This is a beautiful, soulful book that has given me deeper perspective about myself, not only for romantic relationships, but for all my relationships. In fact, when I wasn't focused on dating, I forgot that this book was trying to help me find a partner. I just felt like it was helping me learn to live a fuller life. And that is part of the way to find a wonderful partner, for sure! The journaling exercises are helpful too, but I didn't have a learning partner and I think having one could be extremely beneficial and enhance the experience of working through this book.
"What are Core Gifts? They are simply your points of deepest sensitivity to life. You will find them in the things that inspire you most, the things that touch you most deeply--and in the things that hurt you the most. Often we think we need to conceal these vulnerable parts of ourselves, to hide them or fix them in order to make ourselves more attractive, but the absolute reverse is true: they are the bullet train to authentic intimacy. When we learn to lead with our core Gifts, our lives shift on their very axes. Our personal magnetism becomes stronger. We experience more passion and more connection to ourselves and others. Most important, we move closer to the love that may have previously eluded us, a love that empowers us and brings us joy." pg. 2
"Like a number of my clients, I felt as though there was a fatal flaw in my basic wiring Why did I keep falling for people who weren't good for me? And why did available, kind, thoughtful people make me want to run for the hills? Why did the ones I wanted most never want me back, while those who pursued me barely interested me at all? At some point along the way, this endless cycle of hope and disappointment hit me right between the eyes. I realized that I had spent years seeking love, but never working to build it." pg. 4
"Of all the harmful myths we're fed, one of the most insidious is the belief that longing for love is a weakness. I disagree. Longing for love is not weakness. It's wisdom. Numbing our loneliness is a path to a despair that plagues our entire culture. We are not meant to be alone and self-sufficient. Without lives filled with love, we wither inside. Intimacy is oxygen. We don't need to transcend our hunger for love--we need to honor it." pg. 4-5
"Core Gifts are not the same as talents or skills; in fact, until we understand them, our Core Gifts are often the very qualities we're most ashamed of, the ones we keep trying to fix or hide because they make us feel so vulnerable. Yet they are also the places from which we love most fully. There is a formula that I've seen proven true in my work and my life: to the degree that we treasure our Core Gifts (yes, treasure them; dispassionate acceptance isn't enough) we attract caring, thoughtful people who are also (miracle of miracles) attracted to us. And, equally amazing, we become more attracted to people who are good for us, and less interested in people who diminish us or leave us feeling insecure." pg. 19
"It was in therapy that I discovered my Core Gift of tenderness--and confronted how angry and ashamed that gift made me feel. I grew up in a family of Holocaust survivors. In their eyes, too much tenderness translated into weakness, and weakness led to death. So I grew up with a powerful wall of shame and anger around this central attribute of my being. And that wall stopped me from finding any lasting romantic relationship." pg. 21
"Our Core Gifts hold the key to ourselves and our relationshps. But they can scare us. It takes work to learn to handle their complexity, vulnerability, and power. As worthy as our gifts are, they are by no means hall passes to happiess They get us into trouble again and again. We become most defensive, or most naive, around them. They challenge us and the poeple we care about. They ask more of us than we want to give. And we can be devastated when we feel them betrayed or rejected." pg. 22-23
"Since the heat of our core is so hard to handle, we protect ourselves by moving further out from the center. Each step we take away from the center of the circle represents a more airbrushed version of ourselves. Each zone outward makes us feel safe, puts us at less risk of embarrassment, failure, and rejection. Yet each zone outward also moves us one step further from our soul, our authenticity, and our sense of meaning. As we get further away from our Core Gifts, we feel more and more alone and adrift. When we get too far from the warmth and humanity of our deepest self, we begin to experience a very painful sense of emptiness and despair." pg. 23
"Your Gift Zone is your springboard to intimacy and to the love you are looking for. The more you live in your Gift Zone and act on its promptings, the more love you will have in your life--and the closer you will come to your future relationship. In this zone your unique magic comes alive and begins to influence your world." pg. 25
"In that zone, perched between fear and exhilaration, we are more likely to feel the urgent importance of love. We all have a suspension bridge inside us that we can visit anytime we wish: it is the scary challenge of authenticity. If we seek deeper intimacy in our lives, each of us must face inward to the challenge of our authentic self." pg. 27
