"Relationship
Advice: Why Selfishness is Okay"
By Susie and Otto Collins
Like
it or not, everyone (including you, us and everyone else)
is selfish.
We'd all
like to think we're not selfish but, we
are.
In our
opinion, being selfish isn't necessarily a bad thing.
In fact,
being selfish can actually be a good thing but here's where
the problem with being selfish comes in...
Most of
us have grown up with the idea that it's not okay to be selfish.
We may have been taught that being selfish is wrong and it's
more noble or important to put others' needs above our own.
Along
these lines, many of us were also taught that "unselfishness"
is the greatest expression of love--or the way to be in relationship,
as well as all the other aspects of our lives.
While
ignoring another person's feelings and
desires can certainly drive a wedge between
the two of you, so too can acting without
considering your own wants, needs or desires.
What you
may not understand or realize is that EVERYTHING that you,
we and every one else ever does, is done for selfish reasons.
Even the
desire to do something for someone
else is always done for our own selfish reasons -- because
what we do makes us feel
good in some way.
This still
doesn't mean this is wrong or "bad."
It's just that we find it to be very helpful to know our motivations
behind the "why" of what we do.
Many of
us have been in situations where we
really didn't want to do something but felt we
had no other choice.
When you
go ahead and do something you
don't want to do and your inner guidance is telling you not
to do it, your heart is just not in it.
When you
agree to do something because you are fearful that the other
person will be angry with you, be disappointed with you, or
make your life difficult if you don't, you are lying to yourself
and ignoring what's truly inside you.
And believe
it or not, this can be felt by the
other person. Even worse, you may feel
resentful and like a victim or martyr in those
moments.
Whatever
so-called self-less gift you were
intending to give to the other person is totally undercut
by your true feelings--and no true connection is made.
Monica
was constantly "doing" for everyone
including her kids and her husband--and she
was tired. Not only did she have a full-time job but she was
a taxi service for her kids after work and helped her husband
with his
business in the evenings--plus she looked in on her elderly
mother several times a week.
As a lot
of women, she had grown up with the
idea that the role of a woman was to be
completely selfless, always putting her family's needs before
her needs.
While
she loved being a wife and mother, she
was beginning to secretly get resentful of
always "doing" for others. She began to notice that
she was angrier with her loved ones than she used to be and
she didn't know what to do about it.
She didn't
want to appear to be selfish but she wanted some time for
herself to do what
she wanted to do.
If you
can relate in any way to Monica's situation, here are some
ideas to help you create more of what you want in your life,
while keeping your connection with your loved ones...
1. Take
a moment to breathe before you
automatically say yes!
Even if
you aren't ready to jump on the
"selfishness" bandwagon, we encourage you
to pause and take a few moments before you
say yes to anything else in your life.
2. Notice
what's an internal "yes" and an internal "no."
Create an internal way of recognizing your "yes"
and your "no." Think of a definite "yes"
and notice how that feels inside you. Now think of a definite
"no" and notice the difference.
Now tune
in to what's being asked of you and
notice whether it has a "yes" feel to it or a "no"
feel.
Do your
best to set aside any judgments about what's "right"
or "nice" or "helpful" or "expected."
Just notice
the feelings you are experiencing
right now. Try to remember that there are many ways for this
other person to get what he or she needs. You are not the
only avenue to what is being asked for.
When Monica's
husband asked if she would pick up his shirts at the dry cleaners
after work, before she said yes, she paused, turned her attention
inside herself and realized that she felt a loud "no."
Her day
was already packed with things to do
and she couldn't fit another thing into it.
3. Ask
yourself what you want.
Learning
to listen to yourself--to your wants,
needs and desires--is the first step in consciously creating
your life. Many of us aren't even aware or think we deserve
to have what we want so we go around doing what other people
want us to do and living their lives--not our own.
When Monica
asked herself what she wanted,
she realized that she not only wanted some time for herself
but also some connecting time just with her husband, without
the kids. She and her husband often went to their kids' activities
together but they seemed to never have any time alone.
4. Ask
yourself what you are willing to do, taking all of your self-judgments,
guilt and expectations out of it.
Monica
felt that she didn't have time in her day to pick up her husband's
shirts for him. Although she didn't want to disappoint or
inconvenience him, she realized that if she did this for him,
she would not be able to complete her other commitments and
she would resent him.
So she
decided that she was not willing to say
yes to his request to pick them up today but
she was willing to pick them up the next day.
5. Express
what you are willing and not willing to do from your heart
space--not from guilt, anger or resentment.
When Monica
talked with her husband, she was clear that what she had already
committed to wouldn't allow her to do as he asked but she
could pick them up the next day.
She said all of this with love in her heart for
herself and for her husband.
He was
surprised but listened to her and agreed that he could find
time to pick them
up himself.
6. Ask
for what you want.
If you completely ignore what you want, you
are not really serving yourself or your
relationship. Your relationship can't grow if you hold back
on what you want.
When Monica
told her husband that she wanted to have some time, maybe
that
weekend, for just the two of them to be together, he was excited
that she had brought it up. He wanted the same thing but knew
how busy they both were and hadn't mentioned it.
They both
knew that they needed to
revitalize their relationship and this was a good beginning.
So just
as damaging as it can be to ignore
another person's feelings and desires, it is
perhaps even more dangerous to ignore your own.
Knowing
what you want doesn't mean you
have to stomp on another person's wants. In fact, sometimes
when you act from what you truly desire, you find that there
is room for everyone's needs to be met.
We suggest
that you leave all of your previous notions about selfishness
behind.
You might
even re-think the whole concept.
Tune in to your feelings and what you want.
Know that you aren't the only one who could
do what seems required of you.
When
you act from your heart and with an
empowered willingness, not only will you feel better, it is
likely your loved ones will too!
*************************
Relationship coaches Susie and Otto Collins,
authors of "Should You Stay or Should You Go?" and "No More
Jealousy" are experts at helping people get more of the love
they really want. Learn the 5 keys to a closer, more loving
relationship, click below for your free 5-part mini-course:
http://www.Relationshipgold.com
*******************************
|