The Gift of Ten Broken Hearts

(Lessons in Love and Abundance.)

valentineschocolatesValentine’s Day used to be really hard.

Several years ago, If “that special guy” didn’t call, ask me out, or plan something, I felt lousy. Unimportant. Hurt. Maybe even angry.

If I was on a Valentine’s date that wasn’t going the way I wanted it to, my expectations produced frustration. If I spent the evening home alone, I was sad.

Scarcity shows up in all sorts of ways (money, love, time…). So does abundance and prosperity. When we look for what’s “missing” and “lacking” we will find more of it. When we celebrate what’s here, or better yet, CREATE it, we have everything we need.

A few years ago I had a turning point in my relationship to both Love and Abundance. I had been focusing on the goal of “Being in a Relationship” for years. Not just any relationship, but a great one. I had envisioned a passionate, committed, loving relationship for years, yet none had shown up to any significant extent.

Sure, there had been lots of dates and even boyfriends. There had also been plenty of romantic dead-ends and false starts, so many that I became known for my “Nashvillian Love-Gone-Wrong” songs and had vowed to name a CD Romantic Comedies and Other Tragedies.

I noticed a pattern – that when a relationship was new and full of hope and promise, I would be thrilled. As time marched on and the skeletons inevitably rattled out of the closet (emotional immaturity, cheating, stalking, addictions, warped values, etc.), my happiness would plummet.

I would work hard to “save” the relationship (or “fix” the guy), becoming miserable in the process. I knew how to be happy on my own, but once tangled in the relationship, I resisted going back to singleness. I became attached to the guy and to “this” relationship. I would resist the unavoidable outcome until the relationship became unbearable.

When the romance was finally pronounced dead, the next stage would begin. Analysis, grieving, and way too many imaginary “conversations” in my head with the recent ex. I’d seek to understand, explain, and perhaps even create new scenarios in my head with alternate endings.

Never in complete despair, I had come to recognize the resiliency of my heart. As difficult as this “getting over someone” stage was, I knew that when it had run its course in the following weeks or months, I would be sane again. Happy again.

I remember writing in my journal, “I can’t wait to get my balance back.”

Hmm… get my “balance back”? What did that mean, I thought? How and when did I lose my balance?

The answer became obvious. I lost my balance precisely at the point when I handed over the keys to my happiness to someone else. At the point when I started to lean inappropriately on another person for my emotional fulfillment. I lost my balance when I gave my power away.

Out of curiosity, I counted these experiences. In ten years, I had experienced ten romantic disappointments. Ten failed relationships. Ten broken hearts.

And the gift of those ten broken hearts was this: I realized I didn’t want or need “a relationship.” I just wanted to be happy. And I had been hinging the success or failure of my own “happiness” on whether or not I was in a relationship!

I erased “passionate, committed loving relationship” from my list of goals and replaced it with a new, revolutionary intention: To be happy, whether or not I was in a relationship.

I also got clear about what I wanted from a relationship.Of the long list of desired benefits and features (love, passion, companionship, etc.) “Love” had always been at the top of the list. Now I realized the sacrilege of it. Here I was, love incarnate, waiting for someone to “give me love” (and refusing to be whole and complete without some external “giver of love”). Hmm, perhaps, I should look at how I was giving (and not giving) love to myself….

I vowed to never again hand the keys to my own happiness over to someone else. Never will I cling to a relationship, imagining “love” to be a scarce commodity and men to be in short supply.

It took some time to develop new thoughts and feelings about “relationships.” But I’m getting the hang of it. I no longer approach holidays with anxiety, frustration, or self-imposed expectations. I just enjoy them, however they show up.

Today was the perfect Valentine’s Day. I dressed up like a human Valentine’s card (black skirt with red roses and red accents to match), shared a lovely meal with a woman friend from out of town, visited another friend in jail, and met some wonderful new people doing the same.

I came home, finished some work, and watched a short movie with my father. We enjoyed some lovely chocolates and flowers sent by a girlfriend.

Nothing was missing. Nothing was wrong.

I did not approach Valentine’s Day seeking love, needing love, or assuming that love had somehow gone missing. I approached it knowing that I embody love. Knowing that I am the Source of love, literally, “a cup of God.”

I brought love to those around me with my festive outfit, words and smile. I received love and happiness from an endless number of friends, family, and even strangers. And I was, and I AM… Happy!

Love is abundant. Love is everywhere. Love is inside of me. It cannot be lost or taken away. Perhaps I shall feel the pang of romantic disappointment again, but I shall not forget the gift of ten broken hearts, the undeniable awareness that I AM LOVE.

2019: Valentine’s Day has been postponed due to blizzard conditions. But when it resumes, I look forward to celebrating my third with my Sweetie. Amazing what can show up when we are present to gratitude and the reality of unconditional love!

 

8 thoughts on “The Gift of Ten Broken Hearts

  1. Elsie

    I enjoyed reading your blog and thought of my own personal search for love, but my tainted heart kept me at arms lenght relationships. I too am divorced and you could say “needed closure” from the ex relationship. Until I forgave myself for making mistakes in life, I forgave my ex for all the hurt. I realize that love begins with me. Do I love myself enough to be able to extend this love to others? You see, we can only give what we have. Nothing more. Love is about relationships, from family, kids, parents, friends, co-workers, etc…it’s all about “Love”.

    I can have a glimpes of understanding when we say “God is Love”. It is truly a form of “Unconditional Love” when you can say I forgive you for all the hurt and still love again…

  2. Kate Phillips Post author

    Thanks for reading and sharing, Elsie. You are right on that we can only give what we have, and that love, by nature, is unconditional. That doesn’t mean there aren’t times when it makes sense for us to heal and protect ourselves. Then we are ready to expand ourselves into living another when we have lived and nurtured ourselves.

  3. John

    Great article Kate- There’s a line in Human Touch by Bruce Springstein that goes “in the end what you don’t surrender, well the world just strips away.” Sounds like a resignation fo cruel fate at first. Over the years tho (the song is almost 20 years old now) I’ve come to realize that accepting this idea of surrender is the road to enlightenment. For me, in the case of of love, it means giving up on the idea that Love can come from anywhere outside of myself. I didn’t get to this place by choice mind you… but that’s another story… As Elsie alluded to, God is Love. And if God is infinite and omni-present so then, is Love… Let it Be…

    Peace

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  7. shri

    i too had a 3 r 4 heart breaks & came to a conclusion that no relation ship with any one in this life & i’m strong about this.reading u r story made me feel so sad about us.