Plenty Of Fish

There are many people in this world who believe that becoming involved in an intimate relationship will be the precise thing that will make their lives all the better. They begin to invest a good chunk of their energy looking for someone out there to complete them or spend their lives with. In doing so, they place various personal ads out there on the Internet and peruse the dating sites daily looking for and hoping to meet “the one”. They continue to maintain a belief that there are plenty of fish in the sea where one of them is going to be the prime catch for themselves. As one date after another fails, or they get stood up, or conversations started online end up going nowhere, they get frustrated. Unfortunately, what they don’t realize is that the one fish they should be seeking and the one relationship they should be working on, is with themselves.

For the longest time, while I represented one of those fish in the sea waiting to either catch another fish or be caught in someone else’s net, I didn’t realize how much I was turning into a carcass rotting from the inside out. I had failed to see how I was seriously neglecting taking care of myself and working through all of my addictions and obsessions and character defects. Although my Higher Power was trying to send me blatant messages indicating this, I ignored all of them and maintained my fervent search and desire to be in an intimate relationship with someone else. I refused to allow myself to see the common factor in all those bad dates I went on, all those boring conversations I had with others from the dating sites, and all those failed short-term relationships I landed in. That common factor was always me.

In every case, no matter who I was pursing, I always found something wrong with them. What I didn’t realize is that each of them were a mirror to all the things I felt about myself. When I met someone I thought was ugly, it’s because I believed I was ugly. When I met someone I felt was boring, it’s because I believed I was boring. And when I met someone I thought droned on and on too much about their life, it’s because I droned on an on about my life with everyone else. The hard core truth is that each thing I judged in all of those fishes of the sea I had met were really things I felt about myself. All of them were only mirrors for the things I should have been working on healing from within myself. The simple fact was that although I had found sobriety from alcohol and drugs, I was still an addiction prone person living out a life of misery, self-pity, selfishness, and self-centeredness. The bottom line was that I really didn’t love myself just as I was and because of that, I was never going to find any success with any of those fishes I met in the sea of life. By not loving myself, I was never going to be able to unconditionally love and accept anyone I met and instead I would only look at each of them with a tainted set of eyes.

This is precisely why 12 Step recovery programs recommend a person like I once was, stay out of intimate relationships (if they weren’t already in one at the time of becoming sober) for at least a year. That is only to help them develop time to work on healing and developing that better relationship with themselves. I didn’t do that so I spent many years going from person to person, having tumultuous dating experiences, and occasionally falling back into some addiction based behaviors because of it.

Just to be frank, I know not everyone is an addiction based person who needs a 12 Step recovery program. But what I’ve found is that most people, regardless of whether they are addiction based or not, go from one fish to another finding something wrong with each of them solely because they haven’t worked through enough of their own baggage in life and usually don’t love themselves. Instead, they chase one fish after another, judging each of them until they finally land in an intimate relationship with one of them whom they initially really like. The relationship starts off like a drug that makes them feel really good but as time moves forward, it no longer gives them that feel good feeling it once gave them and they begin to see all the things in the other partner that they don’t like about themselves. Or maybe they start to get afraid of all the good qualities the other person has that they don’t have. Either way, they begin sabotaging it until it ends with them being back in that pool with the plenty of other fish that exist, starting the cyclical process all over again. Until they become willing to look in the mirror, face their baggage, and begin to love themselves a lot more, they will continue to repeat this pattern of not liking something about every fish they meet. And sadly, some of those fish they meet are people they could spend the rest of their lives with, except they won’t see that because they’re blinded by their own disgust of themselves.

If you are relating to any of what I’ve been saying and have been finding no success in the dating realm, I encourage you to take a moment, breathe, and realize that maybe the Universe has been trying to send you a message. Are you able to go right now and look in a mirror and tell yourself that you like what your seeing? Have you worked through a lot of your own baggage and inner demons? Can you honestly say you truly love yourself unconditionally? If you answered “No” to any of these questions, there’s a good chance that while there are plenty of fish in the sea, none of them are ever going to suit your fancy because your fish of a life has been slowly turning into that carcass and rotting away for years. So maybe it’s best to take some time away from the dating realm and start working on being able to answer “Yes” to each of those questions. As maybe then, the Universe will guide you in a current straight towards another fish, who will end up being the one you mate with for the rest of your life.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

“With Great Power, Comes Great Responsibility…”

I’ve often wished that God would grant me superpowers, like those in the comic books, so that I could use them to help make this world a happier, healthier place to live in. It hasn’t happened yet, at least not that I’m aware of it. But it’s got me thinking lately that maybe the reason why has something due to the message behind what Uncle Ben was saying to Peter Parker in the Spider-Man comics when he said “With great power, comes great responsibility…”

Up until not too long ago, I wasn’t very good with responsibility. People couldn’t rely upon me as I was too deeply focused on my addictions and obsessions. I also had a tremendous ego and was completely selfish and self-centered. Everything I did for anyone usually had some type of price tag attached to it. I can only imagine what I would have done in those moments if I had some type of superpower given to me.

Take X-Ray vision for example. In those totally self-absorbed days, I would have used that power to enhance my sexual addiction with every person I found attractive in this world and ignored any type of responsibility with that type of gift.

How about super strength? In those days where I didn’t care about selflessness and only looked out for the accolades from others, I most likely would have used that power for hire or sought fame from using it. I also might have used it to bully some of those who were bullying me at the time and ended up seriously hurting them in the process.

