In this discussion, I'll explore the parallels between tapestry making and relationship building, emphasizing the importance of preparing ourselves before weaving the intricate patterns of love.
The Rush to Find Love: A Common Pitfall
Most of us are in a big hurry to find a great relationship, but this goal—while understandable—is almost invariably premature. We simply are not prepared to participate in the tapestry of a relationship.
Understanding the Tapestry of Relationships
On many occasions I have seen large, ancient, and intricate tapestries on the walls of museums, castles, and great manor houses.
They are gorgeous works of art, created not with a brush but by weaving threads in a way that the final product appears from a distance to be a painting.
Making a tapestry first requires setting up a large frame with vertical threads—the warp—evenly and finely spaced from one side of the frame to the other.
The artistic work is then created by weaving horizontal threads—the woof—between and around the vertical ones. Such fine work requires a great deal of native talent and practice.
I have intentionally omitted the true first step of creating a tapestry, which is the preparation of the threads used in the weaving.
Until the thread is properly created—the cotton planted, picked, ginned, carded, and spun—working on the tapestry is impossible.
When looking at a tapestry, however, rarely do we consider all the effort that goes into making the threads, nor do many people who weave them.
Preparing Your Emotional Threads
Similarly, in our relationships we tend not to consider first our own emotional work—spinning the threads of our lives—by finding and trusting Real Love®, healing our wounds, and learning to be loving.
Instead we want to go straight to the weaving of the tapestry—experiencing the joy of having healthy relationships. But it doesn’t work that way.
The tapestry of relationships is rewarding beyond words, so richly fulfilling that it’s worth all the preparation that is required to spin the threads we’ll use to complete the weaving.
Heal your wounds and learn how to be loving.
READ OR LISTEN TO: