Monday, November 22, 2010

Emotional Awareness and What I Can Do For Me

I find it ironic that just last month I did a post on insecurity, only this month to find myself staring it in the face. Every time a situation changes, that means the triggers change. Where before I felt secure, suddenly I am no longer sure.
Fortunately, perhaps because of the post so recently, I was able to identify the source of my destructive behavior and put a stop to it before it morphed into something truly ugly. But catching such things does not automatically mean they go away. The absolute worst thing possible is to pretend that insecurity doesn't affect me. The very idea of "pretend it's not there" is tantamount to giving a toddler a loaded gun. The situation will not end well.
So how does one go about dismantling insecurity rather than denying or supressing it? I would argue that emotional awareness is the biggest ally we can have. Being aware of how we feel, TRULY and honestly feel, can alert us to things long before they become a problem. Being so aware can also give perspective. For example, I know that for me I always spiral into a mini-depression 2 days before my cycle starts.
EEEW!
Yes, I went there. Let's be real. Women are emotionally jerked around by their hormones to a terrifyingly high degree. When that is not recognized, or given validity, or minimized and ridiculed, this gives these hormonal driven emotions free reign to be a complete ass. Those women who use PMS as excuses to justify behaving like total bitches make me grind my teeth in fury. PMS justifies nothing, and yes, I recognize fully that it's a valid condition.
Awareness is the key. How do these tie together? I've been working with some friends to help them become aware of how their emotional outlook is affected by their physical condition. Does tiredness increase a tendency toward irritability or depression or other? Does ovulation increase emotional fragility or libido? Does eating high sugar foods lead to anger?
If I'm aware of how much my body is directly influencing how I feel, I can put responses into perspective. Let's return to the example of the mini-depression. If someone just happens to say something on this day which could in any way be construed as a negative comment, it gets blown all out of proportion. I used to act on that, not being aware that my response to the situation was wildly inappropriate, and as a result caused all sorts of needless tension and drama. Now, I'm keenly aware of my body and the relationship between how I physically feel and how I emotionally feel are related. With this awareness, I can take a breath, despite the rioting depression, and say I'm going to have to get a good night's sleep and re-examine this situation in the morning.
That said, let's return to the concept of PMS. It's very real, and I say that the emotions it brings to the surface are equally real. What I think it does is magnify things. Biologically speaking, that part of the female cycle is a 'cleaning house' in preparation for a new cycle. That it hormonally drags to the surface all those emotions that we'd like to pretend aren't there also make sense from the 'cleaning house' perspective. "Hey, found all this trash in the basement here. Get rid of it." And women, especially those who are emotional unaware, go nuts. Erratic behavior, violence, verbal viciousness. Yick.  And they laugh it off as "just PMS". No. It's not. PMS just augments what's already there. By A LOT. Find yourself acting violent, or extremely controlling, or 'uncharacteristically' jealous, or anything like that? That's a wake up call. Take it. Wake up. Become aware of what's going on. The kind of Lioness I want to be a deliberate one, taking actions inspired by choices made.
Again, awareness is the key. So how am I going to use my long history of emotional awareness to address this instance of insecurity? Listen for the triggers. Acknowledge those little pings in the moment they happen. Examine them. Understand the relationship between how I'm interpreting the situation and what else is going on. Mainly, I need to change the way I see the situation which is inciting it. I can choose to change the way I see something. It's beautiful! And it takes only a moment to decide that something can go from being A Threat to being An Inspiration. Being equally aware of my hormonal reality means I help maintain the Inspiration perspective, rather than letting the response devolve into the Threat level. It's my choice, and my power to make that decision. I can only do this if I am aware and honest with myself.
Here's something most folks don't like to know. Insecurity has nothing to do anyone other than the individual it is affecting. It cannot be blamed on anyone else. Cannot be cured by anyone else. I have to own it, be aware of it, and then engage it. I have to engage the foundations behind why this or that makes feel insecure, makes me feel as if I have to defend myself. Awareness is the best tool in my arsenal to help me defuse and dismantle this emotional time bomb.
My vision of the Lioness is one of emotional security, one of complete self-possession. She knows fully who she is, what she's capable of and not, and accepts herself while still challenging herself to strive for better. The Lioness is not immune to self-doubt or occasional insecurity -- but she does not allow such emotions to make her into their puppet.
- Lioness (in training)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Strength and Vulnerability

