“You Two Are Like An Old Married Couple!”

I used to take the statement, “You two are like an old married couple!” as a total form of flattery when someone said that to me and the person I was spending time with. Over time though, I realized just how far that was from the truth. I began to notice how each of my connections being told that, never lasted very long. Because of this, how I handle this statement today is completely different when it’s directed towards any one of my relationships. Instead, I use it as a warning sign as it could be indicative of behaviors that are spiritually unhealthy within that connection.

For seven years I was in a domestic partnership with a man, who by the end of it, I secretly loathed. While the first few years of that relationship were wonderful, the last four were not. What most people saw by then were the two of us arguing over just about everything. I lost count of the number of times when people said how much we looked like an old married couple. The same thing can be said of a friendship that I had for about four years with someone in Massachusetts. In that connection, 9 times out of 10 when the two of us were together, minor arguments ensued, irritations flared up, and those around us would say that very same statement about us.

Those are only two examples of the many others when I’ve heard this statement. In each of them, there was always one common factor; lack of control. In many stereotypical old married couples, what that constant bickering is all about generally boils down to one or both not being in control and getting their way. The sad thing is that it’s often rooted in each person’s insecurities and those usually stem from unresolved issues from the past, sometimes even before that relationship ever came together.

In my case, I had a lot of unresolved mother issues up until just a few years ago. My mother was a very controlling person and I spent most of my life caving into each of her demands. As I grew up, I unfortunately became just like her and started trying to control all the people around me that I was close to. So when I wasn’t in control in a situation with any of those people, I’d start bickering and arguing with them in an attempt to get my way. And eventually, someone around that connection would get tired of hearing it and say that it was like that old married couple.

Thankfully, I’ve worked through all of my mother issues and continue to work on letting go of control by turning my will and my life over to the care of God each and every day. Frustratingly, I still heard that statement recently, as a few friends said that of my current partner and I. The difference now is that I can safely say the weight of that statement is not of my own doing. My partner is just starting his own uphill journey to letting go of his past, his control issues, his anger, and other insecurities he’s held onto for an entire lifetime. I plan on supporting him through this because I know we both want to spend the rest of our lives together. He also has the willingness to do the work necessary to get there and so do I. But just as importantly, neither one of us really wants to be like that old married couple who can do nothing more than constantly bicker and argue with each other over way too many things.

So if you are in any type of relationship where someone has told you that “The two of you are like an old married couple!”, you may want to take it as a wake-up call. While I believe it’s next to impossible to completely avoid ALL bickering and arguing, seeing it take place day after day isn’t spiritually healthy for either of you. Underlying each of those confrontations are control issues and deeply imbedded insecurities that need to be addressed. By avoiding them, you may find your relationship ending like so many of my own did. By working through them, you may find your relationship enduring, and even better, you may never have to hear that statement again.

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Mantra For The Day – For Releasing Anger And Resentments

One of the greatest poisons to a person’s mind, a body, and a soul is to hold onto any anger or resentments. I spent years harboring ill will towards my parents, towards the bullies from my grammar school days, towards the man who molested me, towards bosses from various jobs, towards various friends and people I dated, towards stranger who crossed my path, and even towards God. All that did was make me incredibly sick on far too many levels. One of the things that helped me to release all of that poison and heal has been to say a daily mantra that’s geared towards doing it. If you are prone to being an angry or resentment person, your current state of health may soon be, or is already quite possibly, suffering greatly because of it. You may want to start using the following daily mantra, as I know it will help you, like it has me, to become free of all of those unhealthy toxins, once and for all.

“I am free of anger and resentments in every area of my life, and I sent love, forgiveness, and peace to anyone who has ever hurt me.”

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

There’s Always A Diamond Somewhere In The Rough

I live in Toledo now where it’s seeing one of its coldest and snowiest winters on record. As much as I am struggling to deal with this frigid weather, I have been searching for that “diamond in the rough” when it comes to these recent elements here. And a few days ago, I actually found it when I saw that Lake Erie had completely frozen over.

One of the aspects of nature that I seem to have always been drawn to in life is to bodies of water like Lake Erie. I learned recently in my spiritual studies that the closest way we all have to experience God or Heaven is through communing in some part of nature. For me that generally have led to sitting near a stream, a river, a pond, a lake, or an ocean and being still. But rarely have I ever gotten to experience the temperatures being cold enough to allow me to walk or sit on any of the large bodies of water I’ve been drawn to. But that all changed the other day when I went down to Lake Erie and saw that it was completely frozen over.

It’s one thing to walk out on a small pond that’s completely frozen over like I often did as a kid. But it’s quite another thing altogether to venture out 1/2 mile onto a solid mass like Lake Erie has become lately. On a day that had crystal clear blue skies and not a breadth of wind stirring at all, I had cautiously taken one step after another alongside my closest friend out onto the ice of this huge lake. In the areas we walked, it was several feet thick where no level of foot stomping could break any of it. As the sun baked my face and warmed my body, I found it strange to think the temperature outside was only in the teens. By the time we came to a rest, the shoreline was far off in the distance and it was then that I did something that I felt completely connected me Source. I laid down on Lake Erie and spread my arms and legs out as far as they could. If there was a moment I could experience what I’d hope God or Heaven would be like, it was then.

For a guy like me who has been enduring such high levels of physical pain and waiting patiently upon God for any form of relief, being able to go that far out onto a large mass of ice was pure bliss. And even though it seemed to pass by in a blink of an eye, I know that for all those moments I was out there, I was a part of something greater that I can only hope was God.

So while it’s been easy to complain about how cold and how frozen life seems to be around here in this city lately, I am grateful that I was able to find something so beautiful within it. And what I discovered out there on frozen Lake Erie the other day, truly confirmed that age-old adage that there’s always a diamond somewhere in the rough…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson