Please enjoy a short excerpt from my new book How To Believe in Love Again: Opening to Forgiveness, Trust and Your Own Inner Wisdom.

No matter how hard one searched, one could not
find anyone in the universe more deserving of love
than oneself.     ~Buddha

Who you are is not the problem – even though you may have heard that your whole life.   This is about everything you’ve done right, not about what you’ve done wrong.

The more you believe in yourself, the better you perform in every part of your life.  Our belief system equals our reality, and is a combinations of our ideas, thoughts, and experiences.  These all combine to determine who we believe ourselves to be.

The journey back to believing in love again must begin with finding a new and much higher level of self-respect.  The secret to letting go of all the hurt and betrayal you may have suffered in your past is the slow, gentle process of giving yourself heartfelt compassion for all you have endured at the hands of others.

At the time of my own separation and divorce, I needed to spend a few years first simply grieving the loss of the dream.  We all have inside of us some dream of what a loving, positive relationship should look and feel like.

The end of any important relationship is traumatic.  Even friendly divorces can be difficult.  It may not even be about the end of a relationship that we found destructive and therefore needed to end.   It may be about the loss of the dream of what love might have been, how it could have made our lives more bearable and more worthwhile.

When I was in the process of learning how to love myself after my own divorce, I found Gloria Steinem’s book Revolution from Within very useful.    I especially enjoyed her idea of accessing your past self for a heart-to-heart talk.

She suggested imagining you are looking your past self in the eyes.  How do you feel about her? What would you like to say to her now?   I found Gloria’s words helpful when I looked back over my life and reflected on the sad, shy girl I used to be:

“She’s doing the best she can.  She’s survived—and she’s trying so hard.  Sometimes I wish I could go back and put my arms around her.”

I found these words to be soothingly cathartic.

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