” become beautiful? How can two “Lonelinesses” coming together bringing a sense of completion and totality? It is just not possible. They are just exploiting each other, and they somehow try to deceive themselves through being related to each other, but that deception doesn’t go far; by the time the honeymoon is over, the marriage is over too. It is just a temporary illusion.

The phenomenon of real love….

Real love is not a search to combat loneliness. Real love is to transform or help the other to transform loneliness into aloneness. If we love a person, we help that person to be alone. We don’t try to fill him/her; we don’t try to complete the other in some way by our presence. We help the other to be alone and to be so “full” out of his/her own being that we will not be needed. That is how noble it should be if two persons are in love, really in love.

Freedom & sharing…

When a person is totally free, then out of that freedom, sharing becomes possible. Then we will give, but not as a need or bargain; we give because we have much to give, and because we enjoy giving.

Our aloneness is sacred…

The real lovers are alone, and he/she will never destroy our aloneness. He/she will always be totally respectful toward our individuality, towards our aloneness. Our aloneness is sacred. He/she will not interfere in it, and will not try to intrude on that sacred space.

Is our relationship a bargain or love…?

Ordinarily so called lovers, they are very much afraid of the other’s aloneness and his/her independence. This is because they think if the other is independence then they will not be needed, and they will be discarded. So the woman goes on trying to manage things so that her husband or boyfriend remains dependent on her. He should be always in need of her, so that she can remain valuable. And the man goes on trying every which way to manage the same, so that he remains valuable too. The result is a bargain, not love; and there is continuous conflict and struggle. The struggle is based in the fact that everybody needs freedom.

Freedom and love…

Love not only allows freedom; but strengthens freedom too. And once you are totally yourself, you feel grateful to the person who has helped you to achieve that freedom. That gratefulness is almost religious. You feel something divine in that person who has made you free; and this kind of love will not become possessiveness.

When love deteriorates, it becomes possessiveness, jealous, and begins to struggle for power, politics, domination, manipulation and all many other ugly things.

If we are in love, our very love will help the other to be integrated. Our very love will become a cementing force for the other. In our love the other will come together as a whole, unique and individual, because our love will give freedom to the others. Under the shade and protection of our love, the other will start growing.

Growth and unconditional love…

All growth needs love; the unconditional love. If love has conditions then growth cannot be total, because condition will come in the way.

Aloneness and loneliness…

Aloneness means purity; we are just ourselves and nobody else. Love makes us alone, and makes loneliness disappear.

Loneliness is a state when we are ill, bored and tired of ourselves, and we want to go somewhere to forget ourselves by being involved with somebody else. Aloneness is when we are thrilled and feeling blissful just by being ourselves. We need not go anywhere; the need has disappeared, and we are enough unto ourselves; by and by we have so much that we cannot contain it, we have to share, and we have to give. And whoever accepts our gift, we will feel grateful that the person has accepted.

Feeling of gratefulness…

Lovers feel grateful that their love has been accepted. They feel thankful, because they were so full of energy that they needed someone to pour that energy into. It is like when a flower blooms and releases its fragrance to the winds, it feels grateful to the winds. The fragrance was growing more and more heavy on the flower, and it was becoming almost a burden to the flower.

Two types of love…

Hence there are two types of love. One is the love that happens when we are feeling lonely; and as a need, we go to the other. The other type of love arises when we are not feeling lonely, but alone. In the former case we go to get something from the other, in the later case we go to give something to the other. A giver is an emperor.

Love and hate…

Love that arises out of aloneness is not ordinary love. It has nothing to do with lust; on the contrary it is the greatest transformation of lust into love; and love makes you individual. If it doesn’t make you individual, and if it tries to make you a slave, then it is not love; it is hate pretending love. Love of this type kills and destroys the individuality of the other; it makes you less of an individual; it pulls you down, and you are not enhanced; you don’t become graceful. You are being pulled into the mud, and everybody who is tangled up in this kind of relationship will feel that he/she is settling with something dirty.

We can’t fight the darkness of loneliness directly…

The darkness of loneliness cannot be fought directly. It is something essential for all of us to understand. We cannot fight with darkness and loneliness with the fear of isolation directly. The reason is that all these things do not exist; they are simply the absences of something, just as the darkness is the absence of light.

The light and darkness…

We can go on fighting with this darkness all our life, and we will not succeed; but you know all we need is just a small candle is enough to dispel it. We have to work on the light because it is positive, existential; and once the light comes anything that was its absence automatically disappear. Loneliness is similar to darkness.

Once we tasted the aloneness…

We don’t know our aloneness, neither have we experienced it nor realized its beauty; once we tasted it, we will appreciate its tremendous power and its strength.

Loneliness is an absence of aloneness; because we don’t know our aloneness, hence there is fear. We feel lonely so we want to cling onto something, somebody or to some relationship, just to hold on to the illusion that we are not lonely; but we know are, hence the pain.

The illusion…

Although this illusion gives a certain solace, but it cannot create the reality so that all the fears disappear. It only represses the fears. Hence so on the surface we will feel good to ourselves (at least we try to feel good), and telling ourselves how wonderful is the relationship, and how wonderful is the man or the woman. But behind the illusion, there is pain in the heart, because the heart knows perfectly well that tomorrow things may not be the same, and they are not the same.

Loneliness is a wound…

Just the word “lonely” immediately reminds you that it is like a wound; something is needed to fill it. There is a gap and it hurts. The very word “aloneness” does not have the same sense of a wound or of a gap that has to be filled. Aloneness simply means completeness. You are whole; there is no need of anybody else to complete you.

Aloneness and our innermost centre…

So try to find our innermost centre, where we are always (have always been) alone. In life, in death, wherever we are we will be alone. But it is so full (not empty), so complete, and so over flowing with all the juices of life, with all the beauties and benedictions of our existence that once we have tasted aloneness, the pain in the heart will disappear, then a new rhythm of tremendous sweetness, peace, joy and bliss will be there.

Aloneness and making friends…

It does not mean that a person who is centered in his aloneness, completed in himself, cannot make friends. In fact, only that person can make friends, because now it is no longer a need to make friends, it is just out of sharing. We have so much that we can share.

