Healing the Midlife Love Crisis

Written by Trevor Emdon


All I wanted was to fall in love and live happily ever after. The End.

Except it wasn’t that simple. At forty-something, I was hardly “onrepparttar shelf”, but I wasrepparttar 128808 veteran of two divorces. That gave rise to plenty of self doubt. It gave rise to another more sinister, subtle symptom too: I didn’t trustrepparttar 128809 opposite sex not to hurt me again. And guess what? Sincerepparttar 128810 women I was meeting were in a similar age bracket, and also veterans of some painful emotional history, their fears echoed mine. Result? An almost cast iron guarantee that love cannot flourish! You might as well scatter seed on concrete and expect a wheat field to flourish.

The internet is peppered with such walking wounded. Dating sites abound and literally tens of thousands of people from all overrepparttar 128811 computerised world are looking for love. Naturally, there are success stories with happy endings. Butrepparttar 128812 vast majority are frustrated individuals. Join these sites for a while, (I did for 3 months and ended up staying for 3 years), and you will seerepparttar 128813 same faces come round again and again. They are not ugly or evil or dangerous people. They are ordinary people like you and me, and yet somehow love is just eluding them.

Why?

To answer that you have to first ask yourself why anyone wants a relationship inrepparttar 128814 first place. The answer is not obvious, but it is simple. In just about every generation up to aboutrepparttar 128815 1950’s, people got into relationships because it was inevitable. Sooner or later, procreation was going to take place, and pregnancy meantrepparttar 128816 mothers needed economic support which was, of course, provided byrepparttar 128817 fathers. Roles were clear, nature played a big part. Whether relationships were “happy” orrepparttar 128818 couple were “in love” were secondary considerations. The relationship itself was primary, and at all costs was made to survive until death did them part. Add in social and religious pressures, and no wonder our grandparents and all of their forbears stayed together for life.

Nowadays we have a completely different agenda. It boils down to this: we will only stay in a relationship, or even enter into one, if it feels better than not doing so.

In other words, relationships have to make us happy or we’re out.

That’s a big agenda, butrepparttar 128819 biggest problem with it isn’t its size; it’s that it goes unacknowledged. Society, from government torepparttar 128820 church to our neighbours, tends towardsrepparttar 128821 old values and we still measure ourselves by them. We still consider ourselves to have failed if we break up a relationship, or worse, if we arerepparttar 128822 one who is jilted. This, in spite ofrepparttar 128823 fact that we don’t bat an eyelid if our friends change career, move house or emigrate no matter how many times they do it. But change partners? There’s something wrong with you!

You Know How, But Do You Know Why?

Written by Laurie Hayes


An unexamined life is not worth living – Socrates

All too often we get caught up in how we should go about achieving a specific goal. We decide that we need to make something definite happen and then focus our efforts on what is required to accomplishrepparttar task.

More important than knowing how to make something happen, is knowing why you want to make it happen.

Knowing why will keep you focused; give you strength when you need it, and keep you in action when you are tempted to quit.

An example of this would be, “I want to be rich.” You have a winning lottery ticket and want to make your moderate winnings work for you.

You decide to start reading real estate investment books, studying stock quotes, and enroll in a taxation course so you can learn how to take advantage of allrepparttar 128806 loopholes.

A few months go by and you get bored withrepparttar 128807 routine of studying and learning. A friend offers yourepparttar 128808 opportunity of a lifetime … a month-long trip to Europe, and for a mere $25,000.

You had planned on using your lottery winnings for creating wealth, butrepparttar 128809 commitment is exhausting and you could really use a vacation.

You cash in your savings and takerepparttar 128810 trip.

Once you’re back home, you have great stories to tell and memories to hold on to, but after a month or two, you become disheartened because you feel you are back onrepparttar 128811 bottom rung ofrepparttar 128812 ladder and have to start all over again if you want to create any kind of wealth.

By knowing why you want to become rich, you may have created a completely different outcome.

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