Archive for February, 2009

 

If an ex boyfriend jumps back into your life.claiming, just personal conversation, is he wanting back in?

Monday, February 16th, 2009
Freaky_Chips asked:


so i have this ex..whom of which our relationship ended badly ..but before it ended it was hot..is there any chance of revival? or is it mass *******? This particular ex of mine has been the weirdest..most odd after break-up relationship for me ever..and i need some advice. So i offer to just be his friend then he claims i am moving too fast, tries seducing me don’t know why, then continues to make comments even after he knows i’ve had a steady relationship for going on nearly seven months now..i used to see him almost everyday because he hung out in the same areas i did, and often i would see him , he would cause problems..now he’s been gone for a great deal of time..and shows up out of the blue wondering if we missed him (my best friend and i)and claiming to only wanting a friendly but personal relationship , including making comments about my beauty and wonderful personality…my head’s alittle foggy right now so i wondering can anyone shed some light?? in other words please help!

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Buildfing Up Trust in Relationships

Monday, February 16th, 2009
If you have a relationship where you truly trust each other no matter what happens, then you have a powerful and wonderful relationship which can last forever. It is difficult building trust in relationships with all the temptations out there, and this is what makes trust so fragile in the first place. When a partner feels that his/her trust has been betrayed, it can mean the end of the relationship altogether. Restoring trust is a mountainous job, and more often than not the betrayed partner will always have the memory in the back of their mind and the niggling question of whether you will break their trust again.

What if you have cheated on Your Partner? Can you get Him /her back?

In most cases people will tell you that an affair with someone else means the end of the relationship and break ups but this is not always the case.  Partners in a relationship can have affairs for different reasons. The affair or lustful sexual encounter can have been in a moment of drunken madness, because of strong attraction to someone at work, or because of pressures at work. Does not matter though, you have betrayed your partners trust and the damage is done.  It could have been something lacking in the relationship which caused your partner to cheat. This is something that should be thought about as well. If both partners love each other you can still save the relationship but it is going to be very hard work for the cheating partner. It can take months, and even years building trust in relationships and in one fell swoop an affair can destroy it!

Building trust in relationships requires an adjustment in attitude and actions for both partners in the relationship and after an affair it is going to be hard work rebuilding trust again. Even after one of the partners have had an affair, it is still possible to save a relationship, and if you truly love each other rather try to than throw many happy years together down the drain. 

Building trust in relationships through open communication.

Communication is the most important building block to any relationship, not love, not sex like you may think. Sure these are all important building blocks of any relationship but communication tops the list. Can you openly communicate with the person you love if something is troubling you? Are you suspicious and digging behind your partners back into their personal effects because you think they may be having an affair. If you can openly discuss what is troubling you, then you have great trust and communication with your partner. Building trust in relationships comes from having honest open communication at all times. Talk to your partner about anything and everything and they in turn must also never be afraid to approach you. That is real trust in relationships.

Sort out your differences and problems and build trust 

If there are characteristics or things that bother you about your partner you should be able to discuss them. By leaving them bottled up inside, they begin to fester and one day in a moment of anger things may be said and your relationship could even end up in tatters. Building trust in relationships means fixing the underlying problems through openly communicating with each other about them.  Sometimes that means going in to couples counseling if you cannot find solutions yourselves. The real secret to building trust in relationships lies not in talking about the right things, but in taking action in doing the right things, and sorting out problems and overcoming obstacles.

The little things you can be trusted with

One of the biggest things you can do in building trust in relationships is to make small promises and keep them.  If you promise to take the garbage each evening, then make sure to do it and do it consistently as well. When you demonstrate that you can be trusted by always doing the little things, your partner will start realizing that you can be trusted with the bigger things in your relationship as well. Do things together and learn to trust each other through keeping the lines of communication open. When your relationship is experiencing problems and you need help to restore your faith and trust seek guidance and counseling. There are excellent guides available on the market that can help you build save and nurture relationships which in today’s modern society are very precious.



By: Richard C

About the Author:

Learn ways to enjoy your relationship to the maximum by using advice, guides and experience from Richard. Use tips from this experienced author with confidence to help you make the right choices when things go wrong in relationships. Romance & Relationships



 

How to Build a Healthy Relationship?

Saturday, February 14th, 2009
BoomerYearbook.com - December, 2008 - “Happily ever after” is a term which exists only in fairy tales. In real life every relationship has its share of bumps and problems. In fact having occasional arguments is even considered healthy. But if mutual bickering and fights become an everyday phenomenon, then you know your relationship is headed for trouble.

