by: Kevin B. Burk
Excerpt From The Relationship Handbook: How to Understand and Improve Every Relationship in Your Life by Kevin B. Burk
One of the most valuable life skills we can learn is how to meet our safety needs. We are responsible for maintaining the minimum balance in our safety accounts. When we learn to meet our own safety needs, every area of our lives—including our relationships—improves dramatically. Meeting our own safety needs is relatively simple. Meeting other people’s safety needs, however, is a bit more complicated.
MEETING OUR OWN SAFETY NEEDS
When we realize that we feel unsafe or that our fight-or-flight response is active, the first thing we must do is evaluate if we are actually in a dangerous or threatening situation. If we feel unsafe walking through a deserted parking lot in the middle of the night, we should certainly honor that feeling and stay on our guard! When used correctly, the fight-or-flight response is designed to save our lives. We simply need to learn how to weed out the false alarms. If we feel unsafe and there is no reasonable threat to our life or limb, then our fight-or-flight response was activated by our egos, and we can safely disengage it.
The most common reason that we feel unsafe is that we are projecting our attention into the future or the past. Our power only exists in the present; when we worry about the past or the future, we give away our power and feel unsafe. The “Present Moment Safety Exercise” on the following page can help to return our awareness to the present moment, and bring the balance in our master safety account back to its minimum level.
Often, in order to feel safe enough to even do this exercise, we need to create some space. If we’re feeling unsafe in a discussion or an argument, we may need to simply walk away—to take a few moments to let our tempers cool. Even though our partner in the discussion may not pose an actual physical threat to us, if we’re experiencing boundary violations in the discussion, we will need to reinforce our boundaries and reclaim our space before we can address our safety needs.
PRESENT MOMENT SAFETY EXERCISE
Stop whatever it is that you are doing and take a few deep, cleansing breaths.
If possible, find somewhere to sit or lie down, and then let yourself feel supported by the chair, floor, bed or sofa.
As you become aware of your body, and aware of your breathing, feel your mind begin to quiet.
Gently release your attachments to any thoughts and simply observe any activity of your mind.
Softly draw your awareness back to the present moment. The more we worry about the past or the future, the more unsafe we feel. The only place we have any power is in the present moment.
Experience the truth that in the present moment you are safe. The past has already happened, and the future does not exist yet. Remember that we create our futures through our choices.
Take a moment to feel the truth that in the present moment—in this moment, and in every moment—you are supported, safe and nurtured. Because you are an individualized aspect of All That Is, your needs are automatically met.
Let your awareness rest on your breath. Let your mind quiet. And for a few moments, simply be. Simply experience what it feels like to be completely safe, completely supported.
You can now consider your current situation from this place of safety, support, and power. You can evaluate your options objectively. You are free to make the most elegant choices available to you. You choose, knowing that your choices create your reality. You choose to experience the truth that you are fully supported in this moment and in the next. And these choices create a present and a future where your needs continue to be met easily and effortlessly.
MEETING OTHER PEOPLE’S SAFETY NEEDS
Meeting other people’s safety needs is often a tricky proposition. In our intimate relationships, it’s appropriate for us to explore emotional connections with our partners. We can look for ways to nurture and protect our partners, and expect our partners to nurture and protect us. It’s rarely appropriate to do this in professional or casual relationships, however. Unless we share an intimate personal connection with someone, it’s difficult to meet his or her safety needs directly. The most we can do is to avoid making them feel unsafe. We do this by respecting their boundaries.
Other people’s boundaries are not always easy to recognize, however. Sometimes the only way we can recognize a boundary is by inadvertently crossing it and making our partner feel unsafe. Often, our partners didn’t even realize that they had this particular boundary until we crossed it. Once we’ve become aware of the boundary, however, we can own it. We can step back, and take responsibility for crossing the boundary. And we can choose to respect that boundary from this point on. We are now both aware of this particular boundary, but more importantly, we are both aware that the boundary will be respected. The boundary is now stronger, and our partner is now able to feel more safe. So how can you tell if you’ve crossed a boundary that not even your partner knew existed in the first place? Body language is the best indication that you may have stepped over a line and made someone feel unsafe. When we feel unsafe, we adjust our bodies to protect ourselves. We may:
If you notice any of these behaviors in your partner, you have crossed a line and made your partner feel unsafe. And if you notice any of these behaviors in yourself, then you’re feeling unsafe because your partner has crossed one of your boundaries.
In any event, whether you’re feeling unsafe or you’ve made your partner feel unsafe, what you need to create is some space to defuse the threat.
If you’ve made someone feel unsafe through your choice of words or subject matter, it’s important that you not pursue that particular subject. If appropriate, you can acknowledge that you may have inadvertently become too personal, and apologize. Remember, when we recognize and take responsibility for crossing a boundary, we make our partners feel safe.