Sharing, giving and begging…

When we share, there is no question of clinging. We flow with existence; we flow with life’s changes, because it doesn’t matter with whom we share, it is not a contract, it is not a marriage; it is simply out of our fullness that we want to give, and giving is a joy.

Begging is such a misery. Even if we get something through begging, we will remain miserable. It hurts our pride, our integrity; but sharing makes us more centered, more integrated, more proud – but not egoistic, simply proud that existence has been compassionate to us, and it is not ego either, it is a totally different phenomenon; it is a recognition that existence has allowed us something for which millions of people are trying to experience it but at the wrong door.

We are proud of our blissfulness and all that existence has given to us. Fear, darkness, the pain and the desire for the other disappear. When we share our joy, we don’t create a prison for anybody. We simply give. We don’t even expect gratitude or thankfulness because we are not giving to get anything, not even gratitude. We are giving because we are so full that we have to give.

Forget loneliness, look for aloneness…

We don’t have to do anything about our loneliness, just look for our aloneness. Forget loneliness, darkness and pain. These are just absence of aloneness, and the experience of aloneness will dispel them instantly.

How to do it?

Become more conscious and aware of our aloneness…

The method is the same, just watch our mind, and be aware. Become more and more conscious, so finally we are only conscious of ourselves. That is the point where we become aware of aloneness.

Don’t fight with negative things…

Always look to see if anything that we are facing as a problem is a negative thing or a positive thing. If it is a negative thing then don’t fight with it; don’t bother about it at all. Just look for the positive of it, and we will be at the right door. Most of the people miss because they start fighting directly with the negative door. There is no door at the negative side; there is only darkness, and there is only absence. And the more they fight, the more they find failure, the more they become dejected, pessimistic, and ultimately they decided that life has no meaning, that it is simply torture. Their mistake is that they enter from the wrong door.

Most of our problems are due to the absence of something…

So when we face with a problem, just take a look at it to see if it is due to absence of something? – the truth is that all our problems are due to absence of something. Once we have found what we are absence of, then go after the positive. The moment we find the positive we have found the light, and the darkness is finished.

02
May
11

Yi Ren® System of Qigong (Chi Kung) in Seattle

http://www.qigongseattle.org/research.html

26
Feb
11

* what is meditative sex…?

Meditative sex is a totally different sex act. It is a journey to sexual and sensual enlightenment. It is not something to be gotten over with; nor something to be done for a release; nor something to be

... just forget about sex, feel our body caressing by the peace and serenity around us...

finished hurriedly with; and it is not a bodily act. It is a deep spiritual communion of the two bodies; it is a deep meeting of two inner-nesses; it is a deep meeting of two subjectivities penetrating each other; during which our whole energy is concentrating near our spine.

... close our eyes, visualize the deep meeting of the two inner-nesses; feel the softness of the two subjectivities penetrating each other...

In the peak of a deep sex act, our spine will begin to discharge electricity. If the intercourse is very deep, very loving and long, and if the two lovers are just in a deep embrace, silent and non moving; just being filled with each other; just remaining in a deep embrace; the moment of enlightenment will happen.

The best way to do it is just forget about sex, and in the warmth of love, filled with peace, and relaxed; close our eyes; be body-oriented, and feel our body from within. When in deep embrace, remain inside and visualize our spinal column.

Love is the deepest relaxation, don’t make it a great tension, or make it an anxiety or a burden…..

… Love is deepest relaxation, don’t make it a great tension, or an anxiety and burden…..
07
Nov
10

* why blame or regret… when things turn sour now?

“The past does not guarantee our future, only present does; however good the past was, if we do not spare a moment to treasure it today , do not cry over the spilled milk when things turn sour in future…”  – the Natureluvr.

19
Sep
10

* sex and lust, are they the same thing…?

Many of us have been associating sex with lust, which (to me) has done a lot of injustice to the greatest gift from nature to mankind.

Let me try to reference Osho’s teaching in an attempt to shed some light on this issue….

What is lust…?

Lust means sex is in focus, the centre of things. You don’t have any sense of beauty; you don’t have any aesthetic sense. Can you think of a man with aesthetic sense going to a prostitute? Impossible. Can you think of a man with aesthetic sense raping a woman? Impossible. Or even hitting a woman in the crowd or just touching her body in such a way as if he was not meaning to touch her, as if it happened accidentally? That is not love; that is not sensibility; that is not sensitivity. It is lust.

Lust means you don’t respect the other person at all. You have a deep, repressed desire, repressed sexuality, which comes out in many perverted ways. Then your eyes become covered and colored only with sexuality.

What is sex…?

Sex is significant because it is the source of all life. It is so significant that if you repress it you will repress many other things as well. For example, the person who is sexually repressed will become uncreative, because creativity itself is a kind of sexual activities.

In Osho’s observation, if a person is totally creative he will transcend sex without repressing it, because his own energy will become creative. The very need for sex will disappear. A far higher bliss will be happening to him and the lower is bound to disappear when you have the higher. A real poet, while producing, creating, composing, forgets all about sex. A real sculptor absorbed in his work forgets all about sex. Even if a naked woman passes by he will not look at her, his concentration is so total. A real dancer disappears in his dance. His ego, his sex drive, everything is dissolved into his dance.

But if sex is repressed, then just the contrary will be the result: your creativity will be repressed, and the implications of repressed creativity are very great, multi-dimensional… If your creativity is repressed, your entire scientific endeavour will disappear too. But if your sex life is flowing joyously, you will have tremendous interest in everything you are doing…

According to Osho, sex is the seed. If it is allowed a natural growth, respected, valued, then a transformation happens, a metamorphosis. Sex starts growing foliage of art, music, poetry, dance, and thousand other creative dimensions. Sex is only a seed, or the roots, but if supported, nourished, watered, taken care of, then many branches will grow, with thick foliage, many green leaves moving in all directions, dancing in the wind, in the rain, in the sun… This is the world of art, the world of aesthetics. And if you allow the world of aesthetics to reach its highest peak, the flower will bloom.

What is sexuality…?

Sexuality is a very great thing. By sexuality I (Osho) mean whenever your body is alive, sensuous, throbbing, pulsating – then you are in a sexual state. It may not have anything to do with a genital experience. The genital is only one very, very tiny expression of the sexual. For example, when you are dancing you are sexual, the energy is sexual energy, but it is not genital. You may not be thinking about sex, you may have completely forgotten about sex, but in fact when you are involved in any deep participation with your entire body, it is sexual, it is sexuality.