Back in this post, I talked about The Wall which served to keep out most everything -- even the things that I'd like to actually get.
I'm one of these people whose body will express for me all those emotions that I don't want to express, or don't recognize. For years now, I've had problems with acid reflux and a chronic inability to clear my throat. I describe the reflux in terms of "I'm trying to swallow something which I just can't digest, and so the body is physically responding by producing more acid." That resonates as "correct" to me. Every time an emotional subject is broached, my throat literally shuts and I can't speak for a few moments, or the amount of crap in my throat instantly doubles and I end up coughing to no avail. It's like that metaphorical wall has become a physical situation, and if I continue to choose to ignore it or think it's normal for me (and therefore unimportant), it will only get worse.
I've been considering: how can I break down this wall? Then a thought popped into my head. I think this wall is made up of all the unshed tears, all the swallowed or unexpressed anger, and all the pain and heartbreak which I have experienced over a lifetime. I'm sure the mortar is full of thoughts which begin like "I shouldn't/should..." and "nice girls don't/do..." or "good girls are/aren't..."
From here, I realized that I need to express all those things I've refused to recognize. To get it out and finally let it all go. Egad! That's almost 40 years worth of denial and repression! The very thought scares me. I don't want to be an emotional basket case! I know that starting this process means inflicting my instability on the household - something I'm exceedingly reticent to do despite my husband now asking to see it. Even just thinking about it has my throat literally burning as I fight to keep all this mess contained. It's a terrifying prospect, but I also recognize that the limits are being reached already. My body is telling me "enough", especially judging by the amount of antacid I'm consuming and the near constant coughing that has no medical basis. I am horrified to find myself crying at sappy commercials with increasing frequency (note the 'horrified' response at uncontrollable emotional outbursts).
I know, deep down, this is something that I not only must do, but will do. That said, I am wondering about the timeline. Should I start now? Or wait until I have the house to myself in the afternoons? I'm pretty sure there's a lot of anger making up that wall, and if I feel like screaming or smashing things then I don't want to alarm the household. I need to feel free to express the emotions which belong to long past events. Concern for others will hamper this process, defeating it because I'll still be editing them.
I like to think of things this way: I cannot build on faulty foundations. The old, the broken, the unsound must first be cleared away. Only then can I start to search for my own Truth, for my genuine Strength.
The biggest impediment to all of this, to the goal of breaking down that Wall, is me. Bluntly put, I'm afraid. I'm afraid to ask for help. Why? Afraid of being seen as weak? As vulnerable? Or afraid of the power that lies behind all the denial? Afraid that once it's all cleared away, what emerges is truly exceptional. Afraid that when the hubby sees how emotional I am, he'll rethink things? I think it's all of them. They are all true, and they scare me.
The more I think about this, the more I realize this is not something I can truly do on my own. Recall that previous post about receptivity and a willingness to be vulnerable? My husband is excellent at helping people get in touch with themselves. I've seen it multiple times, and yet I've never asked him in earnest to do that for me. The first challenge is asking him, someone I care about deeply, for help, to push a hole through that wall large enough to be heard and be able to receive what is given.
In order for the lioness I see with my mind's eye to be as glorious as she has the potential for, she can't be hiding. And I'm still hiding.
- Lioness (in training)

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

An Unrecognized Benefit Of Job Allocation

Sunday was a bit of a breakthrough in terms of clear articulation. Like many women, I work full time and also take care of the 99% of the housework. I also live in extremely high traffic areas, so the traffic-free 20 minute commute turns out to be closer to a 1 hour with traffic commute. That means minimum 10 hours of my day are taken out by the work-a-day routine (8 + 2 hours of travel time). Add in dinner, which we usually eat out because I don't want to have to clean the kitchen, and that consumes another couple of hours. I'm down to 4 hours now to squeeze in everything else - social requirements, vacuuming, dishes, laundry, dusting, litterbox detail, paying bills, hobbies, and spending quality time with hubby. That's a lot. Really. Alas, it very often boils down to choosing what I consider to be the most important thing and actively letting the rest slide until I can make the time to do it.

