What Are You Tolerating and Why?

Why do I think I have to tolerate situations that keep me from experiencing peace?

This is a very good question, one of which I found the answer, and hopefully you will as well!

I moved into my townhouse 4 years after my husband liberated his soul from his physical body on November 27, 2017. I was able to move on quickly because we said everything there was to say and only love remained. He was free and so was I.

Two years later my new neighbor bought a dog, an Australian Blue Heeler, a herding dog, meant for a huge back yard where she could run freely. This was not the case in our townhouse complex. Whenever my neighbor left her alone, she would bark for hours, disturbing my peace of mind. I was also concerned for the dog. Sometimes it was for 45 minutes and sometimes 4 hours. I kept texting him to come home to settle the dog down, but he ignored my plea. I did talk to him on several occasions and made some suggestions on how to resolve the situation, none of which he took. I even went over to talk with him when I was sick to ask him to put his dog in her kennel when he left so she wouldn’t bark and I could get the rest I need. No such luck. This went on for a year at least once per week and I never knew when. I couldn’t even relax and read in my own home. I even started to have physical symptoms of stress. I couldn’t imagine someone putting a dog before my well-being. Finally, after the dog was left alone 4 times in one week, I had it! I called the HOA and they gave me a barking dog kit which I filled out and sent in to the City of Phoenix to register a complaint against my neighbor.

Why did I wait a year? Did I think more about keeping the peace with my neighbor than looking after my own well-being? What is up with that? Then I went back in time and identified other times in my life when I thought I had to tolerate. One was tolerating my husband’s hoarding for 4 years, and the previous time was for 8 years that I tolerated being on the lower floor of a condominium unit and the people upstairs had 2 kids running back and forth. Why? Why didn’t I just move?

I knew there must be an earlier experience in childhood where this was coming from, so I sat down with myself and took a long hard look. All of a sudden, bingo, the answer came. When I was 12 years old my mom filed for divorce from my dad and the judge gave her a legal separation instead. In 1966, this meant she had to wait 7 years before she could file again for a divorce. She figured that if my dad found out she was dating, he would take her to court and file for custody of us 4 kids, so she made me lie to my dad when she was spending time, sometimes the whole weekend, with her boyfriend. She made me call him Marge, so when my dad called to talk to her, “Oh, mom’s not here, she went out of town with her girlfriend Marge.”

I was the first born, so after my dad left, I became both the mom and dad to my 3 siblings, being responsible until she got home from work. This lying really got to me, but she pleaded with me that my dad would take us kids away from her if he ever found out. So, out of survival, for 7 years, I thought I had to tolerated this lack of integrity and even started to have tummy problems. I knew it wasn’t right to lie, but at 12 I felt I didn’t have a choice. She even told me once that the only way to get thought life is to tell little white lies. So, I thought I’d try it. I told her I was going to the library and instead I went to hang out with one of my girlfriends. My mom found out and I got soap in my mouth. I didn’t have anyone to talk to. I knew if I told my dad, I‘d probably be grounded for years. I didn’t quite understand why it was ok for my mom to ask me to lie for her, but when I did, I was punished. At 12, I wasn’t very confident or self-assured, so I didn’t feel I could talk to her about how wrong I thought this was. I felt I had to tolerate this situation to survive living with her.

Knowing where my need to tolerate came from, I went right to the Family Loyalty Repatterning and you’ll never guess what came up, “I demonstrate my love and loyalty to my mother by tolerating things that don’t agree with my morals, in order to survive.” I was happy to change my resonance with this pattern and since then, I no longer tolerate people or situations that interfere with my inner peace. I feel free to take care of myself and my well-being. My new resonance is, “I demonstrate my love and loyalty to my mother and all the members of my biological family system by doing and saying things that are morally right for me, speaking the truth, speaking my truth, and not tolerating situations that harm me or effect my peace.”

Interestingly, after the session, and once the police came to my neighbor’s door to tell him a complaint was filed against him for his barking dog, I haven’t heard a peep from the dog. It’s a miracle! I withdrew the complaint because I got the peace I wanted.

According to Burt Hellinger, developer of Family Constellation, he states that in order to belong to our Biological Family System, which we need to do in order to survive, we have hidden loyalties to honor them. Once we identify the hidden loyalty, we can change it, like the example I gave above.

If there is anything you are tolerating, or any pattern of behavior you want to change, you may want to reach out to a certified practitioner on the Repatterning Practitioners Association website who can support you in releasing the pattern.

