I live in a very transient area. People move here and move away all the time. It's one of the most painful aspects of living here, especially for a person like me who clings to people like a barnacle. “Don't leave me! Stay!” Except, the thing is, even if a person is physically present, it doesn't mean they're emotionally present, or that they'll be emotionally present all the time. Well crap. What's a person to do?
I'm going to pass on a secret: Be there
for yourself. Counter to all the messages we're being fed, the
solution to fears of abandonment is not to find that one perfect
person to spend the rest of our life with. The solution is to give
that to ourselves. To say to myself, “Rebekah, I'm here. I'm not
going anywhere, I'm not ever going anywhere. I'll stay.” People,
and pets for that matter, come into and out of our lives, but the two
constant presences are ourselves and the Supreme. My spiritual
teacher says God is our one true friend, our constant, forever
companion. But how often are we nurturing these relationships? How
often are we instead taking them for granted?
Won't you stay? Oh, I have to be there for me? Oh, right. |
One of the most powerful messages I've
gleaned from being in recovery is that I'm in a relationship
with my Higher Power. That God is not Santa Claus, rewarding me when
I'm good and punishing me when I'm bad. And that just like any other
relationship, we need to spend time together to improve it. We need
to communicate with one another, to talk and to listen. It's easy to
neglect the relationship because it's always there, to take it for
granted, but I'm reminded again, it's one of the most important
relationships in my life.
The
other most important relationship in my life is the one with me. Am I
here for me? Am I taking care of me? Am I treating myself like a
friend? Saying nice things to myself, encouraging myself, forgiving
myself for mistakes? My inclination is to turn outward, to focus on
outside relationships, other people, what they're doing, what they're
saying, how they feel. My meditation practice, however, is about
turning inward, asking instead what am I doing, what am I saying, how
do I feel?
A few
weeks ago I went to a group meditation and I'm the only one that
showed up. I know, that sounds weird because if no one showed up then
it was solo meditation, but the intention was to meditate with
others. I felt so awkward, sitting in a space that belongs to a
friend, meditating alone when usually I'm surrounded by others. But
then the awkwardness faded as I felt the presence of my Higher Power,
and the presence of me. Instead of being by myself, I was with
myself. No longer did I feel alone because I had me and I had my
Higher Power. It was one of the sweetest meditations I've experienced
for awhile. So in answer to the question, “Won't you stay?” the
answer is yes, Rebekah, I will.
I
dream of a world where we develop the relationships with ourselves
and with the divine. A world where we feel the presence of us and
something greater than us. A world where we remember we are never
alone because we have our one true companion by our side.
Another
world is not only possible, it's probable.
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