Friday, May 25, 2012

Keeping Agreements

Many authors and teachers advise us to be mindful of the agreements we make with other people so that we can be sure to keep them.  Certainly this is sound advice for anyone seeking a long term loving relationship with a partner.  Have you ever thought about the agreements you’ve made with yourself? 

When I was dating, I found it helpful to list the agreements I had with myself, so that I could stay on track and be true to myself.  When it gets lonely and discouraging (being single isn’t always the blast it’s portrayed to be, have you noticed?), we may be tempted to compromise, only to regret it later.  Below are some of the agreements I had.  Hopefully they’ll get you thinking about your own list.  I agreed:

-          To remember that the reason I desired closeness and love is because God desired them for me first, so their manifestation was guaranteed if I believed.

-          To honor myself and not settle, as I had in the past.

-          To be honest with myself and not talk myself into a relationship or into feeling attracted to someone I just wasn’t attracted to.

-          To be confident and patient and not act from desperation, because I was not desperate.

-          To have only sane sex.

-          To remember that I could be both a good mother and in relationship with a man, thereby avoiding the martyr role or sacrificing my needs for my daughters.

I invite you to write down your own agreements and use the list as a checklist when you come to a choice point.  It’ll be a helpful tool to sort out your feelings, enabling you to make the best decision.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Sane Sex May Resonate with Teens After All

When I write about sane sex, it’s always with adults in mind; the life-creating potential of sex renders it strictly adult behavior.  So when people ask me if my book is appropriate for their high-school son or daughter, I hesitate.  Although I would certainly rather see high schoolers practicing sane sex rather than any other kind, my preference is that they have none at all, at least they’re old enough to marry without permission.  I’m happy to report that it appears we’re headed in that direction.
  
According to the Centers for Disease Control, in 1988, 50% of boys and 37% of girls age 15 to 17 reported having had sex.  Today, the numbers are down and the difference between the genders has disappeared.  Fewer than 30% of all teens surveyed in that age group stated they’d had sex.  I am surprised and delighted by this news!
  
There seem to be two major factors that account for this shift. The first is fear of pregnancy and HIV-AIDS.  Interestingly, more boys than girls cited these fears were the primary reason they postponed sex.  The other factor may be more even unexpected: boys, not just girls, expressed the desire to wait for the right person.  Researchers have found that teenage boys are equally committed emotionally in their relationships as teenage girls.  I should also note that 30% of those surveyed named religion and morality as their motives for delaying sexual activity. Halleluiah!
  
Parents, I hope this encourages you, as it takes courage to broach these topics with teens today.  Don’t be afraid to start the dialogue with your kids; they may well be more receptive than you thought!

Friday, May 11, 2012

How Do You Wish to Be Treated?

I recently thumbed through a journal I kept during my dating days and found a letter I’d written.  It was an exercise I’d done where I imagined how a letter from the love of my life would have read.  There were several purposes to the activity, one of which was to put on paper how I would like to be treated.  How would you like to be treated?  Are you experiencing that?
  
One powerful way to attract a relationship where we are treated in the manner we desire is to first start treating ourselves that way.  If you want someone who is compassionate, first be compassionate with yourself.  (This goes for married people, too.  Catherine Ponder, among others, has many stories of people who changed themselves and noticed a corresponding shift in their spouse.)  If it’s humor you desire or generosity, look at how you treat yourself in these areas.  So many of my clients and people I encounter are hard on themselves, setting unrealistic expectations for themselves.  I know I fall into this trap occasionally, too.
  
Gandhi advised us to be the change we want to see in the world.  A relevant variation on that is to be the person you’d like to attract.  When we accept and are at peace with ourselves, we project that out to the world, and people want to be around us.  Today, be loving toward yourself.  At the very least, it will feel good!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Achieving Alignment with the Sane Sex Model

What prompted me to write my book was the frequent dialogue I had with singles while I was dating.  I found many to be confused, discouraged, demoralized, and occasionally embarrassed. These feelings were the result of being out of alignment, primarily because they had been following Today’s Dating Model.

You may recall that with Today’s Dating Model people move from attraction to physical intimacy very quickly, without having experienced emotional intimacy.  We are not just physical or sexual beings. We are also spiritual beings, and we’re complex.  Body, mind, and spirit are all interwoven.  For instance, we can physically feel our emotions.  A knot in the stomach signals worry and tightness in the shoulders can indicate stress.  When presented with the chance to do something we find enjoyable, our energy level lifts immediately.  We just can’t insulate our bodies from our thoughts or feelings.  So when we engage in sex before becoming emotionally intimate with someone, these two types of intimacy are out of alignment.  Like the sensation we have when our car is out of alignment, it doesn’t feel comfortable.

With the Sane Sex Model, physical intimacy is grows as emotional intimacy develops.  As we get to know the other person and disclose more of ourselves to create greater emotional intimacy, it’s natural to get physically closer, as well.  Keep in mind that there is an array of ways to gradually express greater physical closeness.  Just as we wouldn’t divulge our deepest secrets to someone we barely know, it doesn’t make sense to have sex with that person either. 

The Sane Sex Model honors your heart and your body.  It keeps everything in alignment, making it much more likely to have a fulfilling experience emotionally and physically.