You know what bothers me? Ivy.
Yes, ivy. Okay, gardeners and
wildlife people, stand down – I know it can be a wonderful thing; I know it
doesn’t really harm houses; I know it gives a home to a host of bugs and other
critters. But, but, but…it fecking well
clings. It’s so bloody needy. It wraps itself, it insinuates itself, it doesn’t
let things sodding well breathe.
For a long time now I’ve been bothered about one
particular piece of ivy; the bit that clambers up “my” tree in the wood just
below the hilltop fort. See, there is
this lovely oak – not old, not young but somewhere in the middle; straight,
true, real, rooted to the earth, reaching to the sky. Beautiful. And then there’s this fecking ivy,
clutching it, cleaving to it, twining itself around the tree’s trunk. So, a while back, I gave it a tentative
tug. Oh my, it started to ease
away. Was it really that easy? No.
After a fair amount of pulling and tugging and yes, to my shame, even
swinging (thank feck nobody wandered past) it remained, firmly attached at the
top, solidly rooted at the bottom – with now a huge ivy rope wildly bending out in
the middle. This, I thought, won’t do. I
can’t become a tree vandal. If it doesn’t
want to let go, who am I to insist? So I
let it be. Well, okay, so I just gave a little pull every so often.
Then, the other day, I looked at it again. I held onto the rope of its middle and pulled
it, gently this time, towards me. And, you know what? It fell into two in my
hands. Just like that. Funny eh? All that
tugging and effort, all that fighting and all that was needed was to find the soft
spot and then all resistance dissolved. It reminded me of the exercises in Cutting theTies that Bind – in which you energetically free yourself from claustrophobic, possibly
destructive relationships, by visualising a cord between you – and then symbolically
and simply snipping it apart. I often recommend it to people and they frequently baulk. ‘But I don’t want to end the relationship,’ they say. And I say, ‘Well, maybe you won’t have to.’
Because, see, cutting the ties doesn’t necessarily
mean the end of something. It simply
means you’re giving up the possession, the clinging, the hanging on. Recently
this question of freedom and containment keeps coming up – both in real life,
online life, in the columns I have to write. Because, in relationships in
particular, we can all become ivy-ish and, lately, I’ve had the same kind of
issues pushed under my nose, again and again: people worrying that their partner
doesn’t love them as much as they love in return; people scared of their
partner’s possible infidelity; stories of partners being controlling and
jealous, and so on. And I find myself thinking and sometimes saying, the same
thing.
If you love someone, let them go. Set them free.
Truly.
I’m talking energetically; psychically. I’m talking about freeing people to be
themselves. I’m talking about withdrawing
the need, the clinging, the compulsion. Recently someone said to me: ‘But,
Jane, I love him so much. I just don’t think he loves me anymore. What can I
do? How can I change?’
The answer is, quite simply, you can’t. You cannot force
love, you cannot insist on love. You cannot change yourself to fit love. Love
just is. Sometimes love lasts, sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it changes. But you can’t force it. My advice to her? Stop worrying about this hypothetical person
he might want you to be and be yourself. Love yourself first and foremost; be
true to your Self. And then, who
knows? Maybe the cracks will widen and
the vessel won’t hold. And, in that case, it wasn’t meant to be and you should,
as graciously as possible, let it go. Or maybe, just maybe, he will fall in
love with you all over again; this ‘real’ you.
I dunno. Do you
really want relationships in which you have to worry all the time? In which you
cannot be yourself, your true self? Do
you want to live your life pretending?
Being stressed about what he or she might be doing, who they might be
seeing?
It’s not just romantic relationships either. We are often
tied in these claustrophobic, clinging, ivy-ish patterns with parents, with
children, with friends, with work colleagues.
Cutting the ties, pulling off the ivy, can be hard,
so hard. It can be scary and it evokes
that primal fear of being alone. But,
seriously, you know what? I’d rather be
alone, totally alone, than have people be with me because they felt they had to
be. I don’t want pity relationships; I
don’t want relationships built on need. I
want people with me who love me for what I am, warts and all. And, in return, I
hope I give them the freedom to be the people they are. And then, truly,
there is an end to all fear and suspicion and jealousy and sadness.
10 comments:
wise words. Have mentally got the scissors out and am happily snipping a handful of people out, people who wind me up, who are casual with feelings while demanding themselves so am hacking through the cords. Most excellent advice. Just need to remember to keep the blades sharp and the scissors about my person.
Your description of the ivy is wonderful...I could truly see it.
I quite like ivy, but this is a bit like your talking to houses - full of sound sense. I like that analogy of ships on an ocean sailing alongside each other but both free to sail closer and more distantly. This is similar. Don't cling. I can agree with that.
Milla: I've done that with a lot of people in the last year. Have tried to curtail my people pleasing tendencies. Not easy...
Gail: you CAN actually see it - in that photo of the tree and the dog (the SP)... :)
Fennie: I don't know...but I think so. I fight my tendency to cling very very hard... but really, it's not fair, is it? It puts such a burden on the other person. All one can do is try... but sometimes it's nigh-on impossible. Ah hell, I don't know.
You're so right, but its so hard - when you feel the craving for company and intimacy and try so hard not to force it.... but that desire is very strong....
Will remember your words. Beautifully written.
This is all very well written, Jane. I could see the tree; I could see the vine; I could see you with "your" tree.
The other thing about ivy — it is a killer. Really. (At lest some varieties are.) It can choke the life out of the "host" plant.
Something important to remember when dealing with "clingy" people.
What have I done to bother her, was my first thought when reading the headline :) Okay it isn't about me and then again it is:
My son is moving out this coming weekend, that is cutting ties, isn't it? to let him get on with his life, me no longer being able to watch over him and his health. 20 years of worrying of "flat sharing" coming to an end..
Ivy by the way isn't that destructive to a tree ( specially not to oaks) I have learned from our lovely Ghanaian tree surgeon. A tree that is healthy can use the Ivy as a moisture reservoir. Only young branches may suffer but not the trunk...
Great...
Strange thing - I think this might be the most misunderstood post I've ever written. Not by everyone - but I seem to keep having to explain it. I guess we see what we want to see. :(
Oh jane I love this. I am a huge believer in letting go - children, husbands, anger, whatever. This is a truly wise and inspiring blog. Thank you.
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