So when I (Osho) use the word ‘sexual’, I mean this experience of totality. By and by, sexuality has become confined to the genitals; it has become local, it is no longer total. This is ugly because the most it can give you is relief; it can never give you orgasm. Ejaculation is not orgasm, not all ejaculations are orgasmic and not every orgasm is a peak experience. Ejaculation is genital, orgasm is sexual and a peak experience is spiritual.

When sexuality is confined to the genitals you can only have relief; you simply lose energy, you don’t gain anything. It is just like the relief that comes out of a good sneeze, no more than that. It is not an orgasm because your total body does not pulsate. You are not in a dance, you are not participating with your whole being, it is not holy. It is very partial and the partial can never be orgasmic because orgasm is possible only when the total organism is involved. When you pulsate from your toe to your head, when every fibre of your being pulsates, when all the cells of your body dance, when there is a great orchestra inside you, that is orgasm. But not every orgasm is a peak experience. When you are pulsating totally inside, it is an orgasm. When your totality participates with the totality of existence, it is a peak experience. And people are focused on ejaculation, they have forgotten orgasm and they have completely forgotten the peak existence. They don’t know what it is. And because they cannot attain the higher, they are confined to the lower.

When you can attain the higher; when you can attain the better; naturally the lower starts disappearing by its own accord. So, sex is transformed, but not sexuality. As sex disappears you will become more sexual.

Where will sex go? It will become your sexuality. You will become more sensuous. You will live with more intensity, with more flame; you will live like a great wave. These tiny waves will disappear. You will become a storm; you will become a great wind that can shake the trees and the mountains. You will be a tide, a flood. Your candle will burn at both ends together, simultaneously.

And in that moment you will have a taste of eternity.

What is Repression…?

Repression is living a life you were not meant to live. Repression is doing things you never wanted to do. Repression is being a person you are not; it is a way of destroying yourself. Repression is suicide – very slow of course, but very certain, a slow poisoning.

Expression is life; repression is suicide.

Don’t live a repressed life; otherwise you’re not living at all. Live a life of expression, creativity, joy. Live the natural way. Listen to your instincts, listen to your body, listen to your heart, and listen to your intelligence (not intellect or mind). Depend on yourself, go wherever your spontaneity takes you, and you will never be a loss. And going spontaneously with your natural life, one day you are bound to arrive at the doors of the divine.

Summary

Let me summarize all of life processes in the following graphic chart to help us better understand the secret of living life as nature had intended. Most of us live our life following the path of the red line in the diagram below, bypassing all the goodness in life. That is why we are experiencing boredom, depression, un-fulfillment and fears in life.

12
Sep
10

* the enlightenment of aloneness…

The words A-lone and Lone-ly, although sharing the common adjective “lone”, are not necessarily expressing the same emotional state of being. “Lone” is used to describe a person or thing in a place, or a person or thing that does something, e.g. a lone figure was standing at the bus stop; a lone gunman or a lone survivor. “Alone” is usually used to describe the state when no one is with you, such as, she lives alone. But later people started to use it to describe the emotional state of feeling unhappy or being lonely, e.g. I cried like a child because I felt so alone. Now we have developed another adjective called “Lonely” to describe the state of being unhappy because we are alone and do not have anyone to talk to, e.g. a lonely old man or a lonely journey. The fact that Alone and Lonely are being used interchangeably without any mindful thought is (to me) mainly due to the domestication process in our society through our exposure to authors of romantic fiction or writers of movie scripts, but not to artists or poets. The artists or poets always work alone, and being alone is the best time they feel connected with their inner world and nature, and they will never feel lonely.

Now I would like to share with you the passage from Osho about loneliness and aloneness. Osho, to me, is one of the truthful and relevant up-to-date interpreters of Lao Tzu’s wisdom, in our time.

“… Once we understand the beauty of our loneliness, it becomes aloneness. Then it is no longer empty; then it is no longer nothingness. Then it has purity – it is so pure that it is formless.

Always remember the difference between ‘aloneness’ and ‘loneliness’. ‘Loneliness’ is like a wound. ‘Loneliness’ means we are missing another person. ‘Loneliness’ means we are thinking of another person constantly, we are hankering for another person constantly. The other is in our fantasy, in our mind, in our dreams. The other is not real, it is imaginary, but it is there and because it is not real we feel lonely.

When we start feeling our ‘aloneness’, the ‘loneliness’ drops from our mind completely. It doesn’t shadow our dreams any more; it doesn’t touch our purity any more. We are happy with ourselves, we are ecstatic with ourselves, we are enjoying ourselves. Now for the first time we are in tune with our being and with our non-being. We are whole.

Now we can be in love. Now love can flow. But now love will be a sharing, not an escape. Now we can go and share our being – our non-being also. Now we can share our wholeness. Now we can allow anybody who is open to join our openness, now we can become partner in the eternal journey. This love will not be possessive, because we are ready to be alone anytime. In fact we are happy being alone and we are happy being together – we don’t have to choose between the two. Both are good. Whatever the case, we feel happy. Our happiness cannot be destroyed now; another can enjoy it and share it but cannot destroy it…”

What all this means is simply that when we have found ourselves from within, when we have accepted ourselves for what we are worth, when we are at ease and comfort with what we are and who we are, only then will we not be lonely anymore; because we will always have our physical self and our spiritual self as our companions in life. When we are in that state of being, we are ready to be in love, we are ready to share our being, our wholeness with another being, whom we are able to resonate with. This is true love, and it is non possessive love, because we don’t have to choose between being alone or being together, we are happy with both. And this kind of happiness cannot be destroyed. Others can enjoy it and share it but cannot destroy it. To me, that is the purest and greatest love of all.

