Image created by D. Denise Dianaty, Editor and Graphic Designer for the WE PAW Bloggers E-Zine

Relationships, Advice, Self-help

How Do Presence and Acceptance Add to Your Relationships?

Being present is timeless because time is an idea, a construction of the mind

PhilAndMaude
WE PAW Bloggers
Published in
7 min readFeb 12, 2023

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Photo credit: Maude Mayes, Photo note: Rock on Hendry’s Beach

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PHIL: Imagine you’re driving to a doctor’s appointment and planning to drop by the supermarket on the way back for the weekly shopping, and afterwards you need to pay a bill that is due, and call your friend back, and BAM! You’re hit by a car you didn’t see because you were checking which street to turn on.

Regret floods in. Take it back, please! You so desperately want to be at the doctor, be in the grocery section, get that bill paid, but instead you’re staring at shards of plastic and wondering if it was all your fault.

Here’s the news: you can’t take it back. The sooner you accept that your day, your week, your world has abruptly changed, that a fold in the fabric of the universe has landed you in a different reality, the sooner you will be able to deal with the present situation, and you do that by being present.

That is sometimes touted as an exotic state associated with enlightenment, whether arising spontaneously, earned through years of zazen, or triggered through an extreme experience like a Tony Robbins workshop or an Enlightenment Intensive.

On the first occasion (aged 8–10) I was in the garden, muddling about alone. A cuckoo flew over, calling. Suddenly, I experienced a sensation I can only describe as an effect that might follow the rotating of a kaleidoscope. It was a feeling of timelessness, not only that time stood still, that duration had ceased, but that I was myself outside time altogether. Somehow I knew I was part of eternity. And there was also a feeling of spacelessness. I lost all awareness of my surroundings. With this detachment I felt the intensest joy I had ever known, and yet with so great a longing-for what I did not know-that it was scarcely distinguishable from suffering…

The second occurred a good while after the first. It was an absolutely still day, flooded with sunshine. In the garden everything was shining, breathless as if waiting expectant. Quite suddenly I felt convinced of the existence of God; as if I had only to put out my hand to touch Him. And at the same time there came that intensest joy and indescribable longing, as if of an exile, perhaps, for home. It seemed as if my heart were struggling to leap out of my body.

Religious Experience Research Centre account.

But being present can also be a matter of degree. I see language as a recent skill grafted on to our earlier sensory and emotional ways of dealing with the world, and we have used it to construct an understanding of the world that is often different from our earlier non-verbal responses. We have two voices that sometimes disagree, and we have to choose one or the other. Sometimes we act impulsively, and sometimes we suppress our feelings.

Language has been such a resounding success that our consciousness largely abides in the world of words. To take our experiences into account, we label them with words, and if we do not find words for them, they drop out of sight and become those impulses that move us.

Being present is moving our attention away from our verbal model of the world to our direct experience. It is a different way of knowing, and (surprise!) there are no words for it; the best we can do is to point to it, for instance with poetry. Meditation practices help with this by quieting the voice with zazen or distracting it with mantras so our attention is not caught up in words.

It is not a question of one or the other. We can be open to both. We can reside in silence in our senses and also make a grocery list in our head, though probably not at the same time. Making peace between the two is worth working on.

I started out by discussing acceptance as a part of being present, and this applies in relationships too. Maude explains it well.

MAUDE: To be truly present you must acknowledge what is and accept what is. The moment you move into wanting something to be different, you are no longer experiencing what is. Any pushing or pulling away is stepping out of the present. Instead, you are trying to conjure something other; to defend against what is, to go backwards or forwards in time, to manifest a creation of your mind and your desires.

The connection between presence and acceptance is a pivotal one. When you are able to embrace and accept what is, you become a part of the present moment and consequently, can contribute your Self to that moment. Presence is a state without anxiety or fear. When you are actually just being and not evaluating the moment of being, you enter a state where truth, beauty and goodness exist. Being present is a shift away from fear responses toward love responses.

This holds true within your relationships as well. When you can accept another person without wanting to change or adjust them, you can be with them and be present in the shared moments. The difference can be felt, it is palpable. The kind of presence that this acceptance brings creates a deepening of every interaction and creates a circle of connection. You can feel when you are being seen and heard for who you are without any attempt to alter you.

This eliminates the need for defenses and allows relaxation, humor and a deep sense of peace to permeate those relationships. It may take a while to realize that the usual defenses are not necessary and that there will not be an attempt to invade your person. Being together in presence is such a strong and recognizable experience that it can change many potentially difficult interactions, creating a previously unimagined closeness.

When someone offers you their presence, it is a deep act of love, of trust, of sharing. To know you are being seen and appreciated for who you are is a joyful, affirming realization. When we are present, we bring out the very best in each other.

Originally published at https://philandmaude.com on February 12, 2023.

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D. Denise Dianaty, Editor and Graphic Designer for the WE PAW Bloggers E-Zine. Administrator for the writers forum “WE PAW Bloggers” group and its sister group “Pandora’s Box of Horrors” on Facebook. In addition to being a self-published author and poet, artist, art-photographer, and administrator of the group, “WE PAW Bloggers,” Denise is a graphic designer with 25+ years experience, predominately in print media.

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PhilAndMaude
WE PAW Bloggers

Relationship experts Phil and Maude have been writing and speaking on how to spread peace one relationship at a time for many years.