I didn't have time to clean last week, so I wanted to do it this weekend. Saturday was just too full and so none of it got done. Sunday morning was likewise booked, leaving only Sunday evening with any amount of time to get stuff completed while I still had the energy to do it. Not having been able to spend time with me at all last week and this weekend, my hubby requested to spend Sunday evening with me. I chose him over chores, but had that axe hanging over my head, preventing me from really being 100% with him.

From talking with other women where I work, this is a pretty typical scenario. Throw kids into this mix and there's REALLY very little time or energy left for the men in our lives. Sunday was different because, for the first time, I was able to clearly articulate the primary benefit of me working in the home:
I can do all the things that I need to do while he's away at work, so that when he comes home I can choose to spend time with him without having any should-do's nagging at me.
Putting it that way to him caused him to smile and puff up. This is what he is giving me, and what I am giving him, the partnership in action. The next day he's talking to a friend of his at work who's wife is a certified nurse who chose to be a stay-at-home-mom-turned-housewife. When the fellow starting thinking about all the things that would have to be done after work if his wife ever opted to return to nursing, he realized there would be no time left to just be with her. He found that proposition completely unappealing. My hubby believes the man now has a whole new appreciation for the real benefits of all that his wife does because things were put into terms that he can clearly see. I have my job, he has his job, and we still have time for each other.

I must admit, it surprises me how much men seem to value just being with their chosen woman. If she doesn't have time for him because of everything else she's trying to do, that's really quite tragic -- for both of them. On her side, she's stressed and angry because she too wants to enjoy spending time with him and kids but there's always more to do. This can degenerate into blame, resentment and anger. On his side, he's feeling neglected and unimportant to the one person he's chosen to commit his life to. This can degenerate into blame, resentment and anger. Truly, a tragedy in the making there! Throw in Hunter/Gatherer typical miscommunication of needs and this gets ugly fast when it doesn't need to be. My heart is breaking just thinking about it!

I know for me, being able to feel my frustration on Sunday and then put that frustration into clear words was very helpful. Now even I can see exactly what we're both gaining even as we choose to give up some income. I think it's totally worth it, as long as I learn the strategies available to make every penny count so that it doesn't feel like we're giving up anything. That'll challenge the Gatherer in me! hehe

- Lioness (in training)