08
Sep
10

* the orchids delight… by National Orchid Garden, Singapore

Since 1859, orchids have been closely associated with the Singapore Botanic Garden. The products of the Gardens’ orchid breeding programme, which began in 1928, deserve a place where they can be displayed in their full splendor. The very design of these orchids is, one could say, “hand-crafted” by the Gardens’ horticultural staff, dedicated to bringing out the finest in any hybrid cross…

To me, the National Orchid Garden has put up the best nature show that I have ever seen.  The richness and the diversity of colors displayed by this wide variety of hybrid orchids are emotionally soothing and spiritually enchanting. They look elegant from far, and sensually stimulating when seen up-closed.  The myriad of orchid blooms produce a wide spectrum of spectacular lights illuminating the entire floralscape.  However, it is sometimes beyond the capacity of our naked eyes to really appreciate the true splendor of these divine flowers.  Hence viewing of this show is perhaps best through a pair of good lens, and here I shall share this enchanting moment which has captivated me throughout the entire three hours’ journey I had in this balmy atmosphere of a secluded tropical garden with you. The show which I have named “the orchids delight…”, features a wide variety of personalities, dressed in their native colorful costumes and makeup, either solo or in groups; some are stunning, some are subtle; some are patterned, some are unadorned; some are intricate, some are simple.  All in all, it has just been an exhilarating and breath taking journey…

My take away from the show is “don’t believe what you cannot see. What we can not see, or understand, is not necessarily non existence…”

29
Aug
10

* the old Katong charm…

The revamped Holy Family Church

28
Aug
10

* the effects of colours with architecture lines …

26
Aug
10

* YOG, Singapore 2010…

Youth Olympic Games wrapper...

The Lighthouse and the Reflecting pool...

01
Aug
10

* The Peace, my reflection from Singapore National Day Parade 2010…

The parade @ Padang, City Hall, Singapore 2010...

The grand old City Hall...

Singapore National Day Parade (NDP)  is one show that will never fail to stir up a certain special, unique and deep intimate emotion in me. I feel blessed (always) when I am able to sit at the gallery and watch the parade passing by peacefully and everyone is able to dance, smile and have a good time partying. Tears will well up in my eyes, and a deep emotional energy will send a series of magnetic waves up my spine to my soul. The feeling is overwhelmingly warm and gratifying.

That is why every year I will always try my best to find my way into the parade grounds, either by offering my service, bidding for NDP tickets, or be a show participant.

This year was no exception; I was there for one of the rehearsal show. As usual, I was carrying my camera, moving around the arena, shooting furiously at everything that had some appeal to my senses. But alas, the cloud

getting ready for the rain...

started to build up, and next came the rain. I managed to find a nice little sheltered place to pack myself in with my camera hanging down my neck, wrapped around by my handkerchief, and continued to watch the show.

“Are you feeling cold?” I heard a voice… it came from a father and a son sitting in front of me. The father was sheltered by a small umbrella, while the son was wearing the raincoat provided in the NDP  goodies bag.

The unstoppable spirit of NDP...


“No dad, I am ok. Besides, those people (he was pointing to the parade ground) are even worse than us; they have not taken shelter, and are still continuing to perform in the rain for us to see. They must be feeling cold…” The father suddenly became speechless, and just hugged his son close to him and continued to watch the show.

The kid echoed something that sounded all too familiar to me… I remember PM Lee Hsien Loong has recounted his own experience, as a participant in the 1967 NDP, where he was soaking wet in the rain. The moment and the experience he had shared were overwhelmingly touching.

Suddenly, the images of yesteryears started to unfold right before my eyes. I was only 6 years old when Singapore was kicked out of Malaya, and forced to be independent. It was not the case that we fought hard for our independence, but more like a bad boy being kicked out of the family, and forced to survive on our own regardless….

The future of Singapore was filled with uncertainties. The Konfrontasi was on-going at that time, and the conservative UMNO faction strongly opposed the separation; we faced the danger of being attacked by Indonesian military or forcibly re-absorbed into the Malaysia Federation under unfavorable terms.

The Singapore's Red Lion...

The British troops had remained in Singapore following our independence.  However, in 1968, London announced its decision to withdraw its forces by 1971. Again we had no choice but to set out to build up our own military, called the Singapore Armed Forces, and a national service programme was also introduced in 1967 by the late Dr Goh Keng Swee.

We immediately sought international recognition of our sovereignty by joining the United Nations. Singapore became the 117th member of the UN on 21 September 1965. In October that same year, we became a part of the Commonwealth nations.

As a small island nation, we were seen as inadequate to be a viable country and much of the international media was skeptical of the prospects for our survival. Besides the issue of sovereignty, other pressing problems included unemployment, housing, education, and the lack of natural resources and land. Unemployment at that time ranged between 10-12%, threatening to trigger civil unrest.

Salute to the President....


My childhood was filled with hardships and uncertainties, but also filled with a sense of freedom.  Life was hard, but I never had to beg for my meals.

Faced with severe unemployment and a housing crisis, we embarked on a modernisation programme that focused on establishing a manufacturing industry, developing large public housing estates and investing heavily on public education. Since independence, our economy has grown by an average of nine percent each year. By the 1990s, we have become one of the world’s most prosperous nations, with a highly-developed free market economy, strong international trading links, and the highest per capita gross domestic product in Asia outside of Japan.

The enemy's nightmare...

The Black Knight....

We managed to find a workable formula to achieve peace, and that led to progress, prosperity and happiness. We have spent a great deal of effort and huge sums of money to achieve and maintain our peace. Without that, we would never have had a place we can call home (of our own), and the opportunity to work hard towards progress, achieving prosperity and securing happiness.

Isn’t that the same principle with our life?

If we want to be happy, we must first seek to have a peace of mind. To achieve that peace of mind is not an easy task.  We need to invest huge amount of effort, time, and sacrifices to reach and maintain that state of being. Only when we have achieved that state of being, that we can then progress, prosper and achieve our happiness in a sustainable way.

the old and the new National Theatres....

Our mind is constantly bombarded by many adverse external elements, such as greed, that leads us to possessiveness and wanting more of everything; jealousy that leads us to anger and creating strains in relationships; envy that leads us to emotional imbalance and many sleepless nights…

To achieve a peace of mind, we must first seek to be integrated – our body, mind and soul have to be integrated into one entity and function as one. Only then will we be able to think as one, feel as one and live as one. Meditation is one way that can enable us to be integrated. A meditative state of being can be achieved by practicing Yoga, Zhineng Qigong or meditative sex.

Once we are integrated, we will be much more aware of ourselves, and of the things around us. We will understand why this world is not free, although it may appear to be free on the surface. The truth is that there are contradictions everywhere in life, and that these will ultimately all converge, such as life meeting death, day meeting night, love meeting hate, and yes meeting no. Our conscience is really not that of our own, but influenced and perhaps even created by society as a result of the domestication process since the day we were born.

