Exploring Relationships - Interpersonal
Yoga (page 6)
1
| 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
Interpersonal Tools
Here are some structures or tools to experiment with
that can open up different aspects of your relationships
and loosen or unravel some of the knots. One dimension of
yoga is creating the tools you need to work with your own
particular problem areas. You may want to elaborate and
modify these to fit your circumstances.
- First, identify the knots by being alert for emotionally
sensitive areas and repetitiveness of any kind - no matter
how reasonable or justifiable each side seems.
- Try to unravel each knot by identifying its underlying
value systems, noting any patterns in reactions, and discovering
what each of you are getting out of keeping the knot.
- Be willing to stay with an impasse, watching its dynamics
and following the fears, without trying to change it.
Just learn about it by living with it.
- Check to see if you're honestly more interested in blaming,
punishing, or winning than in communicating. (Feelings
of relish are especially suspect.)
- See if you can forget yourself temporarily and put yourself
in the other's place, to find the internal consistency
in their viewpoint and describe it objectively.
- Before responding, interpret in your own words what
the other has just said to their satisfaction. This can
help you see what you may be missing.
- Arranging "feedback sessions" periodically
allows feedback to be given outside the context of a heated
discussion. And it also keeps it from inundating your
life.
- Writing in a journal when confused or upset can reveal
and intensify underlying emotions, and show their connection
to thoughts and values.
- In watching your responses, it's useful to separate
how the content of the message affects you from how you
react to the way it's presented.
- Tape recording your talks or arguments allows you to
see your own patterns and view the knot from a removed
place. It also helps you recognize complaining, sarcasm,
put downs, and blame. Listening to yourself is difficult,
but crucial, since this rarely occurs in a heated discussion.
Life is full of surprises once you begin to live with the
actual problem at the core of a knot, instead of the reactions
and values that coat it. Often you get back in touch with
love, which has its own unpredictable problem-solving magic.
There are always potential knots that need periodic working
out. Whether you meet them creatively, or whether you close
down in the face of them, is what matters. But there is
also a risk in serious exploration: you may discover that
you have drifted apart as your interests have changed, or
that you're no longer right for each other. Yet, there's
more danger in not confronting your problems, for this undermines
your own growth and brings stagnation into your life.
Approaching relationships as yoga creates levels of communication
and openness that are unique. Part of the process of yoga
involves keeping it new and vital by being very alert for
the onset of habits, set routines and boredom, because when
the mechanical creeps in, it can dull anything. Communication
is the key that can allow love to ripen through time. A
relationship that promotes newness and creativity while
developing the closeness and depth that only time can bring,
is hard to replace. The context of such a relationship offers
the opportunity to learn about yourself, the people you
are involved with, and the world, in a way that can only
come through real communication.
1 |
2 | 3
| 4 | 5
| 6
|