Is a Happy Marriage the Unicorn of Relationships?

Is a Happy Marriage the Unicorn of Relationships?

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Unicorn,” is defined as “a creature of the imagination; a person that exists only in legends or myths or fiction.”

As a therapist, mediator and attorney, I see many unhappy individuals and couples longing for the “happily ever after” they had planned. The ones in the most pain are not sure if they want to stay or go.

To many of my clients, the possibility of experiencing a truly happy marriage seems as remote and impossible as sighting that “imaginary creature represented as a white horse with a long horn growing from its forehead.”

A happy marriage is not a mythical or magical experience. It’s the end result of many acts of two people who truly CARE about each other.

You can appreciate that despite your best efforts, from time-to-time you’re going to trigger each other. Or hurt each other. Or scare, sadden or disappoint the other.

The difference between reality and mythology is that the happy marriage doesn’t miraculously appear. In the real world, you can create a happy marriage by learning a few Compassionate Communication skills — including empathy and forgiveness — and applying them liberally and often to your relationship.

What I have learned over the years is that the difference between a happy and an unhappy marriage is that in the HAPPY one, each partner truly CARES.

Partners share:

  • C – Compassion for themselves and their partner. Compassion is not codependency. It’s a healthy perspective on your own needs as well as your partner’s. It’s knowing the 5 steps to receive what you truly want and need and practicing the miracle of empathy.

 

  • A – Acceptance of all the idiosyncrasies that make your partner unique. Acceptance is the ability to love someone for who they are, and not who you need them to be. It is also accepting the humanity and divinity of both of you, knowing we are spiritual beings having a human experience. And marriage can trigger all our human parts.

 

  • R – Respect for each other’s individuality. Respect is the ability to see the good traits of your partner and honor those. No one is perfect. As Sam Keen said, ” We come to love not by finding a perfect person but by learning to see an imperfect person perfectly.”

 

  • E – Empathy for your feelings, desires and needs. Empathy means you listen, understand, and truly care what your partner feels, and they learn to do the same for you. You drop the walls you’ve built to protect yourself and the filters through which you have judged each other and truly relate from your heart.

 

  • S – Self love that allows each of you to practice healthy self-care. True self-love is the ability to take exquisite care of yourself, no matter the circumstances. You give yourself the attention, affection, appreciation and acceptance you need. Then you share all that love with your partner.

If you’re unclear where your relationship is breaking down in this CARES model, I can help. 

Take my free Relationship Assessment – and find out how to heal and transform your relationship. 

Bottom line: Unicorns don’t exist, but happy marriages do. You can have one — if you try.

And if you do your best, and CARE as much as possible and it’s still not meeting your needs, you can have a Compassionate Divorce®, which isn’t a Unicorn either.  https://amzn.to/3nfd0WV

Linda Kroll is a therapist, mediator, attorney, Chopra Certified Master Teacher, and author of the bestselling Compassionate Mediation® for Relationships at a Crossroad: How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce.  

You can get a free chapter of the book at LindaKrollBook.com, or order the book on Amazon. https://amzn.to/42BxJEl

There are more free gifts and resources for Compassionate Communication and Compassionate Mediation® at LindaKroll.com. 

Linda’s online course on Compassionate Mediation®  is available now. To learn more go HERE.

www.CompassionateMediation.INFO

Is a “Happy Marriage” the Unicorn of Relationships?

It’s not a mythical dream! Here’s how you can get your marriage back on track.

Unicorn,” is defined as “a creature of the imagination; a person that exists only in legends or myths or fiction.”

As a therapist, mediator and attorney, I see many unhappy individuals and couples longing for the “happily ever after” they had planned. The ones in the most pain are not sure if they want to stay or go.

To many of my clients, the possibility of experiencing a truly happy marriage seems as remote and impossible as sighting that “imaginary creature represented as a white horse with a long horn growing from its forehead.”

A happy marriage is not a mythical or magical experience. It’s the end result of many acts of two people who truly CARE about each other.

You can appreciate that despite your best efforts, from time-to-time you’re going to trigger each other. Or hurt each other. Or scare, sadden or disappoint the other.