Once we are aware of all these contradictions, we will transcend beyond the boundaries, to a state of being where we can embrace all these contradictions in a holistic way. Only then will we not have to make choices. We can then exist in a state of “choicelessness” but remain silently aware that these contradictions will eventually converge and become one. We know yes is no longer yes, and no is no longer no.  All these are absolutely indefinable because where yes and no meet is inconceivable, and this is the state of transcendence, a state of real peace which is beyond our mind.

07
May
10

* Can the co-existence of ideal world and real world be possible…?

Someone whispered to me from a distance as I was walking into the woods.  She seemed to be asking me something which I couldn’t figure it out at first. But as the wind and the dust gently and slowly settled down, I seemed to hear a trembling voice, which was trying to reach out to me, as if she was in great pain from within…

“In an idealistic world, it will be most wonderful that… but we are just humans with so many realities of daily living. Does anyone expect people to switch in and out between the ideal world and real world…?” As she finished uttering those words, her voice started to break and fade hurriedly into the night like a frightened child being seen doing something wrong… She seemed to be running away from something or maybe someone…

“Is it possible for such a co-existence…?” She turned her head, and looked back at me with her tearing doubtful eyes, as she echoed those few trailing words before her shadow withered helplessly into the distant darkness and the night became cold and quiet again…

“Must we live in two different worlds?” I asked myself.

It seems to me that people who cannot be or are not able to be themselves, tend to see the ideal world and the real world as two distinctive and contrasting worlds. It is as if one is for the mind, while the other is for the body.

There is not much difference between our left brain and right brain. The left brain is the logical world or real world, while the right brain is the ideal world or emotional world. Until today, scientists and researchers have not yet successfully figured it out how our left and right brains can function as one integrated entity.

But we don’t have to go very far to know that we are always switching between the two brains, one moment we are thinking logically, the next moment we break down and cry. We do it so often that we don’t even realize it.

The ideal world is our dream, is our source of passion, and it gives rise to our hopes and energy to be alive. The only thing that can make the two worlds different is when we stop pursuing our dreams. Doing nothing and making no effort to move towards our dreams, that is when our dreams remain still as dreams, and they become unreal, turning into day-dreams.

Just look at many people in the past who have successfully turned their dreams into reality, like how Walt Disney has put life into his imaginations, and how the Wright brothers have built our first flying machine…

Our destiny is in our hands – have the courage to live in our “ideal world” in the real world. Even if we do not reach our ideal world in the end, we will be happy and comforted to know that we have at least sown the seeds and have spared no effort in pursuit of our dream. We will also not feel regretful that we have wasted our entire life living in other people’s dreams, since we know for sure that as we live our life every day, we are journeying a day closer towards our ideal dream world…

The feeling is exciting, real and fulfilling when we know we are living and journeying closer to where we want to be. We do not have to live in contradictions, in agony, and be what others want us to be any longer. Now is the chance for all of us to be ourselves, to re-discover who we are and what we want now, yes now – at this very moment…

Practice makes us better, but it is in taking the action that makes all the difference.

Lets live our dream today and everyday… my friends!

02
May
10

* lack of love – the wisdom from nature…

lack of love…

Many of our challenges and sufferings today are related to love, to be precise is due to the “lack of love”.

The cleaner dreads her day, feels ashamed, and lacks motivation and creativity to keep the place clean. She does not have the feeling and love for the place and for the people who are working or living there.  Consequently, she perceives, unconsciously, that a clean and tidy environment is not needed and that they do not deserve her efforts to keep the place clean. If she loves the place and the people who work and live there, she would have harnessed a lot of cosmos energy and creativities to find a better way to make the place clean and tidy. She would have found the noble meaning to serve those people whom she believes would benefit from her efforts.

inability to love…

Many of our complex emotional issues, disorders or illnesses today stems from our inability to love and to receive love, the real love. This inability is the result of our human behavioral evolution and domestication process that started a long time ago when our human society needed a system for all human-beings to survive, and to live together in a coherent manner – hence the birth of morality and legal systems.

birth of morality…

The moral and legal standards and definitions did not arise out of consciousness or love by the Pharisees, the puritans, the scribes or the pundits. Their definitions have arisen out of the legal court. Just like adultery, the meaning – the ordinary meaning – of which is “to make love to a woman you are not married to.” But the real meaning of adultery is “making love to someone whom you are not in love with. She may be your own wife, but if you are not in love with her, then making love to her is adultery.”[1]

Many of our moral teachings today are based on fear, but dressed in the cloth of love. When our parents told us to study hard, they have always reiterated that it is due to their love for us, of not wanting us to follow the same path that has led to their sufferings … was it out of fear or out of love…? When we got married, was it because we really loved that person and wanted to be with that person unconditionally, or was it because of our fear of losing that person, whom we perceived as capable of providing a shelter, the emotional needs and happiness for us…?

Having said all that, I would like to reiterate that it is not our parents’, teachers’ and relatives’ conscious intention to domesticate us in this manner, the manner that is driven by fear in the cloth of love.  It was just that no one has ever shown them how to love, and the meaning of real love.[2]

learning to love…

To really learn how to love and experience love, we must all “selfishly” learn to love ourselves and fill ourselves with all the loves that we deserve. Learn it from nature, because nature is still communicating in the language of love. Once we’ve understood “what is love” and the “feeling of love”, we can then go on to share our love with our parents, children, brothers and sisters, friends and the one we want to spend our life with. That is the real cycle of love.

Once we have experienced “real love”, we will experience life changing events, and we will feel peace and being showered with good energy from the cosmos universe. There will not be any guilt, jealousy or envy which are primarily responsible for creating those pains, hurts and sufferings that we are experiencing now. Though we may come across the occasional storm, and some emotional ripples later in our peaceful life, do not over-react, because it is just the way nature reminds us of the value of real love.

taken for a free ride…

As such, the notion of “taken for a free ride” will disappear, and we will feel at ease and feel blessed for being alive, everyday and the day ever after ….


[1] Reference from “The ABC of Enlightment” by OSHO.

[2] Refer to my other article on “what is real love” for details…

09
Jan
10

* love & romantic love; what are they….?

