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Discerning The Loving
HeartHow often have you had
the experience of connecting with someone – a friend or a
potential partner – who turns out to be an uncaring person?
At first you think this is a really good person, and then
down the line you discover that the person is
self-centered, narcissistic, angry and uncaring. You wonder
how you could be so wrong, and what can you do differently
next time?
I have discovered in my 35 years of counseling that people seem
to decide very early in their lives whether or not they want to
care about and have compassion for others’ feelings. As a
result, people have different levels of the willingness to feel
others’ feelings. Some of us deeply feel others’ pain and joy,
while other people don’t. Some people can recall caring about
others’ pain and joy from a very young age, while other people
remember being concerned mostly with their own feelings and
needs.
The people who have chosen the deeper level of compassion are
often the ones that become the caretakers, while the less
compassionate people become the takers. Caretakers are people
who have learned to take responsibility for others’ feelings
and well-being, while takers are people who expect others to
take responsibility for their feelings and well-being and often
blame others when they don’t take on this responsibility.
If you are a compassionate person who easily feels others’
feelings, you might find yourself drawn to people who are in
pain. Your compassionate heart naturally wants to help those
people who are in pain, not only out of caring, but also
because their pain is painful to you. The problem is that this
person might not care about your feelings as much as you care
about his or hers.
So, how do you become discerning of who has a loving, caring
and compassionate heart? The first step is to focus on
developing as much compassion for your own feelings as you have
for others. Often, very caring people leave themselves out,
caring about others far more than they care about themselves.
This leaves them vulnerable to becoming the caretaker for
someone who just wants someone else to take care of them, and
then gets angry when you don’t do it “right.” If you develop
compassion for yourself, you will start to feel much more
quickly when someone is not really caring about you. If you are
just focused on another’s feelings, you won’t notice what you
feel, and it is your own feelings that allow you to discern
caring from a lack of caring.
The next step is to understand and accept that, no matter how
caring you are to others, you have no control over how caring
others are with you. You can’t make someone be caring, and the
more you take care of another’s feelings and well-being while
ignoring your own, the less caring the other will be. The other
person becomes a mirror for your lack of caring about
yourself.
The more you learn to take full, 100% responsibility for your
own feelings, the more another’s lack of caring will be
intolerable to you. The more you are able to stay tuned into
yourself and trust your own perceptions, the quicker you will
discern a lack of caring in others. The more you accept your
lack of control over getting others to be caring, the quicker
you will let go of people who are intent on getting caring but
not much concerned with giving it.
It really doesn’t take long to discern the loving heart once
you have compassion for yourself, trust your perceptions, and
accept your lack of control over others. People betray their
intention to either give love or to get it, or to give to get,
with everything they say and do. With practice, you can learn
to discern the loving heart very early in a relationship. If
you want to stop recreating the same relationships over and
over, then develop your power of discernment.
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broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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