Mind Freedom Exercise (15): I Changed My Mind
Mind Freedom Exercises
Exercises To Do Together
I Changed My Mind…
And she never gives out, and she never gives in. She just changes her mind.
Billy Joel, She’s Always a Woman
Time for Exercise: 10 to 30 minutes
Properties Required: none
Steps:
1.Individually select an issue that has been a bone of contention between you.
2.Offer a new position on that issue than the one you have held onto in past discussions, debates, or arguments. This works best if both of you create a new position, although not necessarily on the same issue. If only one of you moves to a new stance on something, it can feel too much like giving in or giving up.
Comments:
There is something about giving in or giving up that connotes defeat. When you give in or give up, often you lose. No one wants to be a loser. But the connotation of changing your mind is completely different. Someone who is incapable of changing is also incapable of growing. Never changing your mind is to be stuck in the past, inflexible, unreasonable, and hard. Changing your mind about things is not only desirable but essential if you are to continue to expand your consciousness, to access more life choices, and to be truly free.
Of course, there is a time to stand your ground, but there is also a time to move to a new position. This exercise helps you begin to discern the difference between when it is appropriate to hold a position firmly, because it represents being true to yourself and your core values, and when it is appropriate to change your position, for example, when you are just insisting you are right only to win an argument or to be in control.
Excerpted from our new book Sensual Love Secrets for Couples: The Four Freedoms of Body, Mind, Heart and Soul, by Al Link and Pala Copeland, Llewellyn, 2007
Available at Amazon.com

Also available as an eBook in pdf for Adobe Reader, prc for MobiPocket, or on CD.

Check also at Amazon.com, Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing, and Dying (Paperback) by Ram Dass

Al Link and Pala Copeland
4 Freedoms Relationship Tantra
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