About Love and Romantic Love: By Michael Grayson Conner, Psy.D


Love is mostly tender and quiet.”

Love is a light that allows people to see things that are not seen by others.”

Romantic love is a deep emotional, sexual and spiritual recognition and regard for the value of another person and relationship.”


Romantic love can generate many powerful feelings. It can provide a profound ecstasy, and a deep suffering when frustrated. To some people, romantic love is irrational. Romantic love can seem like an emotional storm.

There are countless people out there who believe romantic is followed by disillusionment. These people come to believe that romantic love is a false hope. They began their relationship with romantic feelings. They had dreams for their future. They felt that life was finally rewarding and worthwhile. But eventually the relationship began to fall apart. It was a painful experience. They remember when they were in love. They feel tortured by their inability to see how or why their love was lost.

Despite these experiences, people are still drawn to something they seldom reach. It is a profound longing. A desire that is difficult to extinguish. Romantic love is not something that must crumble when faced with practical realities. Romantic love is not something just for youth.

Utilitarian & Intrinsic marriages…

Before going further, we should know something about the institution of marriage. One kind of marriage is the utilitarian marriage. In this type of marriage there is an absence of mutual involvement or passion. This type of marriage is usually held together by social, financial or family considerations. In a utilitarian marriage the relationship is made tolerable by long separations, community activities and usually infidelity. The other kind of a marriage is the intrinsic marriage. In this type of marriage there is passionate emotional and sexual involvement. The experience of life is shared. The relationship is considered more fulfilling and interesting than any social activity. In this relationship there is a tendency to avoid activities resulting in separations.

Why are we not able to sustain romantic love…

Marriage itself does not create or sustain romantic love. To love someone, and for that love to endure, requires the ability to see that person with clarity. For example, we have all seen how some people will idealize or glamorize their partners. They exaggerate their good qualities, and they ignore and avoid considering significant differences and potential problems. Why do they do this? Many reasons, but mostly because they need to see the person in this idealized way.  People can fall in love with the idea of a person who doesn’t really exist and then hope the relationship will endure.

Most people never learn how to sustain a loving relationship. The reason is simple. Nobody showed them. The mere fact that a man and woman feel love toward each other does not guarantee they will be able to create a joyful and rewarding life. Love does not automatically teach a person communication skills. Love does not teach a person how to resolve a conflict. Love does not teach people how to weave their love into the rest of their life.

For most people who fall in love, a time will come when they sense the beginning of problems. They know that romantic love can produce great joy and happiness. But with time, they begin to feel more alone. They experience self-doubt and they feel the consequence of their unmet needs. They begin to see the other person more like they truly are and not what they needed them to be. They usually begin to find faults in others and they may become jealous, angry, bitter, sarcastic or cynical. Many will separate or remain together in misery. They will often have children and try to raise a family in an effort to revive the relationship or to feel better. Many will have an affair. When they separate or divorce, some will get involved in another relationship too quickly. They try to find some way to ease the pain. They idealize this new person in their life and the cycle starts over. They say to themselves, “I’ll never be hurt like that again.

The desire to love…

The exact origin of the desire to love is difficult to comprehend, but can be appreciated in many ways.

When a man and woman encounter each other in midst of love they seek intimate contact. In a general sense, love is a response to something we intimately value. Romantic love is the experience of joy in the presence of a loved one, joy in being close to a loved one, and joy in our interaction with a loved one.


“Someone we love enters the room. Our eyes and heart light up. We look at this person. We feel a growing feeling of joy within us. We reach out and touch their hand. We feel happy and fulfilled.”


I believe we all have a profound need to find things in the world we care about and feel inspired by.

“Life is worthwhile – at any age – when we find something worth pursuing.”


The needs to express our true nature…

Psychologists have long recognized that both children and adults need something in their environment that is a source of “pleasure.” Maybe pleasure is a not the best word, but we do have a need to explore those things which are interesting and exciting.  We search for that which will charm us and bring us in touch with the awe and wonder we experienced when we were children.  We know that children are curious and adventurous. But the most important need of children and adults seems to be the expression of their true natureBeing who we truly are is important. Sterling Ellsworth called it our Real Self, our identity and our true nature.

Our Real Self and the nature of people are quite clear when we observe children. Any parent can readily see that children are inherently lovable and capable. And for children to grow into healthy adjusted adults, they need to be treated as lovable and capable beings. They also need to express their lovable and capable nature.

“From the moment of birth we begin looking for lights that will brighten our journey, provide us with purpose and meaning, and make our struggle worthwhile.”


It is here that we can begin to understand another important expression of romantic love.

Romantic love is a powerful way to express our capacity to love and to be loved. It is a way to focus our energy, our curiosity, and our desire for adventure. Romantic love is a source of pleasure and inspiration and is worth pursuing. Romantic love is a blessing of life. Romantic love confirms our lovable and capable nature.”


The dynamics of romantic love at work…

At the very core of Romantic Love I have observed and discovered a number of important dynamics at work.

1. Visibility (the desire to be seen)

To live successfully is to put ourselves into the world; to give expression to our thoughts, our values, and our goals. Whenever we express our personality, we make known our values, our intelligence, our sense of life, our rhythm and temperament. Each of us expresses ourselves in our behavior – how we act and what we say.  Whatever we express in our behavior can be reflected back by the response and the behavior expressed by others. We see how others respond if we are paying attention. The way they act, how they look at us, the way they speak to us, and especially the ways in which they don’t respond.

When we encounter a person who thinks as we do, and notices what we do, and values what we do, we experience a strong feeling of contact with that person.


“In loving you, I see in you a part of me that is also you. I also see in you something that is really me. And there is you, a person of many qualities – a person who is a mystery – a person I am drawn to.”


All life – by its very nature – entails a possibility of defeat. Because of this, we find pleasure and reassurance in the expression of life. Sharing our life and participating in life is reassuring that life is possible. Romantic love is an intense sharing and reassurance that life is possible.”


So we find pleasure in the experience of life which endure. We take comfort in the experience of this. This comfort is a greater gift than any explicit words or advice: The sight of a lovable person. The awareness of a capable child. There is something in each of us that finds pleasure in watching the healthy assertiveness in a child make his way into the world. Finding ourselves romantically in love is always associated with a hope that it will endure.