Thursday, November 11, 2010

A Deeper Look at What it Means to be Receptive

Having recently done the post about Receptivity and how many women (including myself) are terrible at accepting things, this is a topic now on my radar. As if by serendipity, a situation occurred a few days ago which really made the extent of this receptivity potential exceedingly obvious. My housemate ended up losing her set of work keys. She was understandably terribly upset about it. Seeing her distress, the contractor plumbers who work for her company said to bill them for the cost of the replacement - a more than $200 cost. She accepted.
I have to admit, I was blown away for multiple reasons. Firstly, the generosity of the offer had my jaw drop. That in itself was amazing. Secondly, these are older men who really like my housemate for the simple reason that she treats them with respect, and listens fully to what they have to say. There’s nothing else to this offer than “we like you, and don’t want to see you get in trouble at work over this incident.” That’s it. But what really and truly had me agog was that she actually accepted.
Her story got me to thinking about my post on ‘receptivity is quintessentially feminine’ in a new way, to a greater depth. I tried to imagine myself in her position, asking "would I have been able to accept?" The answer is, unfortunately, no. I could not have accepted. Not 'would not', but 'could not' have accepted. Trying to imagine it, the gift offered was literally too large to have squeezed through the small chink in my armour. A compliment? Sure, that's easy. It's tiny, for the most part. But larger? No way. That would have physically hurt, and I came to the sudden realization that in the process of rejecting their sincere offer that I would have demonstrated to those guys to never again attempt to help me in any personally meaningful way. That was an entirely new revelation to me.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot since then, wondering how many gifts have been offered to me over the years that I literally didn’t even see?  I want to be able to recognize all the things that my husband WANTS to do for me but right now I am blind to. I am now fairly sure that I regularly reject his offerings simply because I can't see them, and this hurt me to think that I am inadvertantly rejecting him in any way. For illustration, I see myself standing behind a giant wall. In this wall is a tiny little hole. Only things which can fit through that hole are recognizable as gifts. Anything larger is either flat ignored because it’s not even reasonable to imagine, or it’s recognized and rejected for being too large, too generous. Accepting it would mean that I’d have to enlarge the hole, a process which is both painful and leaves me open to being wounded.
This image lead me back to an older idea, revamped a bit. There is another thing that I think is quintessentially feminine, and it is often unrecognized or unspoken. That thing is a willingness to be vulnerable. It’s what makes a woman ‘soft’ in appearance. I’m still working on articulating this better, on how to work with it, but it feels like I’m on a right path there. Being open to receiving gifts means simultaneously open to being abused, hurt , used. It takes a powerful woman, a  truly self-confident woman, a Lioness, to recognize this, to know this, and still choose to remain open to all the positives despite the potential negatives.  A child is open because she hasn’t learned yet of the dangers. A woman chooses to remain open because she understands her own strength. Few women do know and trust in their own inner strength, and so fewer and fewer experienced women are willing to make themselves vulnerable anymore. In doing so, they are rejecting everything, even the best that men have to offer.
I’m still working out how to go about opening myself in this way, to being able to recognize and receive graciously yet without expectation. But then, that’s the whole point of this blog – learning how to be that Lioness. The first step was seeing what I've seen. Now to take the opportunties which abound to find ways to learn how to trust my own strength.
- Lioness (in training)

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Hunters and Gatherers - "Just Getting Home" Needs Are NOT the Same


One of the best things that Alison Armstrong ever gave to my husband and me is a way of communicating our way of doing things in a manner that the other could understand. That language is all things related to the Hunter and Gatherer. I have to say, it's quite wonderful to actually understand why men and women are doing what they are doing. It's even better to be able to articulate it.
Alison clearly has the whole "Hunters’ need their transition time to go from Work Mode into Home Mode.” That transition time is solitary, does NOT include any talking, and takes about 20-30 minutes or longer (depending on the guy and the day). What she doesn't talk about is the Gatherer's need for this same thing, but the mechanism is very different.
My husband is extremely conscious to always ask "How was your day?" and then force himself to sit and listen to whatever spews forth. Long ago, he told me that he learned the hard way, with his first wife, that this was a required question. If he did ask, when she was finished he could then have his quiet time that he needed, and the rest of the evening was good. However, if he forgot to ask, or was too tired to force himself to listen to her 'rambles', then the evening would not go well because she’d chase him down and insist on telling him of her day.
A few days ago, my husband forgot to inquire how my housemate's day was because he was excited about his own project and I was not there for her to talk to. She realized sometime later that she was very discombobulated and out of sorts, feeling overlooked and minimized. As she was examining this response the next day and we were talking about it, this idea popped into my head: "Well, of course. You're a Gatherer! After a long day out picking berries, you've just arrived back home from your foray, and you needed to empty your basket, needed to share with everybody all that you found, where you found it, what else might be there, etc." If a Gatherer can’t share her basket, then she gets the idea that her goodies are actually just rotten berries, and she feels bad. Suddenly it all clicked.
I've heard so many men complain about being accosted by their wives when they get home and she just wants to talk, wants to "natter on" about all the minutiae that happened to her that day. For his part, he just wants to unwind and relax now that he's home and he can't do that when she's talking to him incessantly. He's trying to unwind by being quiet, and she won't let him. He's getting resentful that she's not respecting his needs, and she's getting angry that she's being 'ignored' and feels unheard, feels as if what she has to share is unimportant. Compound this by years and you get some ugliness -- needless ugliness.
This is a typical Hunter/Gatherer conflict of needs, and yet easily worked with IF recognized. From within this paradigm, our house now has a new language which is being implemented as a result of this observation. It's very simple. Here's the scenario -- we've been apart doing whatever we need to do for the day (work, school, etc) and now are meeting up in the evening.
"Honey, I am dying to empty my basket. It'll take maybe X minutes. Is now a good time?" I am fully prepared for a no answer, and that's fine. Why? Because I know that he may very well need to do his thing first, so that he's not distracted by work worries and thus can't pay attention to me. It also lets him know that I need his attention, but am asking for it when he’s emotionally available to give it to me.
"I need to get out of 'kill the deer' mode so that I can be fully at home. It'll take me about Y minutes. After that, I can listen to you for as long as you need." Here's the key thing that many women might have a hard time with - leave him ALONE during this. That's very important! Since I know that for me, feeling as if my basket of goodies is important enough to warrant his attention is essential to me, then I'm perfectly happy to give him the time that he needs to actually have the energy to listen. If I interupt him, the process has to start again. Deny the temptation to peek in and say "are you done yet?" and you'll discover (as I did) that he'll come find you when he's ready to be with you. In the end, we both get what we need but in a manner that respects each other’s basic nature.
- Lioness (in training)