A lot of song writers and poets have aptly said “love just ain’t enough!” Mutual love may be the most important building block of a relationship, but love alone can’t sustain the relationship.  You might love your partner or spouse to death but may still find your relationship battling stormy weather. The reason could be that your relationship has one or more of the following elements missing: trust, open communication, respect, honesty and/or complete commitment. However, if you have the will and desire to make your relationship work, these problems can be sorted out.

How to make your relationship work?

Acknowledge that you have a problem

Blame- game is the common factor in almost all troubled relationships. People tend to get so blinded with anger that they lose their objectivity. Ego of course adds fuel to the fire. Sadly, this raging fire of anger and ego burns down the most vital building block of a relationship- love. It is therefore important that both the partners acknowledge the fact that they have a problem and refrain from finger pointing.

Communicate

Often we don’t share our feelings with our partner/spouse for the fear of hurting them and some times we may avoid speaking our mind in order to avoid an argument.  Continuation of this kind of behavior has the potential to destroy a relationship. Not sharing your feelings will lead to simmering resentment within you and the other person will continue with their life without even realizing that their behavior is hurting you. The result can be an explosion of bottled up emotions, leaving your partner bewildered and deeply hurt.  Open channels of communication are therefore vital for the health of any relationship and remember communication need not always be in an argumentative tone or a high pitched voice.  It’s important to keep your ego aside and communicate your feelings in a loving manner, in order to save yourself and your loved one from pointless hurt.

Relationship counseling

When you are angry or deeply hurt, you may blow small problems out of proportion. Just as love sometimes clouds our objectivity, hurt and anger have a similar effect too. You may be tempted to ask a friend or a close relative to interfere or “make the other person see the sense of your argument”, but remember this approach can easily backfire as friends and relatives may not be objective and biased towards you.  It’s therefore advisable to seek relationship counseling if both you and your partner are open to the idea. You may feel hesitant about confiding in a stranger, but remember a counselor is not just a stranger but a trained therapist. Just like you go to a doctor to treat an illness, you can visit a relationship counselor to treat your ailing relationship.

Clinical Hypnosis

If either of you have a problem with insecurity, jealousy or commitment phobia, the reason could be your past. Clinical hypnosis could help you in this case. Sometimes some past events or happenings may get so firmly embedded in your subconscious that you might end up taking a lot of actions because of those past memories, without even realizing it. Through clinical hypnosis a trained therapist will be able to delve into your subconscious and help you release the memories which are hampering your relationship and re-program your mind.

Positive affirmations

When a relationship is in trouble we tend to indulge in lot of negative self-talk about ourselves and our relationship. Not only does such behavior push the relationship further into the abyss of loneliness it also affects our confidence and desire to make the relationship work. Repeated negative self-talk ends up strengthening our belief that our relationship is beyond repair.  However, if instead of telling yourself how miserable you are and how imperfect your relationship is, if you could focus on making your relationship work, not only will you feel more motivated to bring your love life back on track but you’ll also feel more confident about being able to do it. You can either make up your own affirmations or practice the following in front of a mirror everyday:

“I love and appreciate myself the way I am”

“I deserve to love and be loved”

“I am surrounded by love at all times”

“The universe supplies me with endless love”

“All is well in my world”

Visualization techniques

Have you ever noticed that when you visualize something negative your body and mind start reacting as if you are already facing that situation? For example if you visualize you and your partner/spouse parting ways, you might feel a lump in your throat and your heart may start sinking. If you continue with your negative visualizations your body and mind start unconsciously pushing you in the direction of what you visualize the most. Similarly if you visualize yourself in a fulfilling relationship with your spouse/partner, your body and mind will start preparing you to live those happy images and will push you to push to fruition the visions of a healthy relationship.

These tips and techniques will be able to help you build a healthy relationship only if you and your partner are open to the idea of changing for the better, to make your relationship work.

Want to learn more? Have a comment or situation you’d like to start? Continue your self-help coaching journey at Boomer Yearbook. Please Visit: http://www.boomeryearbook.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=6

www.boomeryearbook.com is a social networking site connecting the Baby Boomer generation. Share your thoughts, rediscover old friends, or expand your mind with brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join today to discover the many ways we are helping Boomers connect for fun and profit.



