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As you may already know, Shambhala is an ancient, legendary city in Tibet. The people of Shambhala are dedicated to wisdom and its practical application toward a joyful life, well-lived. This site is similarly dedicated as a pathway toward Conscious, enlightened relationships. Within these pages the Shambhala Master gives us access to the secret wisdom of Shambhala.
Stories like Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, Beauty and the Beast, and Cinderella appear to have one universal theme — boy gets girl and they live happily ever after. However, the mythical adventure every prince and princess embarks upon is a symbolic pilgrimage we are all Called* to take into the depths of ourselves.
Shambhala Masters want our students to understand the world and themselves in terms of relationships because life is not a series of unrelated, unpredictable events. Nothing exists in a vacuum. Everything is interconnected. Every idea has impact on the world around it. Every fear has the power to control or liberate us. Every hope has the ability to inspirit or dishearten us. Shambhala students must learn how everything is interrelated and how it all relates to them or they will remain remote controlled robots. They will continue to be chemically and historically directed by others who know more about them than they know about themselves. They will be operated by forces that remain hidden and more powerful then them. Shambhala students will not have the ability to align their emotions and behavior with their own Consciously chosen perspectives and priorities. They will not have the option of becoming Self-directed. To understand the world in terms of how things are interrelated Shambhala Masters teach our students to examine the ways in which they are affected by the social perspectives and biological priorities they have acquired.
DATING, MATING, AND RELATING
DATING (COURTING) Through the ages any amount of scheming, plotting, and planning to trap your “special someone” is accepted and even applauded as creative, industrious, and ingenious. And, since time began, trying to pair people up has been a business and social activity with secretly planned parties, blind dates, and covert actions. Through generations and generations people have been taught to believe that all’s fair in love and war. Finding and securing a prince or princess is as serious as planning a war. And, if the match and the courting is done “right,” then the prospective partners will hopefully be able to avoid Knowing each other. It is crucial to the success of the dating, courting, mating process that prospective partners avoid Knowing each other at any depth, because familiarity not only breeds contempt, but Knowing one another interferes with the romantic illusions of prince/princessing. Consequently, to create successful pairings people throughout time have followed these dating prerequisites.
DATING, COURTING, MATING PREREQUISITES 1. ADHERE TO ROLES Consequently, dating, courting, and mating have become even more reliant on romantic illusion in direct proportion to the autonomy afforded people today. Therefore, while dating, it becomes more and more important to adhere to the standardized romantic roles and practices. Princesses cannot be too aggressive, competent, intelligent, self-contained, or self-sufficient. Princes cannot be too needy, too available, or emotionally dependent. Neither can wander too far from what is romantically expected. 2. BE SPARING WITH
CANDOR 3. DO THE NECESSARY
FANTASY WORK 4. KEEP IT LIGHT 5. STAY WITH THE
TRIED AND TRUE
SHAMBHALA RELATIONSHIPS One way to tell the difference between prospective romantic partners as opposed to Shambhala relationships is that the former spend time talking about candor rather than being candid. Prospective romantic partners talk about the importance of taking relationship risks rather than placing the relationship at risk by disclosing unflattering information about themselves. Prospective romantic partners talk about the importance of revealing feelings rather than daring to disclose their dips in energy, fears, insecurities, and pain. Prospective romantic partners talk about honesty rather than risking rejection by probing where they may not be welcome and/or being clear about their unpleasant feelings about each other.