The difference between reality and mythology is that the happy marriage doesn’t miraculously appear. In the real world, you can create a happy marriage by learning a few Compassionate Communication skills — including empathy and forgiveness — and applying them liberally and often to your relationship.

What I have learned over the years is that the difference between a happy and an unhappy marriage is that in the HAPPY one, each partner truly CARES, and that means they share:

Compassion for themselves and their partner. Compassion is not codependency. It’s a healthy perspective on your own needs as well as your partner’s. It’s knowing the 5 steps to receive what you truly want and need and practicing the miracle of empathy.

A  Acceptance of all the idiosyncrasies that make your partner unique. Acceptance is the ability to love someone for who they are, and not who you need them to be. It is also accepting the humanity and divinity of both of you, knowing we are spiritual beings having a human experience. And marriage can trigger all our human parts.

R  Respect for each other’s individuality. Respect is the ability to see the good traits of your partner and honor those. No one is perfect. As Sam Keen said, ” We come to love not by finding a perfect person but by learning to see an imperfect person perfectly.”

E  Empathy for your feelings, desires and needs. Empathy means you listen, understand, and truly care what your partner feels, and they learn to do the same for you. You drop the walls you’ve built to protect yourself and the filters through which you have judged each other and truly relate from your heart.

S  Self love that allows each of you to practice healthy self-care. True self-love is the ability to take exquisite care of yourself, no matter the circumstances. You give yourself the attention, affection, appreciation and acceptance you need. Then you share all that love with your partner.

If you’re unclear where your relationship is breaking down in this CARES model, I can help. Take my free Unhappy Marriage Quiz – and find out how to heal and transform your relationship. 

Bottom line: Unicorns don’t exist, but happy marriages do. You can have one — if you try.

(And if you do your best, and CARE as much as possible and it’s still not meeting your needs, you can have a Compassionate SELF-Led Divorce®, which isn’t a Unicorn either.)

Linda Kroll is a therapist, mediator, attorney, Chopra Certified Master Teacher, and author of the bestselling Compassionate Mediation® for Relationships at a Crossroad: How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce.  You can get a free chapter of the book at LindaKrollBook.com, and get free gifts and resources for Compassionate Communication and Compassionate Mediation® at LindaKroll.com. Linda’s 8-week live online course on Compassionate Mediation® begins soon. To learn more, join her upcoming live free webinar “Should I Stay or Should I Go: Five Vital Questions to Help You Know!

“Should I Stay or Should I Go?” Five Vital Questions to Help You Know

“Should I Stay or Should I Go?”

How many times have you asked yourself this question—over how many days, weeks, months, years, even decades? Do you feel like your relationship is difficult and don’t know how to change it? Have you had marriage counseling that didn’t work? Are you too “checked out” to try again?

Have you ever considered the possibility of divorce, but were not sure what to do next? Are you too scared to even discuss it? Maybe you’re reluctant to talk with an attorney because that would make the situation “real.” Or perhaps you’ve threatened to leave the union for so long now that your partner doesn’t believe you anymore.

Right now, you may be suffering in silence or engaged in all-out battle. Or you might be separated from your partner and each trying to live your own lives without a clear sense of direction for your relationship. But it doesn’t have to stay that way.

When a marriage is in crisis, you suffer from unmet expectations, dashed hopes, stored resentments, quiet desperation or even overt war. You may have created an “impenetrable wall” around your heart as a way to “manage your pain” and protect yourself from more hurt and disappointment. You may have erected “filters” through which you see your partner, clouded with judgment or blame for what she/he did or didn’t do. (“She always does this, he never does that.”)

If you feel you’ve reached the end of your rope—that you can’t go on this way any longer, that you’re at a crossroads and don’t know which way to turn next—before you take a step in any direction, it’s time to come home to your SELF.

Vital Question #1: Am I bringing my best SELF to the relationship?

When you are “in SELF,” answers to your questions will come to you with ease. You won’t have to agonize about which direction to pursue. You will be led by that inner wisdom which is always available when you quiet your mind enough to hear it.

