The rate of divorce is
skyrocketing in the United
States ,
and the U.S. Census estimates about half of marriages end in divorce.
According to relationship experts, the number of long-term relationships
heading towards separation is becoming more frequent with a longer life span
and a growing acceptability of divorce.
So what the experts
are in fact saying is that people divorce because they have a longer lifespan,
and that divorce is no longer a social taboo.
But marriage is about
commitment and responsibility. What our society is saying is that individuals
have a right to look for something better as long as they have a breath of life
in them, or to opt for something more satisfying as long as something is
available to them. If that were the foundation of marriage, then why bothered
to get married in the first place? Remember, marriage is not a dress that you
throw away when it no longer fits you. If you find that your body has outgrown
the dress, you can slim down so that you can fit into the dress again, or you
can have it altered so that it can fit into you. In other words, life is about
changes, and so is marriage. You just have to adapt yourself to these changes,
and that makes it challenging and interesting, and that is what marriage
is all about. You don't just walk away from a marriage because you don't like it
anymore. A marriage is a lifetime commitment for thick and thin, for better or
for worse.
Are you finding
yourself in a marriage that you want to get out of, or in a relationship that
you don't like?
Only you have the
answer.
However, here are some
thoughts of Zen wisdom:
First of all, Zen is
not an Eastern religion, but an ancient Chinese philosophy based on the wisdom
of Lao Tzu, a sage and the author of the famous ancient Chinese
classic "Tao Te Ching."
Life is full of
problems, so do not strive to seek a solution to all the problems in
life. As a matter of fact, too much striving is the source of stress,
which may create more stress and therefore more problems than solutions.
Right and wrong
co-exist, so do the desirable and the undesirable. In life, embrace what is
pleasant, well as what is unpleasant. Just as Sosan, the Zen scholar,
said: "To separate what we like from what we dislike is the disease of the
mind."
True love is “loving
without expectations.” Love is never about having to use someone to make you
feel better. Remember, you are who you are, and you are good enough for the one
you love.
Remember, nobody is perfect, including yourself and your spouse.
Stephen Lau
Copyright©
by Stephen Lau
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