Invisibility, super speed, mind-reading, it doesn’t really matter what the power would have been, I would have taken any of them in all those egocentric moments and either enhanced my addiction prone life or sought money and notoriety from using them.

A lot has changed for me in the past few years. And while I would still love to have superpowers these days, my use of them would be a lot different now. I could see myself being a lot more like those heroes in the comic books such as when Peter Parker became Spider-Man. He had to learn the hard way what his Uncle Ben was truly saying when he abused his abilities for ego based purposes and lost his uncle tragically because of it. I’ve always admired the hero he developed into after that tragic event, as it was never based upon his ego after that.

In the television show Heroes that came out a bunch of years ago, people started evolving and developing these superhuman abilities. The show portrayed how those people went in one of several directions upon finding out they had a unique gift. Some followed in Spider-Man’s footsteps and became silent heroes who never took the glory for anything. Others thought their gift was a curse and tried to avoid using it at all or looked constantly for its cure. And then there were those who became so ego-based with what they could do with their new ability, they caused more damage and destruction to the world when using it.

Given the state of our world today with how many tragedies occur every single moment that range from a minor to a major scale, the presence of superheroes, like in the comic books, could really help to reduce them. Unfortunately though, they could also end up increasing them just as much. As for every humble hero like Spider-Man or Superman who were examples of the true do-gooders, there were also those like the Dr. Octopus and General Zod who sought control of others and put themselves on raised pedestals because of their abilities.

Maybe this is why we haven’t evolved enough yet enough in our world to develop any of these enhanced super abilities. Because if we did, we might tear ourselves apart at the seams with the amount of self-centeredness that still is present in so many of us. I’m convinced that if life does exist outside this planet, which I believe it does, that there are worlds who do have people living actively with superpowers and handling them with great responsibility and humility. But in our world, granting the wrong person with powers such as what Superman has, could lead to even greater global catastrophes than what we already are having to deal with.

Hopefully one day, this planet will evolve to a level where EVERYONE is more concerned in helping each other out much more so than boosting their own egos, controlling others, and watching out for themselves. As when a day like that comes, maybe then God will open up those doorways within us for superhero like abilities to manifest…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Once A Cheater, Always A Cheater??? – Part II

It’s been almost a week now since I discovered my partner cheated on me and only a few days since I wrote about it in here where I came to the conclusion that I needed to give my partner a second chance. While I’ve had a little more time to clear my head and have really tried to start moving on from this, I’m finding doing so is proving to be extremely difficult. Having felt betrayed and my trust broken by him, has left me feeling like a wounded bird who keeps re-injuring itself over and over again through its own actions.

One may think, how is that actually possible?

In my case, it comes down to one simple thing. I have been spending vast amounts of time interrogating my partner about every littlest detail of this whole infidelity experience from the beginning of how it started to the end of when I caught him. What I am beginning to realize though in doing this is that it’s not only causing me more pain each time I do so, it’s also causing him more of that as well. And while my ego seems to get some sense of satisfaction out of that, my spirit has been showing me that neither of us are ever going to heal and move on from this if I keep doing that behavior.

The simple fact is that this infidelity experience occurred, but it’s now done and over with…hopefully and God willing. Rehashing any of the minute details of the whole thing has been doing nothing more than raising my anxiety, causing me to feel sick to my stomach, and reliving it over and over again. I’m not sure if it would ever even be possible to grasp why my partner did this as there are any number of reasons as to why he was led to doing it. I’m not him, I don’t have his thinking processes, nor the old tapes that play in his brain. So none of his explanations that he might offer me, nor having him tell me any more details of the experience, will help me in the least bit. Instead, it just makes me more frustrated and more angry to where I lash back out again at him.

While my ego might like the lashing bit because it wants my partner to know the pain I feel, my spirit does not. Doing so is not practicing forgiveness and beginning the movement towards healing and acceptance. It seems as if each time I probe my partner for more and more data trying to wrap my brain around what happened, I grow more sad, frustrated, and angry. In turn, he goes into deeper levels of guilt and shame and having any more of those feelings is not going to help him heal from this either. Thankfully, he’s taken some steps to find a therapist to help in his own process of healing as I know my partner feels terrible about what he’s done. If I’m truly going to practice forgiveness, I must, at all costs, drop my interrogation and berating to allow him to heal.

I know there’s a part of my partner that has been wounded ever since his childhood when he molested at around the same age that I was. Like it did for me for years and years, I believe being molested has prevented him from ever being able to fully receive unconditional love from anyone. While it will be his therapist’s job to help him figure this out, I can see clearly how my partner was trying to self-sabotage the deep intimacy and closeness we had been experiencing prior to his indiscretion because it was totally foreign to him.

The bottom line is that if I want my partner or myself to heal and move on from this experience, I need to let it go. That means not talking about it and rehashing all of its details. That means not berating my partner when I feel some of the pain surface from within me about it. That means waiting patiently for him to share with me anything that may come up during his own healing process. And that means going to my Higher Power through prayer and meditation to trust that I will heal from it as well.

I think it’s a normal reaction to want to know every little detail on a partner’s indiscretion, especially when so much love and trust is broken from it. I also believe it’s a normal reaction to lash out at the partner who cheated because of feeling betrayed. But to become a spiritual person filled with love and light and to give my partner a second chance, I know I must let all of those behaviors go and trust that God will guide the two of us through our own healing processes in our own way.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson