Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Common Ground

Our best friends are the best and our closest relationships are so close because we share a lot of common ground with those individuals. This common ground is often built upon shared experiences.  We meet someone on the first day of school and we go through every day with them, side by side, we hear the same lectures, we do the same assignments, we interact with the same people, we share hours and hours of our life together.  We are friends because our lives are entwined.  Over time these experiences build a bond.  Inside jokes develop, we know what each other is thinking by body language, and we feel like we really know each other.  These types of shared experiences often develop at work, school, church, clubs, on sports teams, in our neighborhoods and families. 

Deep and lasting bonds are built on more than just shared experiences. We share interests, values and passions. It's more than just experiencing the same thing, it is reacting to those events in a similar way.  We are more likely to be close friends with someone that shares our sense of humor and laughs at the same things we do.  We are drawn to people who laugh when we laugh, and cry when we cry - those who share our reaction to the world.

Our reactions to the world stem from our personality and our core beliefs.  They define what is sacred, what is funny, what is important, what is meaningful, and what is abhorrent to each individual.  These values are key to how we view and react to the world around us, most especially the people around us. What is funny to one may be obscene to another.  What we value differs, and it differs by degree.   No two are exactly the same.  Most people have some things in common, some shared values, beliefs, interests, or desires.  If you look hard enough, you can usually find some common ground between two individuals. 

Deep thinkers want to have conversations with other deep thinkers.  Born skeptics want to hash out theories with other skeptics. Sports fans want to play, watch and talk about sports with other sports fans.  It's no fun to take someone to the hockey game that hates hockey.  It is painful to have your enthusiastic response fall on deaf ears.   In short, birds of a feather, flock together. 

It's not an exclusionary mindset.  It's not necessarily judgmental.  It's just human nature, it's logical.  It requires a lot of effort to build a relationship with someone who is vastly different from us.  We have to dig deep to find the common ground.  There may be great rewards for that effort, but it won't come easily, and most people don't have what it takes to work that hard on a relationship. It does not mean that we don't love, respect, or value people who are different than we are.  It just means that life moves along more harmoniously when we are surrounded by people who see the world similarly to the way we see it. 

We naturally gravitate to those that share the most sacred of our common ground.  Friendships, marriages, and business partnerships that share a set of core beliefs have a better chance of success.  This is not to say that we should find clones of ourselves, and only associate with them.  We all need to share our strengths with each other.  Finding team members who possess complimentary skills and talents is critical.  What I am talking about are core values.  When our core values are aligned with our team, then things flow more easily, and success is more easily attained. When we want the same things, and define success in the same way, we can move down that path more freely.   

Relationships can erode when common ground is lost.  If one or more of the parties radically depart from the status quo, it can be difficult.  What was once shared is now in conflict.  Resolving that conflict is a big challenge.  It's  difficult to adjust to a new way of relating with someone you have known for a long time.  The points where you used to connect don't line up anymore, and the change is unsettling.  This does not mean that the parties involved no longer love or care for each other.  It's not a matter of allowing or accepting that the other person has changed, it's figuring out how to connect with this new set of differences.  When individuals change, their relationships also change, as a natural consequence.  It's hard to know just where the relationship stands when the common ground erodes out from under you.

This can especially be true when someone changes their political affiliation or religious beliefs.  What are the two subjects best avoided in polite society?  Religion and politics?  That's because the emotions attached to these points run deep.  They pretty much set the stage for an individual's world view.  These type of fundamental changes represent a major shift in how a person thinks and feels about life.  It changes how they react to the events and people around them.  It changes their relationships. 

When someone close to use has a major shift in previously shared core beliefs it can feel like a personal rejection.  For the person that has not made any shift, it can feel like the other party is rejecting them personally, along with their previously shared world view.  If they no longer agree with how you think, they no longer agree with you.  If they no longer value your ideals, they no longer value you.  If they think your beliefs are wrong, they think you are wrong.  It's a pretty logical conclusion to make.  Logical maybe, but not necessarily helpful. If the particular core belief that changed was what the relationship was built upon, it might be insurmountable.  How can two hunting buddies remain close friends when one of them becomes a vegan and a PETA activist?  

The person who converts to a different religion, moves to a new country, or swaps political parties is a brave soul. Breaking with the pack can leave a person alone and without any deep connections.  The old connections are weakened, even if the individuals involved are loving and accepting of the change, they no longer have the strength of unity, and opportunities for shared experiences diminish.  New connections are just that, new.  They don't have the benefit of years of shared experiences and so they are weaker.  Often people revert back to their traditional religion, country, or ideology.  It's hard to go it alone.  Making new close connections takes time and life doesn't stop throwing challenges at you so you can get your new support system in place. 

In most cases, if both parties really try, common ground can be found.  It might be a small little plot, but it would be somewhere to start.  When there is no longer any common ground, cherish the memories and respectfully part ways.  When you come upon someone newly landed in your circle, extend a hand of friendship and help them build the strong connections they need.  Love, patience, and understanding go along way toward finding common ground.
 

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Love Songs

Forget the flowers and the chocolates, let's DANCE!

Here's a playlist all ready to go.  So, hang up the disco ball, turn on the strobe light and dance the night away!

Happy Valentine's Day!



Yes, Journey is heavily represented here. I know, Faithfully is on there twice - sorry - that's how much I like that song. You may also have noticed a few anti-love songs, like that one by Joan Jett.  It's a great song, and hey, not every love story is a happy one.  I didn't include Love Stinks, cause well, that's just not true (and that is not a danceable song).  Love is great, even if it is a battlefield sometimes. :)

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Go Ahead and Shrug

This is the cover art from one of my favorite books. The image illustrates the story well. The weight of the world is on the broad, capable shoulders of Atlas.  The world is balanced, and safe as long as he holds strong.  Do the people walking around on the earth even notice the enormous job Atlas is performing on their behalf?  Do they know the sacrifice, or the personal strength it takes to carry that load? What if Atlas were to shrug? Where would they be then? More importantly, what would Atlas do without that burden on his back?   Atlas is a metaphor for the hard working people of the world, the contributors, those that produce. 

Tonight at yoga class we were working on opening up our shoulders.  My shoulders are typically tight, and I have to consciously remember to roll them down and away from my ears.  Shoulder work takes effort for me, and tonight was no exception.  While we were in the middle of a particularly challenging pose  with a very small movement we switched quickly from stretching shoulders  into opening up our chest.  The instructor explained that when our shoulders are tight, it makes it difficult for our chest to open.  The tight shoulders pull our chest inward.

At that moment my understanding opened up and I made a connection.  When we shoulder too many burdens, carry more than our own load, it makes it difficult for our hearts to be open. The emotional, energetic weight on our shoulders forces our hearts to close-in for protection.

Look at Atlas.  Where is his heart?  Can you see his chest?  It's closed and protected, to garner the strength, to bare the load.  He isn't standing - it's too much.  It is not right for one person to carry the weight of the world.   Even Atlas isn't really designed to do it for the long haul.  Carrying that much takes it's toll, and severely limits the joy the barer can experience.

It is hard to love when we try to carry it all.  We have to let those burdens go if we are to truly be open to love and be loved.  The burdens are not ours to shoulder.  We need to shrug them off, let them roll on by, and open up our hearts and embrace the love. Go ahead and shrug.
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