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The Law of Attraction: Hokus Pokus or Bunkum?

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

I first heard the Law of Attraction described in scathing terms by a psychologist who was advocating that it simply meant more business for him! I was curious about his perspective because I was quite intrigued at the time with the concept. Having “discovered” Norman Vincent Peale (You Can If You Think You Can) at the age of about 16 when going through a depression of sorts, I was given a lot of hope by the idea that your thoughts create your world. Could it be that simple? Clearly my psychologist friend did not think so. Also this fitted like a hand in glove for me with my spiritual understanding, I’d always had a strong faith which had taught me things like ask and you shall receive, knock and the door will be opened.

But I have come to realise over time that it isn’t that simple and then again it is. It is true that we project aspects of our disowned selves onto others and thus encounter our own selves mirrored back to us in our relationships. How does this fit into the law of attraction? Well it’s a matter of what is going on underneath things. If we really want to invoke the law of attraction we need to understand that what we are attracting is the product of deeply held beliefs about ourselves and the universe which we are often unaware of. Thus my psychologist friend was wrong and right. For those who think they can work with the law of attraction without going through the long and arduous process of self revelation and reflection it is bound to fail. The hard reality is you have to be prepared to do the work. There are no magical quick fix solutions, although synchronicity does happen as do miracles. In fact my experience is that miracles are so common place that we need a new word to describe the concept! The everyday occurrences when we are so totally aligned with our deepest selves and with the force of universal energy outside of us that the light from outside colludes with the light inside! Perhaps that’s the definition of joy.

However, to really invoke the power of the life force that is known as the law of attraction we cannot do any Dorothy tricks. Nevertheless that does not mean that it does not work! And this is where my psychologist friend was naïve. He had not understood how to harness the powers of creation to bring healing love and light. It’s not that complicated, it’s about manifesting and aligning ourselves completely with our soul purpose. In order to do the hard work required, we first need to be open to growth and committed to collaboration with Spirit. We need to understand the fundamental principle that that which we seek to attract will in fact at first invoke it’s opposite. Have you ever noticed how the day you decide to be more peaceful you are suddenly surrounded by chaos? This puts many people off. They feel afraid of their power almost as if they are likely to sabotage all their best efforts. The trick is to know that this is simply part of a process. It is the process of bringing out what is hidden in order to heal and make space for its opposite. It is the process of revealing the fears and beliefs which lie beneath our desires in order to move to a place of trust. But we must be prepared to confront ourselves and our shadow. Carl Yung knew what he was talking about when he spoke of the shadow side and also of synchronicity.

The most exciting thing on this journey is to become truly aware: aware of our projections fears and anxieties, aware of our limiting beliefs. Let them surface like gold, face the darkness and become part of the light

©Margie Ulbrick

If you would like some support with your relationships or creating greater happiness in your life, please contact me on 0403 814 477 for a free 10-minute consultation to discuss your needs.

Love

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

Such a grand big topic and such a difficult one to define! We all want more of it; in fact we crave it and sometimes spend our whole lives searching for it. Unless of course we feel we already have it. Even the Romantic poet John Keats said “Love doth know no fullness nor no bounds. / True-tender monitors! / I bend unto your laws.”

So what makes up the life experience of someone who feels abundant in love? What do they do to give/receive love? What are some of the qualities of a loving relationship? What are the “laws of love” to which Keats refers?
When we are “in love” we can experience the heady (and bodily) sensations which are evoked in great romantic literature and art, merging and separating and merging again but “love is blind” for we know that we see what we want to see and disregard the rest! Being “in love” or “falling” in love is not talked about as being “high” on love or as our senses being “drunken” on love for nothing. When me and you become as one we experience a state unlike no other. What John Donne referred to as new worlds are experienced, in fact are brought into being and a sense of transcendence of the ordinary life experience is felt, the earth shakes, the planets align, God is in her place and all seems well with the world!

Our earliest experiences of love shape our ability to give and receive love. There is the ideal: a child developing in the safety of a loving home, who is mirrored and responded to and forms what psychologists refer to as secure attachment patterns. However many of us were not given adequate mirroring, were not listened to and were not able to grow and develop a sense of self and of other, which ideally occurs with the appropriate mirroring. Mature “I love you” requires a strong sense of I and of you. In our longing we sometimes merge the two and seek symbiosis: you should think and feel as I do, if that was me I would never say/do that to you. We fail to appreciate our separateness fully. Experiencing it provokes the anxiety of abandonment triggered by the separation that happened when we were vulnerable and small, and so we attempt to merge boundaries: you should want what I want, should know what I want without me telling you!

Therefore, a healthy relationship of love requires that we have a strongly defined sense of self and of other in relationship. It can be difficult for some people to express empathy or to have a genuine concern for the experience of the “other” in relationship. This makes love feel very far away for those involved; their unmet needs from childhood are still unmet! But if we have a well defined “I” as well as an appreciation of what makes “you” then love becomes possible. If we can tolerate our individuality and sense of separateness, together with an appreciation of another’s experience as being valid even though different from our own in relationship, we can begin to negotiate the junctions and intersecting points of “I”, “you” and “we”.

In choosing the path of love we can consciously cultivate certain qualities. Qualities of a loving relationship are easily seen. Control is absent and trust is present. Presence is a definite hallmark. We are present one to another and to our own experience. Looking at it this way it’s not hard to see why love can be a tricky path. We allow each other to be as they need to be, respecting that it is not up to us to takeover the journey of another. Our presence and acceptance in itself is a mark of love. Simply showing up and being there is one of the most loving things we can do. In a spirit of allowing another to walk their own path but in commitment to be present for one’s own lived experience and for another, we confront all of our own humanity. We overstep our reptilian brain response of fight or flee and instead we give another human being the greatest gift of all: the offering of self in connection.