DEPENDENCE IS NOT LOVE Dependence is likely to begin when, through your association with someone, you fulfill some of your needs. If you believe that these needs are critical to your well being, then you will be tempted to set aside some of your “less important” needs to make your partner happy or as a gesture of your good will. These kinds of compromises can place intimate relationships in grave danger. This is the case because people attach so many emotional and romantic expectations to their “close” relationships that they do not keep their needs, agendas, bargains, and compromises clean, clear, and up front. Even the most honest individuals become covert manipulators when “love” enters the picture. Consequently, “close” relationships become riddled with hidden expectations, hopeful, but secret agendas, innocent and not so innocent misrepresentations. These standard practices within “close” relationships erode each individual’s self-regard and fill the relationship with confusion, resentment, distrust, and hidden animosities. People are taught that they should be willing to set aside their needs for the “love” of another. But, in truth, you are making compromises to secure what you want from each other. You make dozens of these silent contracts every day without being honest with yourselves or each other about what you are setting aside, and what you want in return for what you are giving up. Through these silent contracts, you, little by little, center you life around your manipulation of your “loved ones” as opposed to centering your life around your Self. The more you center your life around others the more you have invested in controlling them. As you compromise more and more of your Self to secure others, controlling them becomes more and more critical to your well-being. You will begin to live in terror of losing them, for if you do lose them you will have nothing . . . not your Self or them. This kind of Self-abandonment for the purpose of securing “loved ones” weaves dangerous webs ensnaring you and your loved ones in a toxic prison. Shambhala Masters teach our students that dependence is not Love (whether or not it is spelled with a bold capital “L” ). We remind our students that if you are not capable of living without your loved ones, then you are not capable of Loving them. True Love requires you to be willing to put your relationships at risk in the process of honoring your relationship with your Self. Relationships become toxic when people who care about each do not have the courage to honor their own Selves first … before they honor their partner’s perfernces. Love is not what most mothers, fathers, and lovers think it is. Love is not being consumed by your thoughts and feelings for your beloved. Love is not centering your life around another. Love is not putting a Loved one on a pedestal. Love is not a single minded focus on the beloved. Shambhala Masters know that Love is a wonderous, multifaceted process. It requires numerous, simultaneous focuses and skills. To be able to truly Love another you must first:
Relationships between people who care about each other, but can not or do not maintain these focuses and practice these skills, inevitably become so rancid that they die.
RELATING: BECOMING EMOTIONALLY These are the questions Shambhala Masters wait to hear from our students. These questions tell us that our students our awakening . . . becoming Conscious. These questions tell us that our students are beginning to walk a path that will eventually lead them to the most grounded center of their Selves where wonderous discoveries await them. The challenge facing Shambhala students is to create Intimate relationships without having to restrict themselves to the conventional models of dating, mating, and relating. Restricting themselves to antiquated, limiting models of relationships is what people have been doing for centuries now. But, Shambhala students make lousy princes and princesses — for numerous reasons. They are uncomfortable with scripts, the role playing, and the superficiality. They are quickly bored by the standard, predictable formats. But more importantly, when Shambhala students minimize their gifts and limit their life experiences through the standardized means of relating to others, an unforgiving emptiness gnaws away at them. Complicating things further, when courting is the only game in town, and when Shambhala students participate in these inauthentic rituals, they end up feeling like fish out of water. They feel dishonest. You do not like misrepresenting yourselves — so you participate half-heartedly. Your internal conflict (wanting to fit in versus your need for personal Integrity) paralyzes you. Your heart is not into dating, courtship, and marriage, yet, at the same time, you want Intimacy in your life. Your only recourse is to conclude that there is something terribly wrong with you. Yet, just the opposite is the case. There is something terribly right with you! There is something just right with wanting more than scripts, roles, superficiality, romantic illusion, and contracted monogamy. What is amiss is the package you are still trying to fit yourself into. What is amiss is the superficial ways in which you spend your time with others. What is amiss is the way you are chemically attracted to people who will not or cannot add to the quality of your life. Consequently, you end up in the eternal quest for the “right” person. You keep asking yourself, “How can I make myself a better prince (princess) so the right ‘someone’ will desire me, want me, fall in love with me?” This is the wrong question! The reason why Shambhala students make a lousy princes and princesses is because you are uncomfortable with these limiting misrepresentations of yourself. You do not like yourself when you are trying to be something you are not! But most important, when you are behaving in ways that cause you to dislike yourself, you will always sabotage yourself and your relationships. Instead of asking yourself, “How can I become more desirable to others, the question Shambhala students need to ask is, “How can I redesign, not myself, but the reasons and ways I spend time with others?”