By: SEM Expert

About the Author:

www.boomeryearbook.com is a social networking site connecting the Baby Boomer generation. Share your thoughts, rediscover old friends, or expand your mind with brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join today to discover the many ways we are helping Boomers connect for fun and profit.



 

What Makes a Healthy Relationship

Saturday, February 14th, 2009
 

A healthy relationship can come naturally to some people—they fall in love and

everything else seems to fall into place. They always seem to get along and rarely

argue. But if this doesn’t happen for you, don’t despair. You can learn (and relearn,

and relearn) to get past the rough spots. A healthy relationship takes time and work.

 

However, it also takes trust—that is, trust in your own feelings, and trusting your

partner with your feelings.

 

Now, what makes a relationship healthy? Good judgment about this requires a three-part analysis: using your mind, heart, and intuition. Use your mind, analyze the qualities of your relationship and determine whether it is healthy.(Take the quizzes in this book to help.) Use your heart and the emotions you have for your mate. And follow your intuition, that gut sense that tells you whether pairing the two of you is “right.” Here, let’slook at the six H’s to a healthy relationship:



1?Honesty. I have asked thousands of men and women in surveys over the years, “What is the most important quality of a lasting relationship?”The number one quality mentioned was honesty. Finances can be shaky,sex imperfect, stress overwhelming, but all those things can be overcome. Trust is essential. If trust is broken, your heart is broken.Everything else seems to tumble down, problems become less tolerable, and compromises less appealing.

 

2. Harmony. The sweetest sounds in music are created when two voices harmonize with one another—one hits a note that is not exactly the same as the other, but blends in perfectly.Better yet, it enriches the first note, filling out the sound. Two people in love similarly make beautiful music together. They don’t need to be the same; in fact, they are more well-rounded when they have differences,like the harmonized musical notes. Their individual choices of notes fit. You make a harmonious duet together.

3. Heart. The heart is the major organ of the body. It pumps the blood supply throughout the body, bringing nourishment. Having“heart” for one another means nourishing each other. Opening your heart to one another exposes your deepest feelings. And connecting your hearts binds you deeply and inextricably.

4. Honor. It’s a word used in marriage vows for a reason. Honoring each other means holding each other in high esteem, considering each other’s needs, and respecting each other—and an even more revered consideration of each other, worshipping each other. This means knowing each other to the core, believing in

each other’s soul, and appreciating each other beyond the physical body.

5?Healing. In ancient India men came to a specially trained female, called a Dakini, to be healed after war. The Dakini helped him clear his mind from the traumas he had been through, so he could reopen his heart and love again

6? Hot. Satisfying, sensuous, and erotic sex can certainly be a part of the healthy relationship equation. Having such a healthy sexual connection can increase your intimacy and bind you closer together.

“If we have our health, and each other, we have everything,” said one lovely woman

to her partner. How well put. That word—“health”—has taken on deeper meaning in

this new age.

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By: wangcan

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eKnow Inc, a Leading eBooks Company
Find More Tips and info about love, sex and relationship at http://www.ebookslife.com/sex and http://www.ebookslife.com/relationship



 

Some Relationship Advice for Married Couples

Friday, February 13th, 2009
Are you married, but wishing your relationship was more like it was before you were married? You are not solitary. When the relationship starts out, both men and women are interested in making a good impression, receiving a clear response, having a good time, and increasing closeness. The relationship feels exciting, the lover appears like the seamless harmonize, and the entreat to commit to one another is high.

Following the nuptials commitment, the very same effects that at first made the relationship so exciting are the very same equipment that descend away. After all, why work on making a good impression if somebody has already committed their life to you? For men especially, commonly the peak steamroll of intimacy they want (sex) has already been obtained. Why put in even more time talking when there is no greater intimacy to be had and there are other stuff to do? On top of this, the effects that were previously fun activities for the fasten become everyday (even a rut).

When a toddler comes along, focus on one another tends to spin to focus on the daughter. Although this as first renews sharing and adds life, it later increases the schedule, decreases offered time and energy, and increases stress. For this basis, couples are encouraged not to have children until their relationship is secure and spicy.

Becoming roommates slightly than companion and spouse is commonly a gradual manner of regularly increasing emotional coldness. Once this detach reaches a glassy that is uncomfortable for both the companion and the spouse, there is a disaster. Depending on the way the disaster is managed, the connect resume to be roommates, have increasing conflict until breech up, or redefine their wedding to tolerate for a confident change.

