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  • See, we've all been through breakups and they hurt.

  • I want to be raw here. I used to believe in happily ever after.

  • I used to believe in marriage.

  • I used to believe that if you go through a breakup,

  • it means going through an inevitable breakdown.

  • I used to believe that if you were divorced, you had failed at one of the

  • core aspects of simply being human.

  • Maybe it was all those Disney flicks.

  • But today, my view of love, marriage, relationships, divorce,

  • and breakups has gone through a massive transformation.

  • A few months ago, me and my then-wife Kristina, we've been married for 16 years,

  • decided to celebrate the end of our marriage.

  • So, me and Kristina have been together for 19 years and we decided to make this our

  • last Valentine's day, which means tomorrow,

  • we officially formally end our marriage.

  • We effectively, consciously uncoupled.

  • Our friends and family came to participate in this celebration,

  • yet so many people found this puzzling.

  • I got attacked on the internet. How dare I celebrate a divorce.

  • You see, if we go by the standard societal definition, then we failed.

  • Like 50% of married couples, we failed.

  • But what if common society is wrong?

  • What if we've been seduced into a completely outdated model

  • of viewing relationships.

  • We are facing an era of human lifespans which are about to reach 120 years.

  • Where did we come up with this idea that to be in a relationship with someone

  • implies foreverness, implies that you have to be with that

  • person forever, and ever, and ever, and ever, even if life no longer

  • seems satisfying, even if you're no longer helping each other grow,

  • even if there might be someone else out there for you who could better accelerate

  • the transformation of your soul.

  • At a certain point, if you're no longer growing, it's okay, you can part

  • ways as friends.

  • There is no reason why you have to go from breakup to breakdown.

  • There is no reason why you have to vilify your ex.

  • Now the person who sparked this idea in us and led to my

  • radical rethinking of life is Katherine Woodward Thomas.

  • She wrote the book Conscious Uncoupling.

  • She is also the newest author on Mindvalley because I feel her work has the

  • potential to shake up a truly broken aspect of human society today.

  • But I want you to know, I firmly believe that the way marriage has

  • become an institution pushed forth by traditional families and religious leaders

  • in cultural traditions that may not necessarily apply in today's world leads

  • to more unhappiness, more broken homes, more badly brought up children than we

  • care to admit.

  • So, as Katherine asked, "If marriage is so beautiful,

  • why does 50% of marriages end in divorce?"

  • And why does a breakup or divorce come with so much shame that you have to feel

  • you failed at life itself?

  • Why do you then have to hate on your ex?

  • What if you can celebrate the time you spent together rather than mourn over the

  • ending of a love relationship?

  • But as Katherine says, "Your next relationship begins not when

  • you find your next person, but in how you end

  • your last relationship."

  • And you want to be able to end that with as much consciousness, mutual love,

  • and respect as possible.

  • After Kristina and I announced our conscious uncoupling,

  • so many people wrote to us to thank us for bringing up such a taboo subject,

  • for showing the world a new way of doing this.

  • And this is one of the reasons why I wanted to bring Katherine Woodward Thomas

  • and her work to Mindvalley.

  • This is not about encouraging people to end a marriage.

  • We should all do our best in a marriage.

  • But a big reason I want to introduce Katherine's work to the world is because

  • almost all of you watching this had been through a breakup in the past and what she

  • teaches is how to heal the emotional and conscious damage that that can do,

  • to forgive your ex, so you can move on without repeating the same mistakes and

  • following the same patterns.

  • This is something that I believe the world needs, and I cannot wait to introduce you

  • to Katherine's work.

  • If you find these ideas interesting, firstly, you might share this video with a

  • friend of yours whom you think needs to hear this.

  • And you can also tune in to my Masterclass with Katherine Woodward Thomas on the

  • subject of healing from the pain of breakups and breaking up consciously.

See, we've all been through breakups and they hurt.

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あなたは、このようなゲームをプレイするために必要なものは何ですか? (Why breakups should be celebrated - NOT shamed...)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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