Posts Tagged ‘relationship advice’

Moon Card Relation or Mama’s Boy? ~ Sarah Elizabeth Malinak, guest blogger

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

I am a mama’s boy / daddy’s girl relationship expert who has had the pleasure and privilege of studying The Cards of Your Destiny. Married to one of the counselors and founders of the Magi Fellowship, I have access to knowledge of the cards immediately following most of our mutual social interactions as well as shortly after any interaction I have with someone when my husband, Joseph, isn’t around. Between our combined knowledge of the Cards and that of the mama’s boy / daddy’s girl dynamics, we have some juicy and enlightening conversations that help us better understand our world and the people who fill it!

Recently, the combination of relationship expert and student of the Cards came together in an unusual way. I attended a seminar given by a man who has a Jack of Hearts birth card, which is moon to my Queen of Hearts birth card. During meals and other down times during the seminar, the sun / moon dynamic between us would kick into gear and I found it confusing. Either I don’t have many men in my life who are moon to me or I have so many mama’s boys in my life that I couldn’t distinguish what was going on between me and this Jack of Hearts whom I held as my superior. He was, after all, the seminar leader and I was a participant.

Sitting across from each other at a couple of meals, whenever I spoke, I held his attention in a way that, if I’d been less mature, I would have found to be a heady experience. I would have wondered if he were attracted to me and, at the very least, would have felt quite arrogant and proud that I held sway over the man running the show!

Instead, I paid attention to the discomfort it caused me, reminding myself that he was moon to me and that I might be experiencing this kind of connection for the first time. To compare, whereas Joseph is moon to me, it is a karma card to karma card connection. More importantly, my Queen of Hearts birth card is moon to his King of Hearts birth card – a much more powerful connection. A position I am very comfortable with. This Jack of Hearts is moon to me twice! His birth card is moon to my birth card and his planetary ruler is moon to my planetary ruler. Additionally, in all our other connections the energy is either flowing from him to me or we are Venus to each other.

Anyway, I’m not moon to him at all. As a woman who is much more comfortable being moon to any man she admires, experiencing this connection and being unable to blame it on mama’s boy / daddy’s girl dynamics was intense for me. Even now, pulling up the Love Cards to look at the connections first between this Jack of Hearts and me and then Joseph’s King of Hearts and me, I feel myself relax in the company of Joseph’s and my Love Cards!

Fortunately, not only are Joseph and I happily married but so are the Jack of Hearts and his wife. In another time and place and under different circumstances, our card connections could lead to mischief, heartbreak, or a crazy amount of joy, depending on the context of the relationship.

This experience is an example to me of many things concerning The Cards of Your Destiny. First of all, it is an amazing tool for understanding the world and the people in it! Secondly, it helps with perspective. If you’re looking for a good time, you can use the cards to hook up with someone you’ll have a hell of a good time with; and you can determine ahead of time whether that will be for just one night or a lifetime. But if you’re in a stable relationship and you don’t want to shatter it, the Cards can help you understand why energy moves between you and others the way it does so that you keep it on the level of something flattering without letting it wreck your life and the lives of those you love.

How to be a Better Listener – it can change your Life!

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

“He won’t just listen! He has to try and fix everything! I don’t need him to fix the issues I have with my friends…I need him to listen. Why can’t he just…listen?”

Do you recognize that rant? If you are a man or a woman who has ever been in a romantic relationship of any length, chances are you have either heard or delivered those kinds of words. Of course, “He won’t just listen,” depicts a particular power struggle women find themselves in when they just need to be heard and the men in their lives want to do the manly thing and fix the problem.

Honestly, though, women are not the best listeners either! There are times, especially in their relationships with each other, that women try to be such good active listeners that they continually interrupt the person who’s talking. Because they are not really listening, they make incorrect assumptions about what’s being said and the person sharing has to slow down and defend herself rather than simply be heard. If they could just be still and listen, instead of trying to anticipate or even fix what isn’t broken for each other, their conversations would be much more meaningful and rich.

I have discovered a pathway to better listening that can change your life. I guarantee it works for both women and men. It works for women because it’s right up their avenue of relationship expertise. I know it also works for men because it has worked for me. The respect in my wife’s voice when she notices my improved listening skill makes me a happy man! This pathway to better listening is simple yet profound, requiring patience and discipline.

The pathway to better listening lies directly through the feelings you experience when you listen. Let’s use the typical listening power struggle that occurs so frequently between women and men.

Stanley and Iris are a working couple who have just come home from a hard day’s work. They’ve only been married a few years but have created an after work plan that more or less takes care of both of them. For the first hour they’re home, Iris gives Stanley space to relax, chill, and do nothing. In that hour, she changes clothes, putters around the house, and begins a meal. She’d rather talk to him but respecting his uniquely masculine needs, she does the next best thing and goes into nesting activity around the house. Besides, this agreement isn’t one-sided. Stanley will not only clean the kitchen after supper, while Iris puts her feet up, when his hour of repose is over, they share the details of their day with each other.