Redefining or renewing a relationship is the treat of poignant nearer together. There are three components to creating a vigorous relationship:

CHANGING VISIONS–Either the husband, wife, or, both necessary visibly to notice what kind of relationship they want to have. So many couples become enmeshed in wearisome to fix the troubles, that they never very obstruct to respect what they want. The counselors will regularly use this problem alert consider that at best can get people back to where they were before. A relationship coached, on the other hand, will use the skill of creating an idea. Visions, needs, and goals, injure us regarding them in a sure and exciting way. This makes for the possibility of an entirely new print of relationship to replace the old.

CHANGING BELIEFS–One of the most debilitating beliefs is that one’s partner must change before the relationship can farther. The detail is that one role must make the first move and that role can be each partner. It is not necessary to have a simultaneous leave up. For example, a guise who is forlorn in their wedding may find that by varying their job or first a new hobby, they become happier with more of a passion for life. This, in junction, can make them more attractive to their partner. Misery loves guests and when one being refused to be miserable and makes certain life changes, the other partner is often pulled in that road without any kind of coercion.

CHANGING STRATEGIES–People do what they know how to do. This means that they try to use the same strategies as in the ancient, but this time eager to achieve different fallout. Even when couples put 100% of their attempt into bracing their marriage by recurring to what worked in the history, they will more than expected end in the very same place. Trying harder to achieve different fallout using the same methods does not work. The number one plan for creating a better relationship is getting help and funding from somebody who knows how to do that. It the part you see in the mirror has not had star in the sphere you want to rally, do you really want to put all your consign in his/her methods? If superstar needs to abandon smoking, which do you think would be better–eager that you will extend the urge to prohibit smoking, difficult to abandon only, import a stop smoking self-help book, or committing to encounter regularly with a practiced in smoking stop? What would be the best plan for achieving a strong relationship?

An employ that you can do now to begin shifting your daydream is to get a part of paper and a pen. Write at the top of the paper, “My Dream Relationship.” Pretend you are not married. Imagine your fairy godmother grants you the long of the man or female of your dreams. Write down what the qualities is like physically and emotionally. What will you do with that anyone? Where will you go? Where will you live? What will your daily life with that person be like? The interesting thing about this employ is that when husbands and wives who are emotionally remote do this training separately, they actually come up with many of the same thoughts for their dream partner. When couples are hazy, it is not commonly because they want different things, but because they don’t know how to get what they want. Working on these areas of regular entreaty with new and useful methods will make new spark into the relationship and originate the possible for more lasting, activist change.



By: Julia Solomon

About the Author:



 

Improving your Relationships — Relationship Dynamics From a Spiritual Perspective – Part 3

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
In Part 2 of this article, I discussed healing relationships and soul agreements. Please see Part 2 for this information. Let’s continue with Part 3, in which we’ll discuss Soul Connections:

Soul Connections

“We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow men; and among those fibers, as sympathetic threads, our actions run as causes, and they come back to us as effects.”

-Herman Melville

Starting to get information on soul agreements led me to continue to explore the concept of relationships on another level and from another perspective. I next began to explore various types of soul connections. Now, the soul connection that we are generally the most familiar with – and desirous of – is the soul mate connection. It is certainly considered to be the most sought-after one, and a relationship with our soul mate is one of the major things in life that many of us yearn for and actively seek. For some, it can be a lifelong pursuit. Indeed, we tend to place so much value on the soul mate connection that we are often unaware of the existence of other types of soul connections that we may have with those whom we may know fairly closely. However, other types of soul connections do exist, at least from the information I have received. So before we discuss soul mate relationships in more detail, let’s look at some other types of soul connections.

At present when I look at relationships in sessions, whether romantic or those with friends, family, work colleagues, children, or others, I will look not just at the energy dynamics or the resonating issues or lessons or soul agreements involved, but also at what the overall soul connections may be. I do this because I have learned that understanding what soul connections there may be on the soul level can give us additional insight into our relationships and their dynamics, as well as into why a relationship may have a certain feel to it or represent a certain type of challenge. I have thus far seen many different types of soul connections and combinations thereof and have been able to sense how they can color the nature of what one experiences in his/her interactions with others.