Many terms are used to describe our most centered, compassionate, and spiritual nature: for example, true self, inner wisdom, higher self, Soul, Spirit, Universe, Oneness, source energy, Buddha nature, Brahman, Inner Wise Self, Inner Wisdom, Inner Pilot Light, higher consciousness, etc. Regardless of your belief systems, and in the interest of laying common ground and language between us, I will call this best, most loving, wisest part of us—the SELF (all capital letters).

Whenever you operate from SELF, you’re calmer, clearer, and more compassionate. You speak with greater confidence and courage, as you stay connected to your deep, inner knowing.  You’re no longer making decisions from old, reactive “Parts” of you that are scared, walled up, judgmental, angry, or retaliatory. You’re able to stay in the present moment and co-create a relationship that considers everyone’s needs, starting with your own.

You may hear different voices in your head. You may have different Parts with different feelings and needs. Sometimes you think, “I want to leave, but I’m afraid.” Other times you may feel, “I hope he/she will change and give me what I need.” You may act “angry” one minute or “withdrawn and distant the next moment.“ There may be a Part of you who wants to stay and another Part that wants to run away.” Guilty, resentful, terrified, hopeful. You have many Parts. Whenever you’re “in SELF” you can speak for your Parts instead of from your Parts. Then you communicate with honesty, empathy, and clarity.

Unfortunately, most of us find it difficult to operate consistently in SELF-mode. More often, we’ve learned how to relate from our “Parts.” The way back to “SELF” is to first know, understand, and love our Parts. Compassionate Communication allows you to connect to your best SELF, let go of limiting beliefs, unburden pain from the past, and relate from your heart.

Vital Question #2: Am I Showing Empathy to My Partner (and to My SELF?)

You first said, “I do,” with the thought of staying married forever, and now you and your partner have developed some bad habits in your method of communication. Many individuals are afraid to share their honest feelings and unmet needs with their partner, so they suffer in silence, act out in rage, or secretly disconnect and find another partner with whom to have an affair.

Problems in relationships are rarely about what you are saying, but how you are saying it. Parts often carry a negative energy or tone. Whenever you speak from SELF, you create more acceptance, attention, appreciation, and affection for each other.

When you are “in SELF,” you are practicing “witnessing awareness” of the behaviors of your Parts and your partner’s Parts. You can notice what is happening between you and then make conscious choices to respond in ways that foster better communication.

It’s important that you and your partner each do your own work, but if only one of you is willing, the dynamics of your relationship can still change. When SELF is present (even if it just comes from you), the relationship improves immediately. You will understand your own unique Parts in order to heal the past and connect to your spiritual source—whatever that means to you. The more you practice showing empathy — acceptance, forgiveness, humility, responsibility, compassion, and non-judgment — the more liberating life becomes—not only for yourself, but everyone around you.

Vital Question #3: Have You Explored All Your Options?

You may feel stuck in you present situation because you feel your only options are the status quo or divorce. You may not be ready or willing to terminate your marriage for many reasons:

  • You hope your partner will change
  • You dread being alone
  • You’re worried about your children
  • You’re anxious about your financial future
  • You are guilty about breaking up your family
  • You still love your spouse

You don’t have to leave, but you don’t have to stay in the relationship you have now. You can learn how to create a new marriage together, even if you are the only one willing to do the work! However, you may have to be strong enough to be willing to leave at some point in the future, rather than stay unhappy, resentful, unfulfilled, unfaithful, and/or helpless and hopeless.

As you do your own work, you will take the time you need to become fully informed of all of the possible options available to you, including:

  • Individual counseling
  • Couples counseling
  • Group counseling (12 step meetings can be invaluable)
  • Post-nuptial agreement (like a “Pre-nuptial Agreement” only after you are married).
  • Separation (discussions needed but no legal action required)
  • Legal Separation
  • Compassionate Mediation® to create a new and improve relationship
  • SELF-Led Divorce®

In the past, divorce has created turmoil, pain, financial disaster and broken families. It doesn’t need to be that way. With Compassionate Mediation® healing can happen—and new, healthy relationships are possible..