"Your Gift Zone carries magic because it springs from the source of your true self. Your song, should you be brave enough to sing it, will attract people who are searching for someone like you. As you live from your Gift Zone, you will meet people you wouldn't have met. You will create things in the world. You will inspire people. You will feel strange and scared at times, but you will be claiming new ground of personal goodness, ground that others will want to stand on--I promise you. When you live in your Gift Zone, you will shine. Many people won't notice--and they don't have to. The people who have been hungry for a person like you will feel thankful that they have finally found you." pg. 28
"In your relationships you may be most prone to becoming angry or distant when you feel wounded around your Core Gifts. When you feel inspiration, validation, and acceptance around them, you'll shine. . . They are the ache, the compelling pull, the inner reaching that we sometimes honor and sometimes try to silence. They are the music that keeps playing below the surface of our minds. To acknowledge our Core Gifts is to create deeper intimacy with our most essential self." pg. 38
"Often, our gifs are so basic to us that we may have never felt the need to single them out and name them--like a fish trying to grasp the concept of water. They are so basic to our inner life that it's hard for us to believe everyone doesn't have the same gifts. This can get us into a lot of trouble, because we expect everyone to hold the same values and sensitivities as we do, and when they don't meet the standards we set for ourselves--and don't even seem to care--we assume that it's because there's something wrong with us. Rather, it's simply a matter of realizing that our gifts are deeply unique, and that not everyone shares our sensitivities." pg. 39
"Also, the more time you spend with the things that touch you and move you, the more you will be noticed by the people who are good for you. The kind of person you're seeking is someone who is drawn to your Core Gifts, your authentic self. If you wait until you know someone loves you before you reveal these parts of yourself, it's as though you're waiting for the harvest without planting the seeds. It's the vulnerability, warmth, and humanity of your gifts that will make the right person notice and come to love you." pg. 41
"One of our greatest life tasks is actually to learn to bear joy, and to let it influence our psychology in deeper and deeper ways. In actuality, there is a great cultural discomfort with joy, and our voracious pleasure seeking is often a mask for our fear of simple joy. Joy frightens us, it makes our defenses quake--it almost invites a superstitious fear of 'the other shoe dropping.' We can bear joy for fleeting moments, but for most of us, self-appreciation all too quickly devolves into self-measurement." pg. 45
"If I had shamed him for the depth of his caring, he would have had to create armor around that gift. If I hadn't coached him in how to honor the almost unbearable burden of his gift, he would have felt ashamed of the depth of his love. Now, he could at least honor himself as he grieved, and that honoring helped him find his own path to healing." pg. 47
"Your sensitivity is an attribute of your greatest self, no matter how much pain it has caused you. Sensing what is happening in our heart, in our environment, and in the hearts of others is a profound gift." pg. 49
"Only by connecting with our Core Gifts can we ever hope to transcend our wounds and our 'unworthiness.' Because somehow, even as we get closer to our demons, each layer inward makes us feel more certain of who we are and what we are meant to do in the world. Each layer inward brings us to another level of passion. Each layer inward allows us to love more deeply, and each trains us in a new level of skill, bravery, and wisdom." pg. 56
"To understand one's deepest wounds and challenges, one needs to ask this question: 'What is the Core Gift that is trying to express itself at the heart of this struggle?' Sometimes the answer can't be reduced to a word or a phrase. And we often need the insight of others to help us decipher our Core Gifts. Creating a relationship with our Core Gifts is the task of a lifetime. Most of us must practice exposing ourselves to our Core Gifts in small doses, gradually increasing our tolerance for their power, their tenderness--and their immense challenge. Our deepest gifts can grow and mature, but they can never be domesticated. They will never fit into the small, safe, well-mannered boxes we create for them. They will continue to draw outside the lines, to get us in trouble, cajole us to the edge of authenticity, cause tears we don't understand, surprise us with their emotion-filled truths." pg. 57
"Here is a way to understand your entire intimacy journey. I call it the Gift-Wound-Defense Matrix:
- At the heart of every defense lies a wound.
