Flights of Passion

Winner: 2016’s Blog of the Year #9

929 Relax and Succeed - We aren't here to be perfect

Many adult relationships won’t crash and burn with something like cheating, or collapse under the weight of losing a child. Most will die a slow, dull death. And for that reason they are the ones that feel the most salvageable. Despite that possibility there is usually some external catalyst required for that to happen because otherwise the issue is difficult to overcome.

Imagine people are airplanes and the people inside are the potential experiences that everyone is born with. Flying is living. There is nowhere specific to go, so the closest thing you can do to “winning” is to land with all of your passengers / potentialities having already disembarked because they were fully realised. In short: you lived your life completely.

Okay. So everyone’s an airplane and when we’re flying high we have tons of perspective and we can appreciate tons of choice in terms of our direction. When we’re low-consciousness, we’re weaving through mountains of thought that half block-out the sky. It feels perilous and scary and we get angry and absent-minded in our efforts and yet the “mountains” are ultimately ephemeral; made only of our own thought and existing only within our own consciousness.

929 Relax and Succeed - Make your life worth lovingA relationship is when two planes choose to fly together. You happen to be on a similar course, you like how they fly and how their plane’s design works. And importantly, your passengers love waving to each other so you radio over and ask them if they’d like to join you on a permanent flight. Maybe you even make it official in front of all of the other pilots at some ceremony where you sign each other’s Flight Logs or something.

Obviously your planes fly differently so they’ll be impacted differently by weather, but in general the flying is good and you both enjoy the flow of your travels. This goes on for years until something happens. Maybe it’s an addiction, maybe you work too much, or you’re always angry or depressed, but somehow one or both of you goes into a downward spin. You’re no longer going anywhere, you’re only thinking about how much you hate the spinning.

The most their partner can do is radio instructions to them because the healthy partner does not actually have their hands on the unhealthy partner’s controls. Instead they naturally begin circling from as close as they can get without doing the same tight dangerous spin. They radio the tower for wisdom but it’s reconfirmed that there is nothing that can be done other than the pilot changing course. Any direction will do, but the plane needs to straighten itself out and only the pilot can do it.

 

In the best case scenarios the person realises that they are just spinning on thoughts about past regrets, or thoughts about future anxieties. They realise that there is no ‘correct direction’ because so much about the future is unknown. We don’t need the direction, we just need a direction. Whichever one we choose is ours.

What was hurting us wasn’t the danger in the future, or the pain of mistakes made in the past. It was the spinning itself; it was the asking of the unanswerable question. At a certain point there are no more answers sought because in the end it is accepted that all that can be done is to fly. And so the person does.

But in some cases the person spins too long. And while their partner has done a lazy circle for literally years, all in the hopes that their companion will pull out of it, eventually their passengers get restless. How much fuel do they have? There’s a lot of life to experience and they can’t live any of it literally flying in circles for years.

Just because one plane’s going down does that mean both should? It’s a personal decision. But everyone will have some common experiences regardless of where their line in the sky is. All pilots will feel the pressure to let those experiences happen. On top of that, the passengers may well note that there’s been little to no sign that anything will change.

Eventually the only question is: when will the pilot listen to the passengers, not if. And therein lies the problem. Once that plane finally does depart (as incredibly reluctant as it will be to go), there will be an immediate sense of relief on the part of the passengers and crew. After all, they’ve just been doing a wider version of that same spin.

They do not want to go down in the middle of a deep ocean having not seen much of anything in literally years. Ironically, their departure can sometimes be what triggers a genuine recovery in the partner. By focusing on that external change, the unhealthy pilot’s mind gets out of its loop and focuses as suddenly the partner gives chase.

929 Relax and Succeed - We travel not to escape life

The problem is that they’re usually a long way behind. It makes sense that they would radio their beloved other pilot and ask them to circle for a while until they catch up. But at the same time they can appreciate the difficulty in that. After all of that time, now that they are finally in motion the notion of travelling backwards or circling more is particularly unappealing.

Often even an intense love for their partner cannot overcome the desire to keep moving forward. Too much recent time has been spent on down and backwards. Their souls are literally starved for forwards and upwards. These are crushing circumstances. No one wants what comes to pass.

These are the worst and most poetic days we will face in life. There are no winners in a scenario like that spin. People can pull out of those dives and they can draw a strong and passionate direction from the emptiness of their previous life so those experiences are never losses.

They are however extremely painful. The most we can come to is an understanding that the passengers in all the other planes have the same will to live that ours do. How long a partner should circle is the big debate. Some say marriage vows say you circle until your plane goes down. Some people say you leave right away.

Others dedicate years, decades and lifetimes. There is no right answer. Others may judge but, they’re not in your plane, they don’t know your fuel situation and they don’t have your passengers. So all anyone can do is use all of their plane-flying skills and instincts and do what they genuinely feel is best. It may not be ideal, but in an unfortunate situation like a stalled relationship, there likely isn’t a better flight plan than living.

Enjoy your day.

big hug, s