Vital Question #4: Do You Understand Your Finances and Your Rights

Are you afraid that if you ask for or make some changes that you will be financially destroyed? Is your partner threatening you in ways to keep you from making your own decisions? Have you taken the time to learn what you own and what you owe? Will you give yourself the right amount of self-care and self love to get the information and support you need?

Many couples begin a conversation about divorce with little or no prior discussion of issues that one or both of them may have ignored or taken for granted. Perhaps you are more responsible for paying bills than your spouse, and you wish that your partner were more pro-active and involved. You may not share equal knowledge of what you both currently earn, spend and save. You may have never discussed retirement plans, savings for your children’s college costs, or how discretionary income can be spent.

All of these topics are on the table when divorce is planned, but it is also paramount that they be part of a healthy relationship in which both parties are equal and informed partners. In many situations, each member of the couple has taken on the same roles of their parents, and then come to resent the fact that the other spouse doesn’t earn more, parent more or pay more attention to the financial and parental details in their lives.

When intimacy is an issue, as it often is, it’s due to the resentments, judgments, and blame that create walls and filters that have inhibited or blocked their sex lives. Couples can live separately and separated under the same roof for years, and even decades. If they took the time to heal the pain, forgive, and be grateful for what they do share, they could renew the bond that brought them together years before.

Learning how to talk compassionately about all subjects creates a sense of safety and trust that probably has been missing for a long time. You can make the time for all these conversations and give you and your spouse, and your family, an opportunity for an intimate and compassionate new beginning.

Vital Question #5: If You Had a Magic Wand, Would You Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce?

Your answer helps you set your personal intention for your relationship right now. Are you hoping your spouse will change to meet your needs? Are you reacting to his indifference thinking a divorce would set you free? Have you become attracted to someone else and want to explore single life? Do one or both of you secretly hope for a reconciliation?  If so, you can build on that hope.

Your answer will help you get an idea of what you each want: a new and better relationship together, a separation, or a divorce. How much do you each know about separation or divorce? Have you or your spouse already spoken with an attorney? Are your expectations realistic? Have you thought about what you want to do about staying in your house, dividing assets, discussing maintenance, childcare and parenting?

Often one or both of you may be resigned to the decision of the other, not realizing you have other options to be considered. If you learn Compassionate Communication, you can discuss all your long-standing issues with mutual respect and confidence. Your new skills of listening with empathy and asking for what you want and need help create a fertile ground for building something new.

Even if a third party is now involved in an emotional or physical affair, you can still heal from that betrayal and move forward with optimism and possibility. However, if there is adultery, abuse, or addiction without a desire to stop or change the behavior, then divorce will be the most likely outcome.

However, if there are hurt feelings that have never been acknowledged or healed, there is a chance that communications training can finally enable you and your spouse to feel seen, heard, and acknowledged. You can learn how to talk about your desires, unmet needs and expectations, hopes and dreams.

Compassionate Mediation® Will Lead You to Your Answer

If couples put as much energy into learning how to communicate with compassion as they have to put into getting a divorce, profound changes can occur within them and between them.

The French philosopher Teilhard de Chardin said, “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.” You can always tune in to who you truly are, underneath your thoughts, feelings, and past experiences. You can connect with what is your divine spiritual nature in the midst of your human experiences. You become more conscious, aware, mindful—in other words, more “SELF-led.” You learn how to choose your responses, your behavior, and your future decisions from your highest and best SELF. Becoming more conscious and SELF-led in your relationship allows you to focus on the higher good for all concerned, and then relate compassionately to heal and transform the dynamics between you and your partner.

Compassionate Mediation® offers the tools of Compassionate Communication, the Miracle of Empathy, and all the information you need to create a new and improved situation, no matter the form. You can heal and transform your relationship for the highest good of all concerned.  You can take the time you need to acquire all the skills, information and support to help you decide what to do next. You will feel more balanced, peaceful, openhearted, open-minded, and present. When you take the time to become more SELF-led, you can choose to consciously create a new relationship that leads to more intimacy, passion, connection and fun.

