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Salaams and Good Morning !

Here is your daily dose of Wisdom for Living Your Best Self!

As human beings we mess up and make mistakes. Quite often. We sometimes behave badly with those who matter most to us.

And when we are confronted about our poor behavior or judgment by a loved one, it feels uncomfortable and it is anxiety provoking. It can be tempting to deny our role in making someone upset by denying responsibility, or worse by blaming them for our own behavior.

For those of us who are parents, our children can sometimes really push our buttons. We may lose it from time to time and get ashamed by our behavior. At this point, we say things like "You made mom/dad mad". "Look what you made me do". We may believe that we are hiding the fact that we fell short of our own values and we feel ashamed. But lets not kid ourselves. Our children can pick up on the fact that we are shirking responsibility. And the lesson they learn from this is NOT the one we want them to learn!

Similarly, in adult relationships which are abusive or severely distressed, there can be many variations of "You made me do it" being expressed.

By saying "You made me do it", we try to escape responsibility and often add insult to the injury of the other by blaming them for our own lack of control.

Not surprisingly, if we say this often enough, we will destroy a relationship. Trust and respect is earned when we can admit to making a mistake and do what needs to be done to clean up the messes we make for ourselves.


So let us acknowledge the fact that we have free will: that no one can really make us do anything. That we always have a choice on how to act and how to respond in the face of provocations or outside stressors.


And when we do fall short, overreact or otherwise misbehave, please let us be grownups about it, accept responsibility and apologize.

Wishing you a day full of positivity, purpose and peace.


Warm blessings

Marzia  

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And here are the links to the audio recordings of lectures on Mindful Communication as a Spiritual Practice

Introduction: The Ability to Communicate is a Gift of the Creator

Definitions and foundations of Mindful Communication

Managing emotional reactivity which blocks communication

Communication and Emotional Reactivity Part 2

More lectures to be uploaded soon inshallah. Please subscribe to the Podcast to hear future episodes. Loving and Living the Quran

Here are my suggestions for books on improving communication skills


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