- At the heart of every wound lies a gift.
- At the heart of every gift lies a portal to the Source of Self--the key to our deepest love and life-meaning." pg 63
"In my many years of practice as a psychotherapist, I have seen something very important: it is those clients who have a generosity of spirit who are capable of finding the greatest happiness. They are also most resilient in the face of trauma and disaster. If they are also wise enough to choose relationships in which their generosity is appreciated and returned, their lives become profoundly gratifying." pg. 68
"When you're getting to know someone new, if you quash your generosity you will feel somehow reduced. If you don't seize the moment and take your date's hand when you feel like it, something is lost. Saying 'I love you' and touching your partner sexually or sensually in a way that speaks from your deepest heart are both acts of generosity. And the experience of having someone respond with joy and reciprocation provides a deep sense of mastery for your gifts. 'I can live in this world,' they begin to say. 'I can be powerful. I can be generous. I am wanted. I can love.'" pg. 68
"At the risk of oversimplification (and excluding cases of active addiction and untreated psychological disorders), we feel good when important things feel right in our lives. We register that 'rightness' with feelings of peace, gratification, and stability. These are signs that our Core Gifts, those barometers of our very soul, are being honored, seen, and embraced. When things feel wrong, we feel empty, sad, hurting. These are signs that our Core Gifts are somehow not being seen or honored--by others, and quite likely by ourselves. The places where we feel most broken often don't need to be fixed. What they need is to be heard." pg. 71
"Everyone's heard the self-help platitude 'You must love yourself before you can love anyone else.' This may sound wise, but it misses a great truth: if we want to experience true intimacy, we need to be taught to love aspects of ourselves--again and again--by the people around us. As much as most of us want to control our own destiny, the humbling truth is that sometimes the only way to learn self-love is by being loved--precisely in the parts of ourselves where we feel most unsure and tender. When we are loved in such a way, we feel freedom and relief and permission to love in a deeper way. No amount of positive self-talk can replicate this experience. It is a gift of intimacy, not of willpower. When we surround ourselves with people who honor our gifts and whose gifts we also honor, our lives blossom." pg. 73
"Of all the people you know, who sees and relishes your true self? Who is not afraid of your passion or envious of your gifts? Who has the generosity of spirit to encourage you toward greater self-expression? These people are your gold. Practice leaning on them more, and giving more back to them." pg. 73
"You may think that a community of loved ones can come later; that what you really need is a partner. If you think this way, chances are good that you are sabotaging your search for love. If you seek romantic love but are not building love into your relationships with friends and family, chances are good that you won't find what you're looking for. In a talk I attended by the renowned spiritual teacher Marianne Williamson, I remember her saying, 'The more I grow, the more my friends become like lovers and my lovers become like friends.'" pg. 74
"Be with those who help your being. - Rumi" pg. 81
"Attractions of deprivation draw us in--and then down, just like an undertow. If we don't get out in time, we're almost sure to get hurt. We keep feeling we have to do something to win our partner's love, approval, or care. We spend way too much time worrying about what we've done wrong, or what we can do differently to make things right. These relationships can trigger a sense of need and longing that robs us of our balance. With some attractions of deprivation, we see the red flags early on but can't stop ourselves. With others, the deprivational aspects of the relationship don't reveal themselves right away." pg. 84
"Attractions of deprivation are also one of the trickiest ways to flee real intimacy. In these relationships our fear of intimacy is hiding in plain sight. We're desperately seeking a solid love--from someone who we know, deep down, won't give it to us. With an attraction of deprivation, in some odd way we are safe. I've found that the people most drawn to attractions of deprivation experience discomfort, fear, unworthiness, or anger when they are confronted with a kind, stable, and available partner. The more we are drawn to attractions of deprivation, the less we will feel comfortable with available and caring people. Many of us need to develop our taste for healthy, stable relationships." pg. 88
