Are you really available?
By Tussy Afam-Obi
Tuesday,
July 3, 2007
One of the questions which often come up in our counselling sessions is how
available people are for a healthy relationship. As someone at a recent workshop
cried out, "No one today has time for a relationship!" Singles often
have a difficult time plugging into a new dating partner’s busy lifestyle,
and may see their dates as being essentially unavailable for creating a deep,
intimate relationship. Couples in a committed relationship may complain that their
partner is consumed and distracted by everything but their relationship: they
may be around physically, but never seem to want to connect in any meaningful
way. Indeed, in our crazy, driven, time-starved world, it often seems as if our
adult relationships take the lowest priority.
There are various levels
of availability for intimate connection:
Physical availability
While
physical availability is the most obvious one, being physically present is no
guarantee of intimacy, as many married people will tell you. Being in the same
house or room or even bed with someone can still feel very lonely if the two people
are not in sync and do not connect. Nonetheless, consistent physical availability
is a necessary prerequisite for deeper levels of intimacy to occur.
Emotional
availability
After physical presence, the next level of availability
is sporadic emotional availability. On this level, both partners are capable of
being emotionally present with their own feelings, as well as with the feelings
of their partner. The capacity to communicate to your partner what you are feeling
is also present at this level. However, while the capacity for being emotionally
available is present, the willingness to choose to do so on a consistent basis
is limited. At this level, each person engages in some forms of withholding of
parts of themselves which results in inconsistent availability.
This withholding
can manifest in many ways, such as inconsistent time schedules; shutting down
or withdrawing emotionally; avoiding difficult topics; or numbing feelings through
food, drugs, work or sex.
The deepest level of availability is what we
call conscious emotional availability, where the capacity to be fully present
and mindful of your own emotional process, as well as your partner's, is present
most of the time. In this level, the capacity for being emotionally available
is present, and there is a strong willingness to use that capacity. Authentic
feelings are acknowledged and communicated on a consistent basis, whether they
are positive or negative. Joy and bliss can comfortably co-exist with sadness
and despair, for there is a commitment to sharing the truth of one’s experiences
with one’s partner.
Why are so many of us unavailable for this deepest
level of human connection? Isn’t the need for bonding a fundamental human
desire? Why do we create these complex, overextended busy lives, which Shakespeare
aptly described as being "...full of sound and fury, signifying nothing",
while our heart’s deepest desires go unmet? This answer is clear: we are
unavailable when we are afraid. We want true love but are terrified of how it
may hurt us, how it may recreate some painful experience, how we may be abandoned
or smothered or lose our familiar identity. So we make sure that there is no room
in our lives for genuine love to blossom. We stay in control, and keep the unpredictability
and vulnerability of genuine intimacy at a safe distance.
Many people
think they are available when they really are not. We have seen this demonstrated
countless times in intensive work with singles and couples. When presented with
all the tools, knowledge, support and guidance possible to create more intimacy
in their lives, the fears take over and they sabotage, distance, avoid or deny.
How available are you? This is really the only question about availability
you need to ask! If you are attracting unavailable partners, there is something
unavailable in you. How available are you to yourself on a deep level? Our relationship
with others is but a reflection of our relationship with our inner self. Reflect
on what you may be running away from within yourself with your endless external
activities.
How can you make yourself more available to present or future
partners? Be gentle and compassionate with yourself and begin by becoming fully
available to all aspects of who you are. Discover what your fears and barriers
to intimacy are, and take steps to remove them. If you find yourself running away
or afraid of certain aspects of intimacy, get some help from someone who has been
down that path before. Strip away the barriers to availability and notice what
comes up for you, mindfully, consciously, and lovingly.
For when you are
fully available for conscious emotional connection with yourself, you will attract
the same energy into your life from others. Creating and maintaining a healthy
relationship is quite similar to creating and maintaining a beautiful garden.
If the gardener is unavailable to tend the garden, the consequences are quickly
revealed. Similarly, relationships need time and open communication to weed the
inevitable hurts and resentments that occur. Consistent time to bond on a physical,
emotional, intellectual and spiritual level is necessary to water the roots of
your love. Like a plant, your love is a living, breathing, organic process that
will get stagnant or eventually wither away and even die if both of you are not
consistently available to keep it healthy.
Authentic, genuine love is safe.
Not loving is far riskier to human life and health than opening yourself to love.
So cancel some of those appointments in your Diary. Delete those lines on your
To-Do List in your compute. Take a deep breath and make room in your life and
in your heart for more love to come in: what better use of your time and your
life could there possibly be other than giving and receiving deeper, more authentic
love?