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Dancing With Faith |
by David Anderson | ||||||||||||||
| Building A Strong Relationship One Step At A Time |
©2005
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Scott Farrell comments:
When the hour was up, Larry gave us a sheet with the 27 moves and told us to go home and practice. Next week, he said with a big smile, Ill turn on the music and well start with a little dance recital. The next day we put the coffee table in the hallway and moved the living room furniture against the walls. Practice began. Someone looking in the window (and dont think we didnt worry about that) would have seen two stiff mannequins locked in herky-jerky combat. But we were happily learning how to dance. For a week or more it was all wonderful like that. It is not hard to dance with someone when everything is just fine. But it is almost impossible to take up a dance position with someone you are fighting with. Pam and I tend not to have explosive fights. (I am Scandinavian and Virgo; Im not sure what her excuse is.) Our quarrels tend to simmer for days until someone is grown-up enough to suggest we ought to have a talk. In the middle of such a simmering conflict, however, it is time to go through our paces. Are we going to practice our dance? she says. I guess so, I say with a passive-aggressive shrug. I put on the music and we stand in the middle of the living room floor like two hedgehogs negotiating an embrace. I take her right hand. Stiff. I place my right hand squarely on her back. She squirms as if to say, This is stupid you cant dance with someone you dont even want to be in the same room with! But we lurch forward on the downbeat of Hi-Lilli, Hi-Lo, clomping woodenly through the waltz. It is ugly, but we do it. And afterward we nod at each other coolly as if to say, So there. That dance rehearsal with its pathetic embrace was pure revelation. It may be impossible to dance with someone you dont even want to be around. But, we discovered, you can practice dancing. You dont always have to enjoy it, you just have to do it. Its the only way to become any good at this. When youre in conflict with your partner, you cant wait for reconciliation to hold one another and move in mirrored grace. You practice your way through the mess. In other words, dancers dance. Because it involves intimacy, dancing seems to demand emotion or feeling. Wrong. Its nice when feeling coincides with intimacy and the outward and visible beauty of a couples movement seems a sacramental sign of an inward and spiritual grace. But dont hold your breath waiting for that one. It happens, but only because you practice. We are sometimes enthralled by the romantic notion that, in intimate relationships, we ought not do or say anything we dont truly feel. To do so would be dishonest. Wrong again. Usually we have to go through the motions to get to the emotions. We are more likely to act our way into feeling, C.S. Lewis said, than to feel our way into acting. The 12-steppers put it in shirtsleeve English: Fake it till you make it. It is our family custom to hold hands when we say grace. Weve done it since the children were old enough to join us at the table. Sometimes when we are in conflict, one or another person will decline to join hands. But more often than not we manage to close the circle. This act of intimacy does not mean that all parties are reconciled the pitched argument continues right after the amen. It is simply a reminder that while we may be in a bitter war, we are fighting with those we dearly love. If action must wait upon feeling, it is impossible to hold someones hand and insincere to pray in such a state of anger. Yet a moments thought tells us that intimacy in the midst of conflict is the true test of love. Anyone can hold a hand or say a prayer when they feel like it. In relationships, as in all of life, we are perfected by practice. Its the one thing we can do even if were not sure we can do the real thing. If you cant dance, you can practice dancing. If you cant love, you can practice loving. If you cant empathize or set aside anger or hold a hand, you can practice doing it. Sometimes the other person cant tell the difference, and after a while, neither can you.
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Learn about Chivalry and Leadership |
© 2005 David Anderson |
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