The plan works for the first hour they are home and it works for the rest of the evening most days of the week. But when Iris has had an especially troubling time with her boss or a fellow employee at work, things get sticky. It is at this point that Stanley just knows he has the answer Iris needs to fix her problem.

If Stanley could stop himself from giving advice and feel his feelings as she continues to share, he would learn to recognize that his need to interrupt and fix her stems from the discomfort he feels as a result of Iris sharing something he has no direct influence on. It makes him nervous and anxious to hear her go on and on about a problem not directly related to him. It makes him feel as though she’s vulnerable to harm out there on her own. And because she doesn’t handle the problem the way he would, he experiences anger with her because, from his perspective, her choices make her even more vulnerable.

For the sake of keeping this short, let me quickly add that similar dynamics occur between women and women and between men and men. Between two women, the urge to interrupt and fix it more likely comes from the discomfort the listener feels over being certain she can appreciate her friend’s predicament, trying to distill the discomfort by taking over the conversation and rescuing her friend. Between two men, the urge to interrupt and fix it more likely comes from a sense of competitiveness and the need to defend one’s own position.

The commonality is that one’s feelings drive the energy to interrupt and either fix, rescue, or defend rather than just listen. This is why the pathway to better listening lies through the feelings. As you put your attention on your feelings and deal with your own discomfort; you, first of all, listen better because you can’t talk and put your attention on your feelings at the same time. Going back to Stanley and Iris, this gives Iris more time to share or vent her experience of her day.

The other way putting your attention on your feelings helps you become a better listener is that your feelings are neither right nor wrong and they are not who you are. So, Stanley doesn’t have to use his feelings to make Iris wrong and him right. In this way, he feels his feelings without agenda. Feeling your feelings without agenda has an amazing effect. It makes the feelings diminish.

As his feelings diminish, Stanley has a whole new attitude with which to listen to and appreciate Iris. It means he can more likely, at a time when Iris has shared enough to feel listened to, be able to ask her a question like, “May I make a suggestion?” Because she has been able to express herself fully, that question spoken in an even tone of voice shows interest in her, making her feel heard. With Iris’s affirmative response, Stanley can gently offer his suggestion based on his logic and reason with the real possibility that she will, in fact, be able to hear him.

With patience and self-discipline, you can master the art of listening better by paying attention to and addressing your feelings as you listen. As you become a better listener, those you communicate with will likely become better communicators and listeners as well by the example you set and because you make them feel truly heard.

Bio: Joseph Malinak, owner of Creating Ideal Relationships, LLC, and co-author of “Getting Back to Love: When the Pushing and Pulling Threaten to Tear You Apart,” is a relationship compatibility expert. Making use of his credentials as both a Jyotish Astrologer and Magi Counselor of The Cards of Your Destiny, he is uniquely gifted in helping people handle compatibility issues. Visit http://www.JosephMalinak.com for more information on how you can benefit from a compatibility consultation.

The Art of Compromise and the Cards of Your Destiny

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Even as a Jyotish Astrologer many years ago, long before discovering the Cards of Your Destiny, people sought me out as a relationship consultant. As a Cancer male who finds fulfillment in helping others and with the King of Hearts birth card and Two of Hearts planetary ruler, I’ve been a magnet for people looking for relationship advice my entire adult life, it seems, even at times when perhaps my own romantic life was at a standstill.

The challenge of using Jyotish Astrology for giving relationship compatibility readings is that the information gleaned from the astrology tends to be on the negative side. So when my sister gave me The Cards of Your Destiny by Robert Lee Camp when it was first published, it was as if God smiled on me because now I had a tool which, combined with the Jyotish Astrology, would help me deliver quality relationship compatibility consultations to clients!

There was still a challenge, though. Frequently, clients would approach me about their compatibility either with someone they were ready to break up with or with someone who wasn’t available (usually because that someone was married or in a relationship with someone else). When clients are ready to break up with their significant other, they want the compatibility reading to prove them right in their purpose. For those seeking the affection of unavailable people, they want the compatibility to prove they have the right to pursue someone else’s mate or lover. (more…)

Your Beliefs Influence Your Relationship

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Have you ever considered where your beliefs about relationships come from? This is a question brought to my attention by entrepreneur and Canadian business woman Penny Phang of www.PennyPhang.com. I was rivited by the question, realizing I had my own thoughts on the subject that I wanted to share here.

First, let me say that beliefs are not the same as truth – certainly not Truth with a capital “T.” Beliefs come to us from a variety of sources. Our parents pass down to us beliefs their parents taught them, who were taught by their parents, who were taught by their parents, and so forth. Beliefs also develop from experience. If no one ever told you to not touch a hot stove because you’d burn yourself if you did, it would only take touching a hot stove one time to create that belief in you!

Beliefs develop from what our teachers, preachers, parents, and peers tell us as well as from the experiences we have with those people. If you have one parent who is especially loving and another that is punitive, you grow up with a different set of beliefs from your next door neighbor who had two especially loving parents (or two punitive parents). (more…)

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