One type of soul connection I get quite commonly is that the people involved, usually in some type of close relationship, are from the same soul group or same soul family. Although I can not yet completely delineate conceptually what that means in the greater scheme of things, I intimate that the souls in a soul group or soul family may have been created as souls at the same time or in a group (although, given the nonexistence of time on the highest levels, I’m not sure that this makes complete sense) and that these souls thus share a “kinship” not unlike families here on earth. Being from the same soul group or same soul family may contribute to an underlying feeling of closeness between people or to a sense of coming from the same place, a feeling of kinship that can’t be explained by other, more superficial characteristics (family connection here, or race, or background). For some reason that I do not yet comprehend, every time I get a soul group or soul family connection, I always get a visual impression of the numerous souls in the group or family arranged in a circle next to each other. Although I feel that there is some significant meaning attached to this geometric “being in a circle” configuration, I do not yet know what that meaning may be.

I have also, thus far on only rare occasions, seen a variation on this connection of same soul group or soul family. In this variation, I have sensed that two people came from different soul groups or families, but that their souls are so similar that they are like distant unrelated cousins or two expressions of the same complex vibration. Up to this point in time, I have only seen this type of connection in souls that have some sort of inherent and greater than normal complexity, greatness, or potential for it here on earth. It’s as if their uniqueness or rareness meant that there were very few other souls who had a similarity. I’m still in the process of understanding this concept completely and will probably only begin to do so when I encounter more instances of it.

There are other, more common soul connections. Most of these are experienced and expressed in familial terms. I have sensed many soul connections that were those of siblings, whether brother and sister or sisters or brothers. I’ve seen parent to child and even uncle to niece or nephew and cousins. Other soul connections may be more non-familial. A very common non-familial one will be that of teacher or mentor and student. I have also seen soul connections that were those of colleagues, sometimes expressed in a positive and cordial manner and at other times, in a negative or antagonistic manner.

I am still not completely sure what causes or contributes to the particular type of soul connections. The connection of being from the same soul group or same soul family appears to be an inherent connection, coming from the “moment” of creation of souls, as mentioned above. Other types of soul connections, such as those of siblings or teacher/student, feel like they may have been forged through various lifetimes. Indeed, I’ve seen instances in which the soul connection between two people was varied, due to the different roles they had played with each other in different lifetimes; they were (or had been) brother and sister (in one lifetime), but also colleagues (in another lifetime), for example, and others who were (or had been) spouses to each other, as well as parent and child. (These varied soul connections, interestingly enough, will often be felt in the relationship of those involved, so that there is a mixed quality that they feel in their connection or an overlay of different attributes.) Sometimes these soul connections will have an added dimension of hierarchy, in that one of the two people (or souls) has traditionally been the “senior” one or the one with more clout or power.

Interestingly, these flavors in soul connections may change over time. For instance, two souls whose overall connection may have been parent-child, with one always having had power over the other, may find that their connection equalizes over time or even in the space of one lifetime, so that the sense of hierarchy evaporates.

These various types of soul connections will flavor what we experience in our relationships with others and often in a subtle manner. We may feel a particular closeness to a friend, for example, and then learn that our soul connection is that of sisters or brothers. This factor of soul connections helps to explain why we may be feeling some sort of connection with certain people that can’t be explained simply by the present connection or nature of the interaction, or why we may be feeling a certain quality in the relationship that has inherently been there from the very beginning; in other words, why we’ve had a specific feeling from the moment we met someone who has later become a friend that she has always felt like a sister, for example, or even a rival. (It can be very perplexing at times to have a conflicting mixture of qualities in these connections. For example, I’ve known clients who were stymied in trying to understand why a person who was ostensibly a friend somehow also subtly felt like a rival or competitor. Once the soul connections were explored and unraveled, the mixed quality of the relationship made more sense.)

In contrast to connections that may remain somewhat consistent, I will also see, as I mentioned, combinations of these types of connections. For instance, two people may be from the same soul group or same soul family and also be brother and sister or cousins or teacher and student.

The types of soul connections I’ve mentioned tend to be between those we know and interact with over and over again in different lifetimes. This continual interaction over different lifetimes tends to forge a sense of connection that is generally stronger than that which would be felt from interaction in perhaps just one lifetime. This soul “familiarity” may also enable us to feel somewhat safer working out some of our stuff in the framework of a learning relationship that is based on these close connections.