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Commitment as a by-product of single-focus awareness

It is now official. I have turned in my notice at work. My last day will be December 31, allowing for my insurance to run out and for the new family plan to take over on the 1st.
I hadn't quite realized one key difference in my mindset versus my husband's on this particular point until just today, as I was relaying the news and noticing his 'yeah, and?' reaction. We've been talking about this, planning the finances and whatnot, for nearly a year. Comparing our different emotional responses to the notice being officially given, I just realized today that in his mind, it was already a done deal. For me, it wasn't a done deal until I had talked to my boss and put a date on things. I felt a sense of relief at having done so today, a sense of "finally! I'm doing something! Here we go..." For me, until that was done, I could still change my mind - that option was still there and as long as that was the scenario then I wasn't COMMITTED (all caps, bold, underline, italics) to it yet, but this was so not the case in his mind. In his mind, I had committed to it a long time ago and what remained was the formality of it.
In talking to him after I talked to my boss, I was surprised that he was so matter-of-fact. At first I was confused, but then something that Alison talked about came to mind: "Men aren't at all afraid of commitment." In fact, because of their single-focus outlook, when they decide to do something they do that something with everything they have, because it's the ONLY thing they are doing. Women, with their diffuse awareness, don't think this way at all. Even when I'm doing a task, I'm thinking of other tasks. I will never again consider any man 'afraid of commitment' as a generalized concept. He might not want to commit to this person, or that idea, or a specific course of action, or he may be waiting to make that commitment based on the fullment of this or that provider related ability he doesn't think is ready yet, but he's not afraid of commitment in general. Commitment is a core, fundamental aspect of what it means to be single-focused!
Today was the first time, with just a few simple words, that this concept was really and truly illustrated to me. It 'sunk in', as it were.
I can't even conceive of doing just one thing, of being actively aware of just one thing (at least for more than a short period of time), let alone truly grasp what it would mean to commit myself to that task to the exclusion of all else. This is not to say that I am incapable of commitment, hardly. It's just so ... abundant. I am committed to many things, all at the same time -- right now. No wonder the hubby gets frustrated with all my interests. He imagines I think in the same way that he does, and that when I say "I want to do this" I actually mean "I will do this to the exclusion of all other things; all other interests will drop away and become a mere footnote in comparison to THIS one".
I am learning to appreciate what it truly means to be single-focused, or least to recognize the benefits and limitations so that they can be reasonably worked with. Previously, like many women, I denigrated it. I thought it was the sign of a small or limited mind. Through this work here, and I'm only just beginning, that bias is now gone. It's interesting. The idea is that we, quite naturally as human beings, ascribe to someone else our own thought process and assume that other people think about things or see the world in the same way that we do. The classic statement for someone caught in this trap is "you should just know!!" Another classic statement is the "it's clearly obvious why I did such, so I shouldn't have to explain it". Now that I see this and do genuinely recognize that we definitely think entirely differently, I’m left to wonder how should I handle this?
My first plan of action will be to never ever assume that I understand why he’s doing something. Leaping to conclusions as to his motivations is unhelpful and leads to an adversarial situation. Instead, when I am unsure as to why or when he responds in a way that has me feeling strange, those are my emotional cues that I need to ask him why he did such and such. But asking is easy. The hard part is listening, and I mean LISTENING, to what he says. Whatever he says, I cannot take it personally. It’s not about me, it’s about him. Because I can step into new mindsets relatively easily, it’ll be easier for me to understand and work with his paradigm than it would be the reverse. I also need to ensure that I’m safe for him to talk to, and that means he has to know through experience that he won’t be attacked for being honest with me. Fortunately, we already have a long history of this but it's never been consciously undertaken by me before. Now, I need to make my awareness of his different mindset an active part of the many things that I keep track of.
- Lioness (in training)

