Last Tuesday Margaret Wheeler Johnson, an angel-faced young
journalist from New Orleans, now based in New York City and editing the ‘women’
section* of the Huffington Post (*they call their sections ‘verticals’ but I
can’t yet bring myself to accept ‘vertical’ as a noun) published an interesting
piece on relationships.
Following the lazy writer’s fashion for quirkily numbered
lists masquerading as articles, hers was entitled ‘31Ways To Know You're In The Right Relationship.’
And I, being a lifelong sucker for quizzes, went through the
list. Not that I needed a checklist to know I am in the right
relationship. I knew that already. But 31 criteria? Goodness me!! I diligently
checked them off, all of them, happily confirming what I already knew.
I aced
the test. And ended up wondering how Margaret devised it. Did she figure it
out, based on her own experience of good relationships (even though she looks
too young to have had much of that) or did she do lots of research, talk to
marriage counsellors etc…or what?
At first I found myself wondering if there were any other
criteria that I, as a psychologist with many years experience in couple
counselling, might have added to her list. But then I decided that for me the
‘right’ relationship isn’t based on lists at all. The right relationship is the
one you are in now. At a spiritual level, every
relationship is the ‘right’ one because we are each other’s teachers and
our most intimate partners are the greatest teachers of all. It is from them
that we learn most about who we are; it is through them that we grow. The
learning and the growing might sometimes be painful. All relationships are destined
to change over time, simply because we
change over time. Sometimes that change may involve conflict, estrangement,
separation and/or divorce and always, somewhere along the time line, it will
involve death. But no relationship ever actually ends: it merely changes form.
The first man I married eventually became my ex-husband and then he became my
deceased ex-husband but at some level our souls are still connected and always
will be. It was never the ‘wrong’ relationship even though it ended in divorce.
I have one of my former teachers, John Welwood, to thank for this
awareness. His teachings on conscious relationship have been my inspiration and
my guide. As he says in his beautiful and seminal essay ‘Intimate Relationshipas Transformative Path’, “If relationships are to flourish, they need to
reflect and promote who we really are, beyond any limited image of ourselves
concocted by family, society, or our own minds. They need to be based on the
whole of who we are, rather than on any single form, function, or feeling. This
presents a tremendous challenge, for it means undertaking a journey in search
of our deepest nature. Our connection with someone we love can in fact be one
of the best vehicles for that journey. When we approach it in this way,
intimacy becomes a path— an unfolding process of personal and spiritual
development.” Yes, oh yes.