Soul agreements may be made both with people with whom we have soul connections, as well as with others to whom we feel no deep connection. And we may have both pleasant and unpleasant soul agreements from one lifetime to the next with those with whom we have soul connections. The variety and combinations appear to be limitless. Certainly if a person we’re interacting with closely comes from our same soul group and is also someone with whom we’ve had both pleasant and unpleasant soul agreements, we may therefore experience mixed feelings about that person, while at the same time feeling a strong connection with him/her. And, similarly, having a same soul family connection with someone with whom we’ve had problematic or antagonistic soul agreements may help to take the sting out of the overall connection or absolve the more problematic flavor.

Understanding what some of the soul connections and/or soul agreements may be operating in the background, so to speak, between people in relationships can enable us to begin to understand why certain mixed feelings may exist in different relationships and how we can best handle the relationship or interact in it. Interestingly, I have seen several cases in which two people had a general soul agreement to always come together in different types of relationships in order to stimulate each other’s growth, without any residual blame or “hard feelings.” (It’s almost as if there were an agreement to have a built-in “eraser” to eradicate any of the residual mutual bitterness that any of their difficult relationships might engender.) The potential is endless for the variety and types of combinations of connections and agreements we may have with other souls, including what the residual effects may be.

We will usually experience a deeper feeling of connection to someone with whom we have a strong soul connection and, concomitantly, less so to someone with whom we may have a one-time soul agreement. This may explain why we feel an instant connection to or bond with someone we meet or an instantaneous sense of familiarity — that feeling that somehow we know this person we’re meeting ostensibly for the first time. Interestingly, it will often happen that we will meet someone for the first time and feel a very strong soul connection — and then, over time, as we continue to get to know and interact with this person in real time, experience the feeling of the soul connection subside, while the present connection takes precedence.

The soul connections that can encompass diverse types of connections can really complicate some of our relationships. For example, I’ve read clients whose soul connection to one of their children was that of student. In other words, the child was their teacher (over and above the usual way in which one’s children can teach one lessons). This adds another element to the usual relationship of parent-child, with the parent trying to be the wiser and nurturing one!

On the other hand, a combination of soul connections can also add a richness and texture to some relationships that might not otherwise have been there.

Such soul connections generally underlie our relationships with those with whom we interact closely, for example family, friends, co-workers — not to mention romantic relationships. I’ve seen clients who’ve had wonderful relationships with their bosses or supervisors — only for me to find a positive soul connection with the boss as benevolent mentor in previous lifetimes. Conversely, I’ve also seen some difficult work relationships, only to discover an overriding soul connection of antagonism or unpleasant rivalry. I’ve even seen instances of two people whose connection was that of always and consistently being rivals or competing with each other. This is apparently the means that they have chosen on another level to consistently stimulate each other’s growth, which, again, may tend to remove any bitterness.

Soul connections like these can also be confusing in romantic relationships. We will sometimes meet someone with whom we feel a strong soul connection and interpret that to mean that, because there’s a strong soul connection, we’re supposed to be together as romantic partners, whereas the actual soul connection may just be that of being from the same soul group or same soul family. I’ve seen clients who were strongly motivated to be in a particular relationship because they had felt a strong soul connection from the outset with the other person and for this reason thought they were supposed to be together. All the more reason why it’s helpful to know what type of soul connection it may be.

On the other hand, it can also happen that we may sense an initial aversion to someone we meet, just because of an unpleasant soul connection — and this sense of aversion may shift over time as we interact with and get to know the person in the here and now for their present persona and essence. I’ve seen one case in which a client had a strong initial dislike for someone with whom he later became romantically involved. As his initial dislike mutated into a romantic interest, he found himself having dreams of the other person, in which he felt that he was exploring his past life connections with her. In every case, he dreamed of her abusing him in various ways. Interestingly, the present relationship between the two of them was somewhat dysfunctional, but was also a strong learning relationship as well. He ended up learning strong lessons from this relationship that stimulated his personal growth. In this particular case, his initial feeling of aversion was indicative of a difficult soul connection and a foreshadowing of painful interactions. However, he was able to mine great jewels from the experience, even though the other person was not his soul mate.



By: Diane Brandon

About the Author:

Diane Brandon is an Integrative Intuitive Counselor, Intuition Expert & Teacher, Speaker, Radio Host, & Author. This article is excerpted from her book, “Invisible Blueprints” (order at www.dianebrandon.net/products.asp). More information on her work may be found on her sites, www.dianebrandon.com and www.dianebrandon.net. She’s the host of “Living Your Power” on the Health & Wellness Channel of VoiceAmerica.com and may be contacted at diane@dianebrandon.com.