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Informative Articles

At-Home Mommy - Entry Level
When I left my high-tech corporate job to be an at-home mom, I had no idea of the changes I was going to encounter. No, I am not talking of the usual baby stuff like not freaking out when food or something worse gets rubbed on my nice...

Getting The Most From A Romantic Relationship
You can make your relationship better. A few basic guidelines will make your relationship more enjoyable and more beneficial for both of you. A romantic relationship has important benefits: companionship, being inspired by someone else's...

Home For The Holidays: Ask Yourself Some Questions
Annie easily slipped into becoming the sole caregiver of her parents. What started out as monthly grocery shopping for them, over the course of 2 years became a full time duty, an overwhelming burden and just about broke her emotionally and...

Relationship Advice: First Date Sex? Should You?
Everybody on TV seems to be tumbling into bed on the first date these days, but should you? Absolutely not, and I don't care if you've been celibate since 1996. Here's why: Chances are, you've just met the guy. You know nothing about...

Women and Men: Never The Twain Shall Meet
"Dear Happy Guy, "I just don't understand men. Last night I was sitting at the kitchen table, when my husband wandered by with a glass in his hand. "I asked him, 'Is that a triple-coconut-cream-of-pickle-juice spritzer with a dash of...

 
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Losing Relationships

I used to lose friends the same way I would lose car keys. They would somehow be misplaced. Of course, with car keys I go through a ritual to look for them -- my night table, the jacket I wore yesterday, my pants in the laundry, the junk drawer, my wife's purse. And then I circle through the same places again, thinking I didn't look hard enough.

The difference, of course, is that eventually my car keys turn up -- they have to. I have to look harder, if at all, for lost friends or I rely on serendipity or I give up. But what does it cost to lose them and what does it cost to find them?

Well, we often don't even notice when we lose them that we've lost something valuable. I know that's callous, but the notion of moving on or starting new is endemic to our culture. "Stay in touch" we might say, but gone is gone -- even email addresses change.

We do have ways now of reclaiming old friends (though women often change their last names) and some of those 'find someone' web sites can be useful. But we largely


remain unaware that we have lost something valuable when we lose friends. I know this because I know how I feel when an old friend suddenly turns up.

The other day, a friend of mine discovered that two of his clients were old friends of mine. Because of him I called them (they're reading this) and we will get together. I had mused about them from time to time over the years but, strangely enough, I didn't realize that I missed them until we spoke and all the good things about them came flashing back.

It pays to stay connected and whatever small effort is required to keep that connection alive, no relationship is worth disappearing.

Copyright © 2005 Michael Lipp

About Michael: Michael Lipp is a Relationship Coach and an activist in the world. He is on the boards of Events to Empower Humanity, the Global Abundance Alliance, Partners in Ending Hunger and Curbing Hunger. He is committed to a world of love, contribution and sufficiency, immensely valuable with a family of wife, 6 children and 6 grandchildren.