I used to believe that commitment and freedom could not exist together. I thought I could have one but not both. I later learned the highest degree of freedom available was only reached through wholehearted commitment. Mind Body Spirit presenter Blake Bauer on commitment issues.
It is a vital paradox. The key distinction here that is crucial to understand, but often extremely confusing, is that we must learn to commit to loving ourselves first and thus to fulfilling our life purpose before any other form of external commitment can begin or remain healthy. Until we can commit to saying our deeper feelings, values, needs and aspirations matter in each situation, our personal and professional commitments will always result in stress, confusion, struggle or heartache — especially our intimate relationships.
If you’re currently having trouble committing to an intimate relationship it’s important to be kind toward yourself as you navigate your next steps. You are feeling this way for a reason. No one wants to feel insecure, distrusting, owned, controlled, or limited in partnership. It is equally important however to become aware of why you feel as you do. For this reason it’s empowering to know the main reason we struggle with commitment, whether we’re starting a new relationship or questioning an existing one, is because we still have not fully committed ourselves, which ultimately entails learning to value and be true to ourselves in all our interactions. This is a major challenge for all of us, but it’s the only road to lasting peace, happiness, and freedom —particularly if you want lasting true love.
A relationship cannot be healthy or sustainable if our relationship with ourselves is not healthy and intimately honest. If we have not consciously made a commitment to be true to ourselves on a daily basis, we cannot put or keep two feet in a relationship. Likewise, if we haven’t learned to make ourselves happy, then we have a habit of always trying to please others in hopes they will return the favor, which inevitably leads to painful lessons. When we have not learned to enjoy our own company and thus don’t value our own space yet, we will just fill it with people who limit us, solely because we fear being alone, which always results in a vicious cycle of feeling trapped and resentful, while we blame a partner for what we haven’t addressed in ourselves.
For these reasons, when we feel we do not have the tools or the practice to honor, express and act upon our true needs, feelings and goals, we’ll either avoid all forms of commitment or we’ll end up in situations that we cannot give ourselves fully to. In both cases we often fear we’ll lose ourselves in the relationship which leads to both a fear of entering them and to a desire to be free from an existing one. This fact is intimately connected to a current reality where most of us betray ourselves to some degree. We habitually please others to our own detriment in exchange for companionship, love, affection, attention and support, which justifiably leaves us fearful of hurting ourselves and of allowing ourselves to get hurt.
After having our heart broken, or breaking another’s heart, it can be scary to give ourselves fully to someone or to feel someone giving themselves to us. Both dynamics bring us back to the task of talking about our current feelings, fears, needs, reservations, and hopes, so both parties feel all cards are on the table. When one or both parties is able to honor themselves in this way, it symbolizes a healthy commitment to oneself, the result of which is always less assumption and more truth, which leads to less pain and fewer games.

