lostbottle.com lostbottle.com
Search:    Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Add Url >> Add Your Article   
 

Sewing Machines Save Money in the Home

The sewing machine is a part of a lot of people??s life any more. Yet some of us do not think that i ... - Joseph Then
 

Parenting On A Budget

Bringing baby home does not have to be expensive! Read as a mom of eightshares the real "must haves" ... - Tracy Lambert
 

10 Summer Camp Safety Tips for Parents

Here are the top 10 tips every parent considering a day or overnight camp should do to keep their ch ... - Michelle Annese
 
 

Gift Ideas for Teachers

Each year we all struggle with what to get our children?s teachers both in December and again at the ... - Audrey Okaneko
 

Home Care Facts

Home care is a type of health care that is provided in the home of the patient. While it may sometim ... - Michael Colucci
 

Alarm Envy or Just a Good Idea

There are various uses for a small battery alarm but how do you make an alarm more cost effective. - Michael Russell
 

How to Make a Child's Handprint on a Ceramic Tile

Moms and kids working together to create ceramic tiles with their kids' handprints on the. Supply li ... - Dy Witt
 

Final Goodbyes

Grief is a funny thing. It can hang around for a very long time, affecting various parts of our life ... - Fran Watson
 
 

  Home –› Garden & Home –› Women
   
 

He Has A Responsibility To Treat Me Properly

   

Author: Annie Kaszina

Most women react to ill treatment in their personal life with disbelief. We prefer to deny that the person who behaved that way to us, actually did it intentionally. They may have been tired, stressed, drunk, upset about something else, jealous, needy, psychologically disturbed... the list goes on and on. We explain away the bad times as so many 'blips'.

That denial is as much about us as it is about them. We want to believe that we are all playing by the Queensbury rules. It's reassuring. It enables us to still the pain. It allows us to think that, in the end, everything will turn out the way we want it to be.

We really don't want to think that we inhabit some kind of parallel universe where interpersonal brutality is acceptable, where we are treated as if we are worthless. We prefer to think that our partner is "a nice person really"- in between one outburst and the next.

The statement: "He has a responsibility to treat me properly" assumes that he is playing by the same rules as we are. Despite all evidence to the contrary. (How many 'blips' does it take before we realise that the blips are an integral part of the mosaic of this person's behaviour?)

Still, the concept of 'his responsibility towards me' sounds perfectly reasonable, until you start to look more closely at it. In reality, it presupposes that your rights are his responsibility.

Well, they just might be - if he chose to make them his responsibility. But he clearly doesn't. And he does have the power to make his own choices- however deplorable you, and society, may find them. Further, if he refuses to be accountable for his own problems, he's hardly likely to shoulder responsibility for anyone else's rights. (Have you ever actually heard him talk about anybody's rights apart from his own?)

However he may conduct himself in the outside world, in his emotional life he opts for irresponsibility. It's a choice that he is free to make. However much you may deplore it, he can and frequently does choose to behave cruelly. It doesn't make his behaviour right, at all. But it does make for clear thinking.

Once you accept that deplorable behaviour is an integral part of this person, at the very least, the scales start to fall from your eyes. You become response-able for yourself and your choices. You become able to choose your responses to the infringement of your rights, because you are no longer disarmed by a misguided value judgement about this person.

Your responses, together with the criteria you use to decide who you will let into the inner reaches of your life, will set the tone for how you are treated.

(Hands up if the criterion you currently use is something along the lines of: "I'll let anyone into my life, provided he shows any interest in me and doesn't appear to have disgusting personal habits.")

This is not to say that an abusive partner will suddenly be transformed into your Dream Partner because you change your responses. The odds are that he will behave even worse. But you've opted for response-ability because your situation was intolerable.

Response-ability is one of the most powerful tools you have for safeguarding your future life from other possible abusers.

Author Bio:

Annie Kaszina

Coach, writer and NLP Master Practitioner Annie Kaszina is passionate about helping people to shift the blocks and limiting beliefs that stop them tapping into their inner joy and realizing their full potential.

You can also reach this article by using: mature women, beautiful women, older women, fat women, old women, latin women, big women, giant women
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Elder Care Attorneys
 
Consider Rubber Decking ? The Possibilities Are Endless
 
Grandfather Clock Do It Yourself Repair - Part II
 
What is a Crib Rail Cover
 
Beware The Dog Days Of Summer!
 
House Move or Home Improvement?
 
Seven Home Decor Quick Make-Over Tips
 
An Introduction to Shutters
 
Maintaining your Fish Bowls
 
How To Choose The Best Kids Go Kart For Your Kid
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Medical Care

 

Fitness & Health

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Entertainment

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Self Help

 

Shopping Online

 

Law & Politics

 

Garden & Home

 

Food & Recipe

 

Indoor Games

 

Realty & Property

 

Employment & Careers

 

Banking & Finance

 

Creative Arts

 

Technology & Science

 

Academics & Education

 

News & Events

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Business & Commerce

 

Teens & Kids

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Networking

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 
Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.lostbottle.com - All Rights Reserved.