Single-Focus and Diffuse Awareness

I want to do a post, but before I can I need to bring in the contrasting types of awareness. They are, as usual, things that Alison Armstrong talks about extensively.

Men have Single-Focus -- meaning they focus on one result at a time. It makes them excellent hunters and long-term planners. They decide what to focus on and stay on task for years. In her illustration, when a man is watching TV, he is ONLY watching TV. He cannot watch TV AND ignore the woman next to him. If he's actively ignoring her, he's not watching TV.

Women have what she called Diffuse Awareness, and it's what enables the gatherer to keep track of where dozens of berry bushes are, where the kids are, where the other gatherers are, what needs to be done for dinner, etc. Here is a short 2 minute video which she has on her website that explains it beautifully:


Monday, November 1, 2010

Receptivity is Quintessentially Feminine

My in-laws have a pretty impressive fruit tree orchard containing 80+ different types of trees scattered around their property. Lemons, apples, grapefruit, grapes, pears, oranges... You name it, they likely have some variant of it. They always have far more fruit than they can possibly eat, so I figured I'd ask for a basket full of their lemons and try some dehydrating techniques I've read about. We'll see how that goes!
 =========
I've been wrestling with how best to proceed on my quest to recover the majesty of the feminine. It struck me that I first need to understand what qualities are considered Feminine, so I thought maybe I'd explore that idea. It's funny how life brings us what we need when we need it.
Alison Armstrong has a new book out called Making Sense of Men. While watching the Between the Lines interview she did, she said something which really hit home for me. Here is the quote from that episode:

"Receptivity is a feminine quality. Unfortunately, between work and the Women's Movement and our culture and that women are highly adaptive... Women, without even thinking about it will become whatever is valued. What's valued in our culture is productivity, so women have become masculinized. So even though receptivity is quintessentially feminine, most women have lost touch with their femininity. So they have become lousy at receiving: at receiving pleasure, receiving gifts, receiving compliments, receiving care, receiving attention. We've just become lousy at it. We're being men, we're being the providers, which doesn't leave men any room to be men."

As she spoke, I could literally feel what she was talking about, feel it as an energetic tightness in my chest. My dad once stated that I had a PMS shield which all men would bounce off of - and for the first time, I understood viscerally what he was talking about. All the examples of attempted giving that I could come up with were accompanied by rebuffs of the attempted gift.

