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"/>BEing True to Others - Ann McMaster M.A., L.P.C.

LIFE AS IT IS

BEing True to Others

Here's what I've learned in the past 6 decades. If I'm not willing to tell the truth because I'm afraid I will risk losing the relationship, I won't be real .. and I get swallowed up by the relationship. At that point the relationship isn't really with me anymore, it's with the Not-Me or the Fake Me or the Me I Think They Want Me To Be. If the relationship means more to me than being real in the relationship, then the relationship is doomed to die eventually. If I lose me in the relationship, they lose me too.

So I have learned to say what I mean and mean what I say, whether it's with my family, my peers, or as Images a consultant/coach/therapist. In some contexts, I get paid to tell the truth. In all contexts, I intend to tell the truth. It's the avenue for real connection. Truth isn't just facts, it's facts plus compassion.

Setting and maintaining appropriate boundaries is an art form, requiring truth from all sides. I have loved an alcoholic. Once I was willing to risk the relationship, I was clear with him about loving him, not telling him anything relevant in my life when he drank, and leaving if he turned abusive. I kept my word with him. He did test me. I held true – to him and to me. If I don't respect myself, neither will the other person respect me. If I don't respect the other person, I can easily treat them in such unkind ways that I turn into someone I don't respect.

Being true to myself and being true to others can also be a nail-biter (risking the relationship), requiring the same courage and faith as following my heart - whether beginning, changing or ending a relationship. 

3 Responses

  1. Irene Wilson

    I loved an alcoholic, in time I didn’t recognise myself in my behaviour. My boundaries hardly existed. It came one day, I gave myself permission to leave the relationship. I still have the love for him, I love and respect me, more.
    What you have written resonates for me.

  2. cb sansa

    WOW so clearly stated and very true indeed…thanks for the reminder…does this also count when it comes down to admitting my age? I dont and my colleagues are under the assumption I am 10yrs younger than I am.they are all in their 20’s and30’s at the most so why should I correct them when in my 50’s if I look like I’m in my 40’s?
    Looking forward to your reply
    thanks
    cbs

  3. Im not a believer in telling everyone everything – that would be naive. My next blog post will be about context … the importance of being yourself within the parameters of the current circumstance in which you find yourself. And thanks for the lead in … if I didnt know for sure, I would have thought you were a plant! LOL