Rewilding Your Relationship: Make Room for Humanness
To read Part 1 click here.
Part 2
Make Room for Humanness
No one is perfect. We all have our frailties. A rewilded relationship has room for the whole person. It does not require efforts to tame ourselves or our partner. We have become a self-help addicted society constantly focusing on self-improvement thinking that will get us to the holy grail of happiness. But focusing on trying to improve what is not working and what isn’t good enough has us miss the beauty and goodness of what is present.
As with part 1, start with yourself here too.
Can you see that any efforts to tame and control yourself result in suffering?
Seeing this is important because if you think it is worthwhile to keep punishing yourself in this way, you will keep doing that and you will do the same thing in your close relationships. The misunderstanding is that you will feel happier when you are … fill in the blank. Or when they are … (fill in the blank.) What this misses is that love and happiness reside within. You don’t need to earn them. You don’t need to be any different than you are to experience them. At this moment your nature is love. That cannot be taken away from you. When you feel the love that is your essence, there is a beautiful feeling of joy, happiness, contentment that fills you. It does not come from outside of you. It comes from within. The only thing that separates you from that experience is identifying with thoughts that tell you you are not that. And those thoughts are lies. The lies that say: “You are not good enough. You are unworthy. You need to improve to be loved or to feel happy.” These are conditioned thoughts that are habitual. They feel real, but they aren’t true.
A rewilded you experiences the beautiful feelings of your true nature with your personality as it is. There are infinite ways we can see to improve ourselves on the psychological level. Trying to improve our psychology is like whack-a-mole. One thing tidies itself up, and another thing rears its problematic head. Underneath it all is fear. Self-improvement is about attempting to rid ourselves of the human experience of fear that takes on so many different guises including insecurity, anxiety, anger. These feelings result in behaviors like shut down, hostility, aggression, passivity. Trying to fix fear is not the solution because it is not the problem.
Trying to fix fear is an impossibility because it doesn’t need to be fixed. There is nothing wrong with us for having this very normal and healthy human experience. Fear is the experience you feel when you identify with fearful thoughts. Sometimes this is very helpful. Fear has you move away from a poisonous snake. Fear can give you a shot of adrenaline so you react quickly and swerve away from the car whose driver didn’t see you in their blind spot. It is practical and useful in these situations and more. It is not practical and useful, however, when you live in chronic identification with fearful thoughts so the jolt of fear doesn’t fully subside. This results in persistent stress that manifests in numerous ways on the mental health spectrum and in physical health ailments. This is not your natural rewilded state. It is the by-product of learned conditioning and it is detrimental to ourselves and our relationships.
If self-help and self-improvement aren’t the answer, what is?
Self-help doesn’t work because we can’t improve ourselves out of fear. We can only wake up from it.
Chronic fear that results in pervasive stress is the result of feeling separate from your true nature. It is an incredibly painful experience. This misunderstanding is what causes us to try and improve our psychology because we think it is by polishing the ego that we will feel better.
But the ego doesn’t exist, so polishing it won’t work.
The ego is a constellation of thoughts that appear and disappear. We create continuity so it feels real and solid, but our experience is constantly being created. We make up the through-line. Not understanding that there is no through-line and seeing we make it up, means that we miss out on the infinite potential in each moment to see something fresh and new.
I miss out on this all the time. I feel like a separate individual. I lose myself in my conceptual mind. I get gripped by insecure, anxious, angry, or reactive thoughts. With rewilding none of this is a problem. It is all part of the beauty of waking up in consciousness. There is no need to fix the way waking up is happening. Your way is your way. You can’t stop it. You can’t get in the way of it, but you can suffer more or less as you go through it. Self-improvement is salt in the wound. Healing happens naturally. The salt isn’t necessary.
The wild, untamed, free nature of who you are exactly as you are is beautiful. You are incredible, amazing, beautiful, lovable, magnificent. You are a miracle. There is no comparison to the unique blessing and gift you are.
You don’t need to improve yourself because your awakening is happening naturally just like your breath, you can take the pressure off of yourself and stop trying to be better. You can relax and know that your limitations are a healthy part of waking up. You are doing the best you can and that is the best you can do. No more is required of you. Any message in your head that tells you you are not good enough is a lie. Who you are cannot be damaged. Your innate worth and value cannot be taken away from you. You are loveable exactly as you are, no matter what you have done. This does not mean that you have only done good things. It means that your goodness is not taken from you by your moments of fear and blindness to your true nature. No matter how blind you were. No matter what harm you did. Your nature is still love. And you are still waking up to that. Can you see this for yourself? Start there, but don’t stop there. This applies to everyone!
If you don’t need to be improved, tamed, or controlled, neither does your partner. No matter what their human frailties are, their essence is love. They are waking up to their true nature. Can you see this? This does not mean you have to stay with your partner. There is absolutely no requirement for you to stay, but can you see their innocence? Can you see who they are? Can you see their beauty and magnificence exactly as they are with their human frailties?
Assuming you are in a relationship that you want to stay in and rewild, can you give your partner the room they need to grow and learn as they wake up to who they are?
Are you able to see their frailties don’t mean anything about you? They are a reflection of their level of consciousness just like yours are a reflection of your level of consciousness. Can you not take their frailties personally?
To rewild your relationship and make room for the humanness of yourself and your partner, it is essential to see that bad behavior is not personal. It is a reflection of a contraction in consciousness. Even if a comment is aimed at you personally and has personal content in it about you. It is not about you, and when you are the one in the attack mode, it is not about the other person. No matter how much it looks like they are responsible for your experience they aren’t. Your experience is a reflection of your level of consciousness, not them.