"You look good in that shirt." -- "No, it makes me look fat."
"I can provide for you." -- "I don't need you to provide for me. I can contribute as well as you can."
I've long had the ideal of working from home. I think one of the key reasons I could never really decide on a career is that I thought (really deep down!) that the one I really wanted was closed to me. "You can be anything you want to be, except a woman." I can be female, no problem -- but not a Woman, and most DEFINITELY not a woman who works to take care of her man. Taking care of CHILDREN, that's acceptable, laudable, admirable. A female can do that. But the concept of taking care of her man??!? Ludicrous. Those women, those ... housewives (say it with a degree of disgust for full effect), are stupid, lazy, unambitious, beaten down females who do not value themselves. They are users of the worst order. They are lesser.
At least that was the rhetoric I picked from popular media growing up in the 70s and 80s, reiterated and expanded in the 90s and on. Well, I'm certainly intelligent, far from lazy, very ambitious and woe to the fool who tries to beat me down! Therefore, I had to have a Career ... which I didn't really want. Damn it.
The problem is that I never wanted A (single) career. I'm a multitasker, and my attention goes all over the place. Trying to pick just one thing that would hold my attention for a lifetime... Impossible! It's one reason why I've had so many varied 'careers', from software analyst to wedding consultant. I don't want to do just one thing, and what I really want to do isn't done in an office! Here is a smattering of the things I've wanted to do: train dogs and horses; spin/dye/work with fiber; make patterns and sew clothing; write romance novels; and so much more! All of these can easily be Careers, but I don't want to dedicate 8 hours per day to any single one of them. It's very difficult for me to maintain that level of focus, especially over multiple years. If my Career were housewife, then making sure my man could do his job of providing to the best of our collective ability, this path then opens the door to me being able to do all the things I want to do, in the doses that I want to do them. If they are fresh, I have more energy and enthusiasm to work. I get stuff done! But there's so much else to do that I can happily putter around and do it all, without the oppressive weight of needing to define any single one thing as a Career. The Career is housewife, and to do it well requires a whole lot of varied and diverse skills and knowledges.
Hearing Alison say what she said about receptivity was, for me, a major shift point. I could suddenly see myself and my denied/repressed motivations more clearly. She was dead right - I was receptively challenged. What I deep down wanted and what I thought I should want were in conflict, and always have been.
It was ... liberating to hear her say it. Validating. I recalled my earliest post in which I stated that by leaving the work force I was voluntarily crippling myself. Now, I have to chuckle at myself. This was an expression of the conflict - I wanted to accept the gift offered, but I believed that I could not. I believed that accepting it made me lesser, but that didn't feel right. I was tearing myself apart with this! But hearing this show segment, and by allowing the impact of what she said to really sink in, by allowing myself to unfurl so that I could honestly and without internal conflict receive the gift being offered completely changed the way that I think. Accepting a gift doesn't make me lesser. It makes me greater, and it opens the way for both of us to be greater still. A line in my last post suddenly resonated more strongly:

It is only by working together that they have the possibility of reaching their potential as individuals.

As I was processing all of this and trying to figure out how to approach it in a blog, a phrase popped into my mind:
Behind every Great Man, is a Great Woman.
I am striving to be Great, in my own way. Significant to me. I am very ambitious, but not in terms of a typical career. This trait of mine means I would never settle for a man who did not himself possess the potential for Greatness. My hubby has it, in spades, as well as the ambition to reach for it. It's why I admire him so, and I see it as my job to accept him, to inspire him, to support him so that he can manifest what I see in him. He has the focus and the dedication to that single task which I will never have, and don't want. By working together, each leveraging our inborn strengths for the benefit of our family, we can be far more successful together than we can be separately.
He's already commented that he's seen a change in my outlook. Considering that we've known each other for almost a decade, that sudden change surprised him, and he's a leery but he very much likes it. I will continue working on my ability to receive with genuine sincerity.
One thing I will state is that "receptive" is not synonymous with "passive". I do not think for a second that Femininity is meekly passive. There is too much power there to be passive, too much to do. Neither is being receptive about being greedy or being a leech. If you are associating qualities similar to these when you think about what it means to be receptive, those are incredibly damaging.
The next time some man compliments you, let those words sink in. Feel them penetrate and spread throughout your body. They carry with them a soft warmth. In response, smile and say simply, sincerely, "Thank you." When that little negative voice in your head tries to find fault, put imaginary duct tape over her mouth. Do not ask for anything else. Just accept what has been offered and go on about your day. It's really amazing how uplifting that accepting even a small compliment or act of kindness can make me feel.
- Lioness (in training)