| |

The Tailor’s Secret
Are you concerned about how you look in your
bathing suit? Do you worry that you don’t look as good as last year, or ten,
twenty years ago? Are you struggling with friendships or business ventures that
once worked for you, but do not offer the reward they once did?
If so,
George Bernard Shaw might show you the door to peace: “The only man I know who
behaves sensibly is my tailor; he takes my measurements anew each time he sees
me. The rest go on with their old measurements and expect me to fit them.”
To plumb to the core of happiness and success, we must recognize the
difference between the present and the past: The present exists. The past
doesn’t. If you have ever tried to go back and relive or rekindle the past, you
have probably discovered that you can’t. What was, was. What is, is. If
something is now, it is because it has life now. If it isn’t now, it doesn’t
exist.
Since the advent of the Internet and Facebook, I have received
many contacts from people I once knew. My best buddies from elementary school,
high school, and college have reached out to say hello. I have enjoyed hearing
from them, and in most cases, we corresponded by email for a bit, and even got
together for lunch. Yet, in nearly all cases, those connections did not last
very long. When this occurred, part of me felt disappointed since these friends
represented some of the best times of my life and I hoped they would renew.
Instead, I found we no longer had as much in common as we did years ago. While
our new times together were pleasurable and rewarding, after reminiscing over
old times, we simply did not have much to say to each other now.
Every
relationship exists for a reason, a season, or a lifetime. You intersect paths
with some people for a momentary experience, and that is the purpose of the
meeting. You were not meant to be together for a longer time. Ken fell in love
with Cindy, and several months later she got pregnant. The couple married and
had a beautiful little boy who became the light of their lives. A few years
later Ken and Cindy divorced and chose different paths. Yet they both love their
son very much, and to this day, over 20 years later, he is the best thing that
ever happened to them. Ken and Cindy came together to have that child, however,
they did not have a purpose as life partners.
Some relationships exist
for a season. You might have a friend, business colleague, or romantic partner
for a number of years. Then you grow apart and the relationship changes form or
dissolves. You may believe you made a mistake or something went wrong. But it
did not. If the relationship lasted for seven years, that was the true lifespan
of the relationship. If you tried to stop it before its appointed time, or you
try to prolong it after it is complete, your efforts would not work. Its
appointed time is perfect.
Some relationships last a lifetime. These
might include family relationships, marriage partners, significant friendships,
or career colleagues. Such relationships are a blessing, for they run deep; the
loyalty and support you share is a true gift. Appreciate such relationships with
all your heart. Such people are genuine soul partners.
In truth, all
relationships last forever. The nature of relationship is eternal. It’s just the
earthly form that goes through changes. If there was once love, there is always
love. The part that gets hurt, upset, angry, or turns its back on another person
is not our true self. Our reality is love. Likewise, if someone leaves this
world, that is not the end of the relationship. As spiritual beings, your
relationship goes on and continues to blossom. Only love lasts.
There are
several ways we hold onto the past in self-defeating ways. One is by clinging to
past hurts or resentments. “We bury the hatchet but then we remember where we
buried it.” Someone hurt you a long time ago, and that is all you remember about
this person or relationship. Or you hurt someone and cannot forgive yourself.
Since then the other person has remarried, passed away, or has left your life.
Yet you prolong the pain by focusing on the past hurt.
Another way we
keep the past alive is through a sense of indebtedness. Someone helped you with
a loan, job, act of kindness, or got you out of a jam. Since then you hold them
on a pedestal as a kind of savior and you feel forever indebted to them. Or you
helped someone and believe they are indebted to you. Yet Plato said, “True
friendship can occur only among equals.” A Course in Miracles tells us,
“Miracles are performed by those who temporarily have more for those who
temporarily have less.” It is holy to ask for help, and holy to give it. But
that interaction lives in that moment, and afterward we must release it as giver
or receiver.
We also keep ourselves small by holding onto an identity
related to a past success. You achieved something admirable long ago, but you
milk it forever. Yet there are new and equally wonderful things about you now.
Can you stand in today’s magnificence as well as yesteryear’s?
You don’t
need to resurrect the past because the Power that made the past beautiful is
making now wonderful. That’s why they call it the present.

Alan Cohen
is author of many inspirational books, including, “A Daily Dose of Sanity”.
Listen to Get Real on Hay House Radio and join him for his transformational Life
Coach Training course September 1. Visit, www.AlanCohen.com, or phone
1‑808‑572-0001.
|
|
Advertisements
|