Knowing you are love and knowing when you don’t experience that, it is a reflection of your own state of mind, is key to rewilding your relationships. There is room for whole people in relationships when we know we are only experiencing our own level of consciousness. This does not mean you need to stay or put yourself in harm’s way. In fact, when you are clear that another person’s behavior is not personal, it is much easier to listen to your commonsense and take care of yourself.
Rewilding allows you to appreciate and enjoy the natural state of love that is the essence of who we all are and share that experience. It appreciates the full human experience as the path to waking up and creates an inner stability that allows us to love and accept ourselves and others as they are.
The final installment of the Rewilding Your Relationship Series will be available next week.
Rohini Ross is passionate about helping people wake up to their full potential. She is a transformative coach, leadership consultant, regular contributor to Thrive Global, and author of the short-read Marriage. You can get her free eBook Relationships here. Rohini has an international coaching and consulting practice based in Los Angeles helping individuals, couples, and professionals embrace all of who they are so they can experience greater levels of well-being, resiliency, and success. Rohini is the co-founder of The 29-Day Rewilding Experience and The Rewilding Community. You can also subscribe to Rohini’s weekly blog on her website, rohiniross.com. You can also follow Rohini on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, and watch her Vlogs with her husband. To learn more about her work go to her website, rohiniross.com.

Christine Heath & Judy Sedgeman – Spirituality and Resilience
When you no longer give authority to the fear-based thoughts in your consciousness, all you are left with is happiness. Through the teachings of Sydney Banks, you can see how your psychological functioning works, which makes you less compelled to follow those thoughts that do not serve you. Becoming more aware of the wholeness and integration of both your human and spiritual natures helps to ground you in the unchanging essence of who you are, and ride out the ups and downs of your emotional experience more gracefully. Accepting the normalcy of your humanness will naturally reduce your anxiety and fear and enhance your joy and happiness in each moment. By placing less pressure on yourself to feel a certain way or be hung up on self-improvement, you may find that low moods do not derail or debilitate you; instead, you will become much more attuned to your innate wellbeing and peace of mind and experience more happiness as a result.
Greater psychological freedom is the gift that keeps on giving. How grateful would you feel if you no longer had to listen to your negative, self-punishing and painful inner narrative, day in and day out? Understanding the role of thought and recognizing how it creates your feelings of insecurity and self-doubt is truly liberating! You will be better able to hear and heed your inner wisdom and become less driven by the noisy thoughts of fear and constriction. As an ongoing practice, this allows you to more fully experience your resilience and reach a greater sense of clarity about how you want to move forward in your life. As a result, you can live in a way that feels authentic and true in every area, including your career, family, home, creative expression, play, relationships and overall well-being.
Your ability to enjoy life comes from being present in the moment rather than caught up in habitual, negative thoughts that take you out of the Now. Sydney Banks’ wisdom supports you in becoming aware of how you get seduced by your limited personal thinking and thus, create a painful reality of misunderstanding, fear and restriction. When you recognize how and why this happens, you can step free of the pattern. This understanding assists you to dismiss unhelpful thoughts and not take them seriously. Unlike traditional self-help or therapy, experiencing more psychological freedom and enjoyment does not rely on techniques. There are no magic bullets on the path of well-being. All you need to do is follow an internal compass that points to the truth of who you really are—beyond transient thoughts to your unchanging, formless essence.
In our culture, success is often associated with hard work and narrowly defined as material gain. However, authentic success, as shared by Sydney Banks, includes such intangibles as happiness, well-being, love, joy, compassion, and peace of mind that are innate in each one of us, along with outward goals and achievements. It honors the whole person in all walks of life, whether you are a professional, leader, executive, solopreneur, employee, mother, teacher or student. From this knowing and experience, you can access the infinite wellspring of love that is your essence, then share your gifts with the world from a place of fulfillment and meaning, through a profound understanding of the interaction between your psychological and spiritual natures. While conventional success can deplete you, authentic success only fills you up.
Are you self-critical, hard on yourself, and constantly trying to “fix” whatever you think is wrong with you? Perhaps you have tried all kinds of different personal growth techniques and spiritual practices in the hope of solving all your problems. This cycle can be exhausting and never-ending, because there will always be something to improve about yourself, from that mindset. Sydney Banks’ teachings can help you to see how your humanness is normal and not something that needs fixing: as a spiritual person, you don’t need to change or eradicate your humanness! Seeing yourself as normal allows you to love and accept yourself exactly as you are—warts and all. Adopting this perspective naturally brings out the best in you and helps to find peace with your personality. Self-love and self-acceptance is your natural state, and any disconnection from your true nature is only temporary. What a relief!
One of the first areas people often experience profound transformation from the teachings of Sydney Banks is in their relationships, both personal and professional. While it often seems like another person’s irritation, anger, indifference, insensitivity, rudeness, etc., directly affects your experience, in reality your disturbance is a product of your own individual thinking. By making someone else responsible for how you feel, that person automatically becomes the cause of your suffering. Once you understand that you always have a place of well-being inside, independent of another’s behavior, it is easier to maintain equanimity through their changing moods and behaviors. Romantically, you may experience deeper love and intimacy with your partner, but the teachings benefit all relationships. This awareness supports more authentic connection and expression, while facilitating greater understanding, improved communication, reduced reactivity, more acceptance of self and others, and improved ability to work out differences and find common ground. Best of all, just one person shifting in a relationship is enough to transform it.
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