2. Visibility & Self-Discovery

The agony of not being recognized or seen by others is a source of many problems and insecurities. When we are seen by others, there is always some element of self-discovery available to us. The first time we feel loved, there is an enormous pleasure and excitement in finding someone who sees and values us. A sustained experience of visibility in any relationship that goes to any significant depth will generate self-discovery and expanded awareness.

3. Visibility & Understanding

The desire to be seen and understood are inseparable. When we are told we are loved, there is something in us that feels joy. And there is something in us that wants to know what others see. The desire for visibility is related to our desire to be understood. For any individual, blind love may help numb or settle anxiety, but it will not answer our hunger to be seen and understood. People who feel misunderstood will often go to great lengths to be seen.

Being visible does not always lead to love. But love devoid of visibility is an illusion.

4. Visibility & Validation

People often confuse the desire to be validated with a desire to be seen. Visibility and validation are not the same.

We have all known people with low self-esteem. In every case there is an excessive preoccupation with gaining approval and avoiding disapproval. There is an excessive desire for validation and support. People naturally confuse the need to feel good about themselves (self-esteem) with a need to be seen (visibility). The desire to be validated is not healthy when it becomes more important than honesty, integrity, or any expression of our lovable and capable nature.

The desire to be validated is not a sign of low self-esteem. But people with good self-esteem do not run around acting super normal, hiding their faults, showing off, or trying to impress people just to be validated.  The more they take pride in who they are, and the more they act in a way that makes them proud, the more eager they are to be seen for who we are. Self-esteem means confidence in our capable nature, and it means confidence in a loveable identity.


“We are not mistakes. Mistakes are how we learn. We are all inherently loveable and capable. We may not be treated that way. We may even come to believe we are not lovable and capable because of the way people treat us. All love endures between people who recognize their lovable and capable nature and that nature in the others.”


When we feel lovable and capable we want others to see us as we truly are – not who we pretend to be. We look to see if they can see and communicate to us their discovery of who we really are. We want people to see and value the identity we were born with and what we have grown to become. We want people to see us and treat us as lovable and capable.

In romantic love, two people see each other in a unique way. And they experience each other in a deeper and more complete way than any other relationship.

5. Visibility & Sexuality

We are more than human. We are beings of a specific gender. Contained in every human is the awareness of being male or female. It is an integral and intimate part of our self-concept and our identity. We are not merely human beings. We also experience ourselves as male and female. Our sexual identity is rooted in the reality of our biological nature. Our sexuality is not simply our physical maleness or femaleness. Our sexual identity is the experience of our maleness and our femaleness.

“The polarity of male and female generates a dynamic tension. These differences can be complementary and provide a window into aspects of ourselves that were never known.”


Our sexual identity is central to who we are. We not only want to be seen by others as a certain kind of human being. We want to be seen as a man or woman. Despite the many differences between men and women, we can compliment each other in many basic, mysterious and wonderful ways.

“As far as I can tell, masculinity is the expression of man’s belief that the creation of a woman was nature’s most brilliant idea. And femininity is the expression of women’s belief that the creation of man is nature’s most brilliant idea.”


We all carry some male and female aspects within us. In men, the male principle is usually predominate. In women, the female principle is usually predominate. A man knows what it feels like to be a man in a way that no woman can fully understand. The same principle applies for women. The difference in perspective available to men and women when encountering each other represents, at least potentially, a deeper range of knowing our self and another person. In other words, a wider range of possibilities exists between men and women than between members of the same sex. The deepest level of self-understanding for a man requires interaction with the opposite sex. In relating to people who are different, especially the opposite sex, we can potentially experience the fullest range of who we are, who we aren’t, and aspects of ourselves we deny or never realized. The polarity between man and woman generates and accentuates self-discovery and self-understanding.

We have all heard how some people can meet someone for the first time and then experience a sudden shock of recognition.  There is an odd sense of familiarity, a mysterious sense of having encountered the person before – as if the person was already known. These people experience a sense of fascination over this mysterious familiarity and strangeness.  Something is known about this person in a powerful way.

In romantic love we perceive the other as a real or potential source of happiness. Desire is born. And desire leads to actions which result in pleasure and joy. If we are frightened or angered by our differences, love withers.


“Fascination, attraction, or passion may be born “at first sight”. But  love requires curiosity, patience, acceptance and seeing people for who they truly are. This usually takes time.”


6. Our Sense of Life & Romantic Love

A soul mate is a person who shares our sense of life. When we encounter another person, we encounter the presence of that person’s sense of life. Sometimes we can quickly sense something about the other person’s sense of life, how he or she feels about himself or herself, the joyfulness in their approach to life, or the defensiveness and fearfulness they endure. We can sense in people their level of enthusiasm, optimism, excitement or even their dread with life.

Our sense of life reflects many conscious and unconscious values. It reflects our broadest and deepest attitudes, and is grounded in our conclusions about the world, about life and about ourselves. When we are not allowed to express our lovable and capable nature, and when we are treated as unlovable and incapable beings, we develop a sense of life in which the world is not open to our thoughts, is unconcerned about our feelings, and unaffected by our actions.

Our sense of life can also reflect a strong and healthy self-esteem, a clear sense of value in our life, and a conviction that our world is open to our lovable and capable nature. Or it can reflect the torture of self-doubt, embittered resentment, tragic defiance, complaining resignation, aggressive impotence, a perverse sense of martyrdom, a view of the world that is sordid and senseless, or the anxiety that we may live in a world were we are unlovable and incapable.

There are potential problems whenever a couple has a different sense of life.  It is essential that people in love fully recognize, appreciate and accept differences in their sense of life.  Even when they don’t, things can still go well initially – especially when people put their “best foot” forward.  Eventually the difference in your sense of life will surface with unexpected results.  People eventually stop pretending or begin to notice with time how you really are.

Our sense of life and our approach to life develops with the first expression of our Real Self. It matters how our parents respond and it matter how other people treat us.  It matters if parents treat us as unlovable or incapable.  It matters if our parents treat each other as lovable and capable.   When people treat us like we are unlovable and incapable, and when they treat each other that way, life can become a grudging responsibility where people may become no more than objects or a means to an end, and new relationships are formed on the basis of social economics. We may begin to value ourselves not for who we are, but for how we look, what we can do and what we have or own. We may develop a sense of life where we shrink our awareness, blame others, give up their responsibilities, or we may come to believe that life is no longer an adventure in which every moment offers the opportunity to learn. When two people who respond to life in radically opposing ways meet, a potential barrier to romantic love may be formed.


