Conversation

"1. How much does your lifestyle allow time and space for intimate exchanges with your partner? 2. How isolated are you and your partner from a network of nurturing relationships? 3. How much does fear of poverty or competition with others drive your lifestyle?"
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"Another kind of happiness exists that you can feel steadily whether you are in a relationship or not. It comes from the sense of connectedness that happens when all your parts love one another and trust and feel accepted by your Self."
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"When you have that kind of love swirling around inside you, it spills out to people around you, and those people become part of your circle of love and support. You don’t need intimate others to keep you out of the inner dark sea because that sea has been drained...."
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"So we’ve all been set up—victims of a cruel joke. First we are loaded with emotional burdens by our family and peers, and then taught to exile the parts carrying them. Then we are told to go out into the world and find that special person who can make us finally like ourselves."
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"Together we and our partner enter the striving, frenetic whirlpool American lifestyle that precludes time together, isolates us from community, depletes and stresses us out, and offers innumerable addictive distractions that further isolate us."
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"Using structured communication packages, your therapist may convince you both to drop your defenses and open to each other once again.... Both of you are too depleted, vulnerable, and needy, and too focused on the other for any improvements to last."
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