Lovingly submitted,

 Victoria Benoit, M.C.

Mind/Body Repatterning Practitioner

Amazon #1 Bestselling Author of What Would Love Do Right Now? A Guide to Living an Extraordinary Life, Three Magical Words for a Magical Life and No Weeping Widow Here-My True Story.

What Would Love Do Right Now in Your Romantic Relationships?

A loving romantic relationship can be one of your most sacred experiences—as well as the most risky. Given the rewards, it is always worth the risk. I love the statement from Erica Jong’s book, How to Save Your Own Life — “Love is everything it’s cracked up to be. That’s why people are so cynical about it. It really is worth fighting for, being brave for, risking everything for. And the trouble is, if you don’t risk anything, you risk even more.”

My philosophy about intimate relationships is that when you make a commitment to love, everything unlike love arises to be released and healed. Your reaction to what arises originates from unresolved issues, idealized concepts of romance, and conclusions you came to through observing your parents’ relationship. Every romantic relationship you have will reflect and reinforce these issues, concepts, and conclusions until you release and heal them. You will then have an opportunity to experience the very love you desire.

Your Parents’ Relationship

Examining the relationship your parents had, can provide insight into your experience of love and romance. How did they treat one another? Were they loving? Did they argue a lot? What was happening at significant ages while you were growing up? How did their relationship influence you?

As a child, you witnessed your parents’ interactions and made decisions about romantic relationships based on those observations. We tend to have romantic relationships that are either just like our parents’ or the exact opposite. For example, if your parents argued a lot, you may have decided that love is confrontational, so your relationships are tumultuous, violent, or chaotic. Perhaps one parent was weak and the other was domineering, so you decided the key to a winning relationship is to be equal in every way. Maybe your parents were overly affectionate, and you decided that a romantic partner must be lovey-dovey or they don’t love you.

Remember, in your healing process, you are not pointing a finger at your parents or blaming them for the way your relationships turned out. You are identifying how YOU responded to what happened between them and the conclusions YOU came to about romantic relationships. The good news is, since you drew the conclusions—YOU can change them.

Your Romantic Relationships

Remember, you ARE love. Being LOVE is allowing yourself to be who you are and who you are not; and accepting your partner for who they are and who they are not. It isn’t always easy. However, it is essential if you want to experience an intimate relationship beyond what you think is possible. BEING love is the greatest gift you can bring to your relationship.

The concepts of being present and getting gotten are particularly powerful in creating affinity and intimacy in romantic relationships. It’s what was so extraordinary in my relationship with my late Beloved Bernie.

In the beginning of our relationship, Bernie understandably wanted to know about my past relationships. I told him, “I’ll share my past experiences with you, if you will celebrate who I’ve become as a result of healing my past and changing my old behaviors.” He lovingly said, “Yes, I can do that.” This started a wonderful foundation of love and respect. I also let him know; he had the best me yet!

This was the first relationship I’d ever been in where the love got deeper and stronger and better over time, rather than worse. What was different? I was different! I was less serious, more playful, more patient, kind, understanding, and loving. I also took responsibility for my part in a situation sooner than I had done before. It was very humbling at times, but always rewarding.

Developing a foundation of intimacy requires a willingness to tell your partner what’s really going on with you; to care about what’s going on with them; to share deep aspects of yourself—especially those things you don’t want anyone else to know or ever find out—and to listen to them share things that you’re not sure you want to hear.

Everything is relational. You’re in relationship with everything and everyone. Your intimate romantic relationship can be either a source of fun and pleasure or pain and suffering. To have extraordinary intimate relationships, it is essential that you heal wounds you’re holding onto from past relationships.

This is where Resonance Repatterning® comes in. This method, developed by Chloe Faith Wordsworth, releases the resonance with unresolved issues, idealized concepts of romance, and conclusions you came to through observing your parents’ relationship. It also allows you to heal wounds you’re holding onto from past relationships. You may want to consider going to the Repatterning Practitioners Association website and choosing a certified practitioner you feel guided to working with and give them a call. You’ll be amazed at the results.

May the wisdom inside you take you on a journey into your heart where your greatness abides. Now, that’s living a heart-centered, extraordinary life!

Lovingly Submitted, Victoria Benoit, M.C.                                                                    

Healer, Speaker, Amazon #1 Bestselling Author, What Would Love Do Right Now?  A Guide to Living an Extraordinary Life.