7. Complementary Differences & Similarities

The second principle involves the “similarities and differences” between people. The most basic similarity is that a man and a woman are both human. The most basic difference is that people are male or female.

In romantic love, a man and woman must experience their differences, at least to some degree, as mutually enriching, and as capable of drawing out untapped awareness and potential in each other. Their intimacy is an adventure resulting in expanded consciousness and the profound sense of being alive. The key is whether the couple experiences their differences as complementary or antagonistic. This will depend on the willingness and ability of both people to appreciate and find value in the other person.


“Romantic love offers us the possibility self-discovery through deep contact with another.”


If you are in love, you might ask yourself, “What part of myself does my lover bring me into fresh contact with”? “How do I experience myself in this relationship”? “When I am with my lover, what feels most alive within me”?


8. Rhythm & Energy

Most people possess an inherent biological rhythm that is easy to feel but difficult to describe when you don’t know what to look for. This rhythm and energy is deeply connected to whether or not romantic love actually ignites or endures.

Rhythm and energy can be observed in our speech patterns, emotional responses and body language. Closely related is the observation that some people are naturally more or less energetic than others – physically, emotionally or intellectually. Some people move, feel, think faster or slower depending on the circumstance and their environment. Some people are impulsive or impatient. They may even experience a different sense and relationship to time.

Sometimes two people meet and are on the verge of falling in love. They may have a lot in common and they may be physically attracted on the basis of their appearances.  Yet they can feel strangely out-of-sync with each other. They may even feel irritated and have difficulty accounting for these feelings. The person who is naturally fast and eagerly explores life may feel chronically impatient with a person who savors life at a slower pace. The person with a less fevered pace may feel chronically pressured.   The person who interprets these differences as personal or intentional by the other will feel frustrated and even angry in the relationship.

Failure to understand the importance of our rhythm and energy, and the effect on relationships, will lead to quarrels and disagreements. These differences can become antagonistic even though they have the potential to become complimentary.   When couples don’t recognize or appreciate their differences, many will become extreme or try to change the other person in order to create a balance. When this fails couples begin to look for faults in each other. As the relationship begins to fail, they may begin to explain their problems in terms of the alleged faults. They remain unaware of a deeper reason for their discomfort and acceptance of differences.

When a man and woman meet and feel “in sync”, there can be an exhilarating experience of harmony and that their relationship is right. Being “in sync” is an experience of knowing the other in a very special sense. Both may resonate to a marvelous kind of rhythm.

Once you are aware of this phenomena, and notice it in your relationships, you can better understand why people are attracted and irritated by each another. Rhythm and energy are the means to explore difference and similarities and to gain a deeper harmony and compatibility.

9. The Private Universe of Romantic Love

Another essential principle to understanding romantic love is the concept of “A private universe.” Two people in love can create a private universe out of their sense of individuality, their similar sense of life, their differences and similarities, their rhythm and energy, and the capacity to make meaningful contact with each other. This universe can be shared with silent understandings, unspoken words, humorous signals, and focused glances.  Conversations and physical contact become wondrous, exciting and safe.


Romantic love is based on shared sight and is shaped by happiness. Immature love is based on shared blindness, and is merely a fortress against pain.”


Romantic love is a sanctuary, and a source of nourishment and energy. Sometimes romantic love is the only point of certainty, and the only thing that is solid and real in the midst of chaos and ambiguity.”


27
Dec
09

* the beauty of lines and shapes – the Ion Orchard…

27
Dec
09

* change your perspective, change your life! the Christmas tree…


Is there any relation between the cosmos universe pictures above and the ordinary looking Christmas tree in the picture below?

20
Dec
09

* the beauty of natures in close-up…

19
Dec
09

* the bee & the lotus…

19
Dec
09

* the beauty at dusk…

19
Dec
09

* the beach party…

19
Dec
09

* Nature, the painter…

19
Dec
09

* the fears…

19
Dec
09

* meal time…

19
Dec
09

* looking over…

19
Dec
09

* reaching up…

19
Dec
09

* the authentic self…

19
Dec
09

* the feeling of love…

19
Dec
09

* the raining after…

18
Oct
09

* Every man is the architect of….

zDSC_3971

“Every man is the architect of his own fortune…” – Sallust

18
Oct
09

* To accomplish great things…

zDSC_3940

“To accomplish great things we must dream as well as act…” – Anatole France

11
Oct
09

* experience tells you…

zDSC_3446

“Experience tells you what to do; confidence allows you to do it.”- Stan Smith

11
Oct
09

* if you aren’t going all the way…

zDSC_3866

“If you aren’t going all the way, why go at all? – Joe Namath

11
Oct
09

* why we always have time to do it over and over again…?

zDSC_3784

“Why is it we never have time to do it right, but we always have time to do it over?” – Zig Ziglar

11
Oct
09

* the choices you make today will determine…

zDSC_2518

“You are free to choose, but the choices you make today will determine what you will have, be, and do in the tomorrow of your life…” Zig ZigLar

11
Oct
09

* one learns people through the heart not…

zDSC_2034

“One learns people through the heart, not the eyes or the intellect…” – Mark Twain

11
Oct
09

* anything that changes your values changes…

zDSC_2029

“Anything that changes your values changes your behaviour…” -  Max Stein

11
Oct
09

* our words reveal our thoughts…

zDSC_4461

“Our words reveal our thoughts ; manners mirror our self-esteem;
our actions reflect our character; our habits predict the future…” – William Arthur Ward

11
Oct
09

* the best time to do something is…

zDSC_4173

“The best time to do something significant is between yesterday and tomorrow…” – Zig Ziglar

11
Oct
09

* each of us will one day be judged by…

zDSC_2814

“Each of us will one day be judged by our standard of life, not by our standard of living; by our measure of giving, not by our measure of wealth; by our simple goodness, not by our seeming greatness…” – William Arthur Ward




Authors

Blog Stats

  • 20,338 hits

Archives

 

January 2012
M T W T F S S
« May    
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  
What Is The Secret

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.