"Attractions of inspiration have a warmth and an easiness. In these relationships, our challenge is to accept and return our partner's caring, not to win that caring. Our partners might challenge us to be better, but at bottom, they love us for who we are. Attractions of inspiration are fueled by the real sense of well-being that the relationship creates in us, not by the unrelenting itch for something that's denied us. These attractions often unfold slowly. They get richer as time goes on. They may take lots of work--but such relationships allow the work of intimacy. They make us feel love, not desperation. These are the only relationships to build a life around, the only ones that deserve the gift of our most intimate self. And I promise you, they really are out there." pg. 90
"Relationships of inspirations expand us to a size we could never achieve alone. These relationships are not only the path to love; they are the path to our own greatness. Through them we can find a way past the fears and wounds that dwarf us. Popular psychology tells us that we can only love others if we love ourselves first. But the real truth is often the other way around: until we feel seen and loved in the places we're most vulnerable (usually the places of our deepest gifts), few of us will ever be able to fully love ourselves. That's the great boon of relationships of inspiration. We experience our loved one seeing into our very core--and valuing what he sees. In the wake of this experience comes a sense of bravery, an innate desire to share our gifts--not out of obligation but from a sense of joyful overflow. And that makes us into just the kind of person we are looking for--one who inspires others simply by who she is." pg. 91
"Here are some markers for identifying your attractions of inspiration:
- Are you inspired by your partner's (mostly) consistent caring and acceptance?
- Are you inspired by your partner's goodness, decency, and integrity?
- Is your love fueled by respect for the kind of person your partner is?
- Are you and your partner willing to do the hard work of healing the relationship's areas of weakness?
- Do you like who you are in the presence of your partner? Does he or she make you a better you?
- Is your partner essentially free of the qualities of attractions of deprivation listed on pages 86-87 [lying and cheating; selfish behavior; unavailability; addictive behavior; hurtful behavior; untreated or unresolved emotional or psychological disorders; blaming and manipulative behavior]?" pg. 91-92
"And if we haven't learned how to honor our longing for connection, the kind of partners we will be intensely attracted to will be people who resist commitment, push us away, or dishonor our need for closeness. It's almost as though our attractions of deprivation are the universe's way of saying, 'There's work to be done around your relationship to this gift.'" pg. 106
"When we embrace our gifts, they feed and enhance us. When we deny them, they haunt us, often through relationships that demean that exact part of ourselves." pg. 106
"Behold, a sacred voice is calling you; All over the sky a sacred voice is calling. - Black Elk" pg. 121
"As you follow your Guiding Insights your life will unfold in surprising ways and you'll spend more time living in your Gift Zone. If you act on these lessons, you will become more creative. You'll have less tolerance for relationships of deprivation and you'll become more attracted to relationships of inspiration. You'll become a better friend to yourself and your loved ones. These are not empty promises, and this is no secret formula. Our hearts are whispering to us--sometimes shouting to us--all the time. The issue isn't that we're not being called; it's that we prefer to ignore that call." pg. 125
"When our goal is to connect with our personal truth and to interact with the world from there, everything changes. We feel a sense of creativity and worth. Our fear of rejection becomes less tyrannical. Connecting with the world as we really are becomes our new passion. That is the art of deeper intimacy and it is dynamic, scary, and priceless.
"Kindness not only helps others; it leads us to meet kinder people, people who are capable of long-term healthy love. Kindness and generosity are intoxicating to others. They are the very medium of intimacy. Love is found, noticed, and cherished in tiny moments of thoughtfulness." pg. 139
[So many more important passages that I noted, but ran out of room here to include them!]
Book borrowed from Skyline College Library.