REDESIGNING THE WAYS AND
A SHIFT OF FOCUS: FROM What Shambhala Masters do advocate is that our students learn to shift their focuses from outside themselves (on others) to inside themselves. It is a strange paradox — focusing on your relationship with your Self strengthens your relationships with others. Whereas over-focusing on your relationships with others not only undermines your relationship with your Self, but it also destroys the possibility of Intimacy with others. It is crucially important to note here that focusing on your relationship with your Self (an internal focus) is not the same thing as being egocentric or selfish. The difference between being egocentrically selfish and being internally focused on your relationship with your Self has to do with the issue of control. Egocentric people are focused on controlling individuals and situations to satisfy their own (usually short-term) needs, regardless of the (long-term) effects on themselves and others. Egocentrics are short sighted. They fail to see how they jeopardize their long-term needs by attempting to satiate their immediate desires. For egocentrics their world is a chess board and the people in their lives are pawns to be manipulated, leveraged, and moved around. Egocentrics remain largely insensitive to the needs and feelings of others, so that the needs and feelings of others do not interfere with their own needs and feelings. Internally focused, non-ego centered individuals, on the other hand, are not interested in controlling others. They are, instead, interested in taking charge of themselves. Internally focused, non-ego centered individuals are invested in learning about and controlling their own behavior. They eagerly encourage the people in their lives to do the same. But most importantly, internally focused, non-ego centered individuals understand the risk of fulfilling their own needs at the expense of others. Internally focused, non-ego centered individuals realize that even if our loved ones willingly set aside their needs for us, then their doing so will eventually take a toll on our relationships with them. Consequently, internally focused, non-ego centered individuals honor the needs and personal priorities of others, as long as the needs and priorities of others do not compromise our own Self-loyalty. We invest enormous amounts of time enabling others to clarify their feelings and needs so they will not overlook their own priorities. We also realize that the only way to create Intimacy with others is to first create and maintain an internal focus on Self-Intimacy, and to second let go of our need to control the outcomes of our interactions with others. Instead of trying to control life’s outcomes, we shift our focus from the external to the internal. We nurture, guard, and protect our relationships with others by committing ourselves first to our own Self-loyalty. There are numerous guidelines Shambhala Masters use to shift our foci from the external (others) to the internal (Self). Ten of these Self-loyalty guidelines are listed here: SELF-LOYALTY GUIDELINES 1) Know Your Priorities 2) Make The Most Out
Of The Now 3) Read Your Internal
Reactions Unlike the roles and scripts of dating, monitoring, examining, and revealing your gut reactions allows you to know yourself and others better. Knowing yourself and others better helps you to know your Self and the Selves of others. These are important steps toward centering your life around your Self. These beginning steps free you to create high quality, interesting, personally challenging, Intimate experiences with many people rather then searching out and securing one “special” person to center your life around. 4)
Gather Information 5) Learn to Differentiate 6) Ask yourself, “How
Much Does This Person Want to Know About Me?” 7) Throw Out The Hard
Pictures 8) Practice Self-Validation
Instead of looking outward to gain a sense of themselves Shambhala students learn how to look inside to know themselves. By doing so they free others to do the same. Shambhala students then become more to each other than mirrors reflecting each others’ desirability or lack of it. They become partners in their journey towards their Selves. 9)
Practice Supply and Demand By supplying others with no more then what their behavior (not words) indicates they want, you enable yourself to stay internally focused rather than over-extending, setting yourself up for rejection, and becoming dependent on another's ability and/or willingness to receive, delight in, and honor all that you have to give. 10) Finding a Balance:
Personal Bill of Rights To foster a balance between your external focus on others and your internal focus on your Self, Shambhala Masters have created a Personal Bill Of Rights (Responsibilities) to help our students to find a balance. This Personal Bill Of Rights (Responsibilities) is a statement of recognition that with the right to internally focus on your Self you also have the responsibility to take the necessary action to align your behavior with your Core Integrity.
A PERSONAL BILL OF RIGHTS
*The word “Called,” is spelled with a bold capital “C.” The Shambhala Master uses bold capitals when referring to the primal, Core, spiritual essence of a word, as opposed to the conventional understanding of the word. Please consult the Master’s Glossary for the definition of this and other unfamiliar terms. For more Shambhala Wisdom visit Shambhalablackbelts.com.
Copyright© 2008 Shambhala Master |
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