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If my recent conversations with friends and clients are any indication, it
would seem that the topic of 'commitment' is one which certainly causes emotions to
intensify and blood to flow
.if not the hackles to rise! The word alone is enough to
send chills down the spine of some and to warm the hearts of others. Even the conversation
about the topic can cause temperatures to rise. And what is often not said aloud is at
least as important as what is.
Commitment tends to be easily confused with the notion of 'obligation': I
must/should vs. I choose/desire, meaning that if I commit to something/someone, I am now
obligated to that/them
.forever
.whether I like it or not. Not unlike being
taken hostage
.or a non-violent (usually and not necessarily) form of bondage. With
this understanding as its context, is it any wonder we quake at the possibility?
We also tend to associate the word 'commitment' with the idea of 'no
turning back'. Can't change your mind. No room for growth, evolution or new world views.
Once the commitment is made
whether we like it or not
whether we choose to or
not
whether our (or someone else's) values change and/or our beliefs shift, we are
stuck with the outcome
forever.
The word 'commitment' is a nominalization - or a code word or shorthand -
for an experience that it represents. Our commitments are a reflection of us; of who we
are at the time that we make them. They are statements of our identity; of our sense of
resourcefulness in the moment; of who we believe ourselves to be and of who we believe
ourselves to be capable of becoming. They are also frequently implied and not necessarily
public declarations of intent. I commit to raising my children based on who I believe
myself to be as 'mother', whether I state that or not. My actions will flow from that
implicit awareness. I commit to my parents' care based on who I believe myself to be as
'daughter'. I commit to my work based on who I believe myself to be as 'employee'. It is
inevitable that if my commitment is to remain vital and alive, it must grow with
me
or one of us will die.
If my commitments are not living things
.if they are cast in stone or
have settled into poured concrete...they will not have movement and flow. Movement and
flow are signs of growth, of vitality, of life. No movement no life. For far too
many amongst us, our commitments have long ago become dry and brittle
without the
capacity for movement
.sliding slowly into their inevitable fate either of
dishonoring the commitment itself or dishonoring of the self in its keeping.
Perhaps we've come to fear the idea of 'commitment' because we've
witnessed or been subjected to its effects when it has become a rigid and
inflexible process. Many of us have witnessed what happens to people when 'commitment' has
come to mean predictability and control. When commitment has become a means to an end, or
a way of keeping something the same so that we need not fear an uncertain future. A
commitment in word or on paper that is no longer alive will itself begin to
sap life from all that it touches.
Commitment sometimes is a Trojan Horse, carrying in its belly the hidden
and potentially lethal issues of control, predictability and stasis. If our context for
commitment the context within which we express ourselves does not grow as we
grow, our inevitable outcome is suppression, compression and ultimately a
decline of body, mind and spirit. Our commitments hold the power to either give life or
take it away.
Perhaps we would be better served as would our children if
we were to reconsider the power that commitment invites when we begin to recognize that
our commitments are always about us; about our view of ourselves; and that we can only
commit to ourselves, to engage life in various contexts. If we become willing to engage
life moment to moment and trust that we are both able and willing to tell
the truth and trust others to do the same, our commitments will only become stronger in
their expression and more powerful in their effects. We would like to think that if
someone commits to us in some way, they won't change their mind, or go away and we will
have some predictability in our lives. That we won't have to go it alone. That the empty
times and spaces in our lives will be filled in some way by someone outside of us. That we
will always be part of something. That we will always be in the experience of 'together'
as opposed to 'alone'. There is no strength in this illusion, as our statistics and courts
will attest.
Our commitments, because they are an expression of who we are, hold the
power to mold and shape our world. Who we choose to be in the expression of these will
define our future and that of our children; shape our communities, our cultures and our
systems. With what appears to be a simple declaration, we can lock things into place, hold
things at bay or we can invite potential to unfold. Like the declaration itself, it's a
choice worth paying close attention to.
This article may be reproduced, provided it is reproduced
in full with appropriate acknowledgement of the author, the source, and a weblink
to www.LouiseLeBrun.com
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