You will bring your best SELF and have the relationship you desire and deserve.

To learn more, please visit https://lindakroll.com/ and get your free chapter of Compassionate Mediation® for Relationships at a Crossroad: How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce.

 

The Proud and “Perfect” Princess

The Proud and “Perfect” Princess

Hi, Dear Ones, I just wanted to share the story I wrote for my six year old granddaughter — who didn’t want to order her own hamburger last night and cried when I suggested she tell the waiter instead of tell me. After I wrote it, I realized it applies to me too. Sending love to all!

The Proud and “Perfect” Princess

Once upon a time lived a beautiful Princess who was very proud and wanted to be seen as perfect.

She didn’t like to make mistakes or have anyone notice if something she said or did was wrong, or could have been better, or had room for improvement.

So she never tried anything new.

She only did the few things that she was comfortable doing, that she knew she could do well. She stayed in her Comfort Zone, which was very small and confining.

She felt confident in her comfort zone. She didn’t care that she never left it, because she had servants who would do the things she wasn’t comfortable doing.

When she went to a restaurant, she had her servant order for her because she was not comfortable talking to strangers. If someone had a suggestion for how to learn to do it, she would cry because it would mean she would have to leave her comfort zone, do something new, and not be perfect the first few times. She was too embarrassed, and didn’t want to talk about it.

So she stayed in her comfort zone, even though it meant she never could grow into a Powerful and Prestigious Princess who would someday make a Questioning and Quality Queen.

Then one day, she looked around and realized, “I want to grow up. I don’t want to stay a Princess forever. Someday I want to be a the Queen.”

And that was the day she gave herself Permission not to be Perfect. And she left her Comfort Zone.

Little by little, she tried new things.
She made mistakes
She learned to laugh at herself instead of cry.
She had more interesting things to do.
She felt more confident, courageous, and curious about everything.

And most of all, she had more fun!

She grew up to be a Quality Queen who questioned everything wherever she went.

She was always learning something new and exciting.

And she lived happily ever after.

P. S. (It’s always comforting when we can love and accept our own inner child. Sending love and hugs from mine to yours! xoxoxo)

 

A Better Way to Get Divorced!

 

 

There Is a Better Way to Get Divorced 

(… for everyone considering, in the middle, or even past a divorce.)

 

My heart goes out to you.

Your family doesn’t need to be “broken,” but can be peacefully and respectfully “re-structured.” Your children need to be shielded from the shrapnel of your hurt or animosity. Love is the answer — and it starts with loving your SELF.

There IS a better way to resolve conflict, heal your pain, and communicate with empathy. My book became an instant Amazon International Bestseller in the fields of Divorce, Parenting and Reference.

Compassionate Mediation® for Relationships at a Crossroad: Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce offers a roadmap for Compassionate Communication leading to a peaceful and respectful transformation.

When I finally got divorced (many years ago), after a very long separation (9 years!) I brought this prayer with me to the courtroom. I gave it to my soon-to-be-ex-husband and our attorneys. When the gavel came down, I handed out Hershey kisses and hugged my ex —  and said I was sorry and I love him. Both were true then and still are.

I share the prayer I had written the night before we ended our 20 year union. Please consider using it for the sake of your children and your future. I send my heartfelt love and empathy to you all.

Linda’s Prayer for a Peaceful Parting

I pray for a peaceful and respectful settlement meeting, in which all parties come together from their Highest Selves and their truest connection to Your guidance, wisdom and love.

I pray that the parts of ourselves that are angry, fearful, defensive, revengeful, retributive, punitive, unloving, unforgiving, sad, young, abandoned, resentful, negative, hurting and hurtful – that all these parts be quelled with the leadership of the Self, coming from a place of trust in Your presence and light.

I pray for compassion, forgiveness, gratitude and appreciation. Although our marriage has come down to a business closing of money and asset division, I ask that we remember the love that brought us together, and the wonderful children which our union has borne. For their sakes as well as our own, we wish to put an end to this process in as respectful and loving a way as possible.

