Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Breaking up by writing

Wow! Two posts in a less than a week, I'm on a roll. I forgot how writing can be cleansing at times. I'm writing this with the full awareness that who this subject start up with could be reading this; maybe give them the opportunity to understand more where I come from and a better understanding of what I've written to them already. If not, I hope the few words below can help someone else. The word relationship in this post relates to a friendship but this text can be for a love relationship as well.

I hate settling relationship matters by e-mails and by letters. I find it ridiculous and childish. Yes - writing permits you to communicate ideas, thoughts and say stuff that one could probably not say by shyness, clumsiness in communicating or simply fear of confrontation and fear of not getting one's message through. The thing about writing about relationships is you need to be talented to convey your emotion properly with a pen. I am not.

Let's use: "I am not" to explain what I mean. I-am-not in this circumstance could be said sadly because I wish I could convey emotion properly by writing OR I-am-not could be said in a stern way as in I don't care if I can do it properly or even a heavier tone of "I don't give a shit". Of course, an other phrase after I-am-not would help clarify the emotion behind the words but I don't get descriptive. My words can be as sharp as my tongue (hmm tongue... mind going in the gutter).

When I speak, my words only represents less than 20 percent of what I feel. All the rest is done through my eyes, my voice, my facial expressions, my hands and the rest of my body. Be the compulsive liar that I was growing up, all the deceptive people I had in my life (mainly because of my past work domain), I came to understand the honesty of body language with its authenticity. Unless you're a poker player or a really good manipulator, then you control your body language pretty fucking well :)

Even the add-on of that smiley face at the end of the last phrase helps to convey emotions. What would e-mails, chatting and texting be without emoticons!

If I would become a therapist of any sort, I wouldn't encourage writing even in the circumstances I mentioned above: shyness, clumsiness or fear. I prefer the head-on technique. You meet and you settle things, right there and then. No fucking around for days on texts that were written, showing it off to other people to have them give you their opinion because you can't do it on your own. In the case that thought me the lesson, I had a conflict with my mother back in the days and she printed out my e-mail response to her and showed it to her side of the family for all of them to read. Yup! my own mother. Ever since then, no more writing relationship issues BUT I did make an exception in this case because this person had some fear of confrontation and not being able of putting their thoughts through completely.

What I wrote to this person I assume 100 percent. I wrote it knowing that it can be shown to other people and that my words can be interpreted in more than one way. I wrote the words fully aware that, now that they are out there, anything can be done with them. Keeping these things in mind when I am writing about relationship issues directly with the person concern, I just write things as they are. I don't sugar-coat them. I simply write matters as I think them, like reporting news from my mind. I have to admit in a way when I read what I wrote, there seems to be a certain carelessness in my phrases but I also feel liberated. Free that it's out! Free that I gave my all! That sense of freedom combine with carelessness just makes it easier to deal with relationship issues at whatever degree.

Break-up and fights by writing aren't easier or better by writing than in person. They still hurt and can break your heart. Apart from the writing, I don't deal with relationship endings as commonly as others. With my life experience up to now, in my mid-thirties, life is too unexpected and short to hold grudges and have drama. Short as life is, the advantage is time heals all and time goes by fast. So we all get over stuff pretty fast once we look back. Nothing lasts for ever: emotions and relationships. People come and go in life. Keep it simple. Enjoy life to its fullest. Lessons can be retain from everything.

Here's one last point again: take for example the paragraph above. One can read it as if I was writing in a condescending tone. Saying the words that I wrote there, I would use my soft comforting voice because each phrase holds truth and is positive to me. I've lost some really good friends throughout my life, may it be by death, misunderstandings or sheer stupidness from both parties. Length of a relationship doesn't give the importance or strength of it. I say this because I experience and I heard from others too much about how much the impact of a person in your life can be the length of a night or a lifetime. With that last phrase, that's why I value all people I encounter, may it be negative or positive, and that's why I don't consider any relationship superficial. Instead of superficiality, I look at it as steps on a ladder of importance in my life.

If you don't like or don't get along with someone, move on. There's so many other wonderful people out there.

Love to all.

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