Listening is another quality which is pivotal to love. It is in seeing/hearing ourselves mirrored in another that we settle. It is this fundamental need from our early development that provides the connection for which we long. It is often said that deep listening is rare. Listening with our hearts as parents to children is a wonderful gift. Do we listen to our partners in love and do we respond by attempting at least to meet them where they are? Many people stonewall their partners, pretending to listen but never being prepared to change their behaviours (or giving up the illusion of control). Of course it’s no surprise that the result is often passive aggression; resentment and frustration are expressed underground.

So if love is our destiny and love is our calling, how essential it is to our happiness that we consider the implications of being loving. Love, the call of the spiritual path and the true call of all the great religions. Love, the meaning of which is still partly mystery and partly ethereal, partly from another world partly earthy, partly sensual essentially practical. Love is fundamentally creative and life-generating. Even while it involves a kind of death of aspects of the self, and knocks the very edges off of us, sometimes taking us to the very edge. On this precipice, love paradoxically generates something new.

© Margie Ulbrick

If you would like some support with your relationships or creating greater happiness in your life, please contact me on 0403 814 477 for a free 10-minute consultation to discuss your needs.

Loss and Learning

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

Confronted with loss of human life, livelihood, personal property and the possibility of loss of identity, human beings have the capacity for remarkable courage, spirit and grace. Often I think of freedom fighters such as Nelson Mandela who said that despite all he endured, the one thing his jailers could not take from his was his human dignity and spirit.

When nature threatens to overcome us, when life turns unexpectedly sour, when we lose relationships or when we feel threatened and unsafe; when all that we have known and loved and possibly taken for granted, is stripped wholly from us, we have an opportunity. After the initial shock, sometimes we see that we can respond in a whole manner of ways.

For those that are blessed enough to see in the midst of death, darkness and despair, a potential for life, light and hope, they can find their lives changed indelibly forever. No longer content with superficial living, they commit to seeking what is truly valuable to confront in a personal and potentially life-changing way, the eternal questions of the true meaning of life: Who am I? What does my life mean? What am I here for? For those that cannot see any way to endure let alone grow, there is the possibility of trust.

When all ahead only looks grim and grey and when all hope seems to be lost, human beings have a capacity for trust: trust in the divine, in the life-giving force, in spirit. It is the ability to open up to spirit which seems like a complete grace that offers millions of tiny everyday miracles and turns even the most difficult experiences into opportunities for growth and regeneration. Wherever there is life, there is death; and nature has seen this vast land of ours confronted with floods, fires and droughts, and still the human spirit survives and sometimes, thrives.

© Margie Ulbrick,  Counsellor

If you would like some support with your relationships or creating greater happiness in your life, please contact me on 0403 814 477 for a free 10-minute consultation to discuss your needs.

Trust and Fear

By Margie Ulbrick Leave a Comment

Years ago when I first realized I had trust “issues” I was inclined to blame those who had lied to me, those closest to me, my parents in their noble though misguided notion that they were protecting me. In delving into lies and secrets as I have in my work as a therapist I have learnt much that has surprised me.

I’ve learnt that protection is a two edged sword and very often those that lie and say that they are protecting someone are often conflict avoidant and really very scared themselves. Trust like many other aspects of relationships is often a projected quality.

One man I spoke to had even “joked” about his belief that his wife would have an affair, years before she ever considered the same. He held beliefs about his own unworthiness for love and fears of abandonment which he acted out in their relationship.

Trust is the direct opposite of fear, trust that even though we cannot see, know or understand all things, they can still be brought to good, that good can come from the most dire of circumstances if make space for miracles. The most important gift we can give ourselves is the gift of trust, when we act from an inner knowing, knowing that we can trust ourselves to act with integrity and authenticity. Ironically it is then that we no longer need to worry about whether others are trustworthy. This is a good place to come to when one does the work and starts to define one’s self in this way. Fear has no place here.

We can set the intention to trust even when it looks like others may not deserve our trust, we hold the space for trustworthy behaviours and actions and we trust that we can also take appropriate measures to care for ourselves moment to moment as life unfolds from this trusting space. Intimacy I’ve heard described is trust in the universe to provide what you need when you need and in the manner most appropriate for you. Being real creates trust, falsity lives and lurks in the shadows casting its web of playmates, anxiety and guilt into inextricable roles in its dance.

© Margie Ulbrick

If you would like some support with your relationships or creating greater happiness in your life, please contact me on 0403 814 477 for a free 10-minute consultation to discuss your needs.

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Empower-Mindful Relationships-cvr-v3 with blurb

A practical guide for using mindfulness to enrich relationships and effectively manage stresses associated with conflict. The authors explore how we can use mindfulness to develop a more compassionate, friendly relationship with ourselves and others; communicate more effectively; reduce defensive patterns; and work effectively within couples, families and workplaces. Case studies highlight key principles, while practical exercises enable the reader to develop their mindfulness skills.

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About Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling

Margie Ulbrick relationship counselling provides psychotherapy services for relationships, stress management and happiness. Margie Ulbrick Counselling offices are based in East Malvern, Melbourne and service the surrounding areas of Chadstone, Glen Iris, Armadale, Ashburton, Malvern, Carnegie, Kew, South Yarra, Toorak, and East St Kilda. Read more about Margie Ulbrick Relationship Counselling.

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