Although we each carry our sadness and pain and mutual regrets, I pray that we can look beyond this difficult period to a time when we can be friends and coexist peacefully. I pray that our once intact family can be rearranged to two intact and loving homes, where our children feel connected and comfortable. I pray that we can hold in a different light the love that once joined us forever; that on the deepest level we wish each other well as we let go and let G-d direct our lives.

For the sake of all we once had, and for all we had planned to share together, let us now finalize the terms of our marital dissolution so that we are both free to get on with our lives.

         Let us complete this last painful task with a sense of trust in the love we once shared and hopefully can remember after this part is over.

         Let us not work from purely simple and self-serving motives, but keep in mind the general welfare of each of us, and our children.

         Let us request our attorneys to contribute what is needed for the mutual benefit of all concerned.

In the end, let us know that we behaved civilly, that we can look back with a clear conscience, and that as much as we could, we came from our hearts.  G-d bless us and direct us all.  Amen.

Compassionate Mediation® will help you now!

I never thought my marriage would end, and I have dedicated my life to make sure other people don’t have to suffer the way our family and children did.

The sooner Compassionate Mediation® is begun, the better, Even if you’ve filed for divorce, you can learn a new way to Compassionately Communicate that inspires you to connect you to your highest and best SELF, let go of your limiting beliefs (and the walls around your heart,) heal pain from the past (and your “inner child”), and relate from your heart.

For over 30 years, this process has helped hundreds of women and men create the relationship they deserve and desire. And even more important, Compassionate  Mediation® helps the children whose parents create a new relationship with respect, compassion and friendship. I’d love to help you all.

You can get a FREE chapter at LindaKrollBook.com or order the book here.

Sending much love and compassion,

Linda

You can begin to make changes in your relationship today by taking my FREE RELATIONSHIP ASSESSMENT.

About Linda:

As a therapist, mediator, attorney, Linda is the author of Compassionate Mediation® for Relationships at a Crossroads: How to Add Passion to Your Marriage or Compassion to Your Divorce and also the Kindle book, Compassionate Divorce™: Changing the Face of Divorce, One Heart at a Time.

She is also a Chopra-certified teacher of meditation, yoga, and Ayurveda.

She combines emotional and spiritual healing, along with legal and financial information and support. 

If you are a therapist, coach, mediator, attorney, clergy or counselor, who would like to learn about this process, please get a free Roadmap and Video introduction at www.LindaKroll.com/Roadmap..

I look forward to connecting with you.

My Intentions for a Peaceful Parting

My Intentions for a Peaceful Parting

Linda Kroll’s Settlement Intention

         I intend to have a peaceful and respectful settlement meeting, in which all parties come together from their Highest Selves and their own inner guidance and wisdom.

         I intend that the parts of ourselves that are angry, fearful, defensive, revengeful, retributive, punitive, unloving, unforgiving, sad, young, abandoned, resentful, negative, hurting and hurtful – that all these parts be quelled with the leadership of the Self, coming from a place of trust in my own presence and light.

         I intend to show compassion, forgiveness, gratitude and appreciation. Although our marriage has come down to a business closing of money and asset division, I intend that we remember the love that brought us together, and the wonderful children which our union has borne. For their sakes as well as our own, we wish to put an end to this process in as respectful and loving a way as possible.

         Although we each carry our sadness and pain and mutual regrets, I intend that we can look beyond this difficult period to a time when we can be friends and coexist peacefully. I intend that our once intact family can be rearranged to two intact and loving homes, where our children feel connected and comfortable.  I intend that we can hold in a different light the love that once joined us forever; that on the deepest level we wish each other well as we let go.

         For the sake of all we once had, and for all we had planned to share together, let us now finalize the terms of our marital dissolution so that we are both free to get on with our lives.

         Let us complete this last painful task with a sense of trust in the love we once shared and hopefully can remember after this part is over.

         Let us not work from purely simple and self-serving motives, but keep in mind the general welfare of each other and our children.

         Let us request our attorneys to contribute what is needed for the mutual benefit of all concerned.

         In the end, let us know that we behaved civilly, that we can look back with a clear conscience, and that as much as we could, we came from our hearts.