What's happening in the example I talked about in the video is called "self-reliance".
It's the most important state of being a man can achieve. It's a place of deep inner confidence and well-being.
It's not a place where we say, "I don't f*cking need anyone!"
It's the only place where we can finally properly love someone and not enslave them with our insecurities and dependence.
Your self-reliance is the foundation for a truly healthy relationship
Have you ever read something that felt
powerfully true and powerfully disturbing at the same time?
Here’s a quote from a book I love on this topic...Beyond Success and Failure – Ways to Self-Reliance and Maturity:
“Dependency always
degrades. It degrades by mutual enslavement of both the dependent and the one on whom he leans. Both are equally guilty of dependence. The individual who is physically and psychologically self-reliant will not allow anyone to lean on him, as it would result in his enslavement if he permitted it. It becomes evident, then, that the one who leans and the one who allows himself to be leaned on are equally lacking in self-sufficiency. They are in a kind of mutual admiration society, which amounts to
a conspiracy to exploit each other. Both are in a condition of second-class citizenship, although one may imagine himself mistakenly as the strong one in the relationship. The fact remains that they degrade, inhibit and enslave each other and that, in such cases, two is less than one”.
They don’t pull any punches, do they?
Have you ever felt like you're seen as a pain-in-the-ass in your marriage?
That feeling is usually accompanied by
thinking you're being under-valued. You feel subordinate to your partner and you feel your needs are less important than her needs.
There is a chilly awareness of feeling deprived, empty, lonely, weak, defenseless, inadequate, minimized or frightened.
These feelings make you sad and desperate. You may continuously pursue your partner to fix these feelings or you may withdraw yourself from the relationship and seek solace elsewhere.
This is second-class citizenship.
And the only way it can happen is if you allow it to happen.
A truly self-reliant person is not looking
to be completed or filled up by another. He knows that the cold feelings of rejection and emotional betrayal are not caused by another person. Those feelings are the result of lacking reliance in himself for truly knowing his own value and true source of well-being.
This kinds of stirs you up, doesn’t it?
You may be thinking, “Yeah, you’re talking about unhealthy co-dependence. But what about the interdependent nature of a relationship?”
You may believe that a “healthy relationship” is one where you can count on each other to meet your unmet childhood needs. That a “good spouse” will learn how to avoid your emotional land mines and do whatever it takes to not piss you off.
You may believe it’s the right of each person to depend on the other to
fulfill their need for self-esteem, significance, personal value and sense of well-being.
That doesn’t sound like interdependence to me. It sounds like a prison.
I believe that interdependence applies to
the responsibility for BOTH partners to “mind the store”.
Both must be conscious, committed and proactive in protecting the agreed values of the relationship – not the egos within the relationship. Your ego is your job.
Interdependence means choosing each day to take action in protecting the environment in which both people can learn, grow and thrive as individuals and partners.
If you have agreed that your relationship values include an environment of acceptance, affection, warmth, support, honesty, appreciation, adoration, emotional safety and vulnerability…then those are where your
interdependence lies.
Both partners must commit to preserving those values through intentional and unconditional action. Without an interdependent joint-effort, the environment will crumble and turn toxic. And you already know
what happens when that happens.
The importance of self-reliance cannot be understated.
It is only the truly self-reliant person who can prioritize his
accountability and commitment to his relationship values over his expectations from his relationship.
It is only the truly self-reliant person who has the clarity and courage to take the loving actions necessary to possibly repair a crumbling environment.
And it is only the truly self-reliant person who can confidently make the correct decisions if he determines his partner is unwilling or incapable of creating that environment with him.
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