Posted on 03/27/2014 6:40:34 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Celebrity power couple Gwyenth Paltrow and Chris Martin are not merely divorcing; they are consciously uncoupling.
In a Tuesday night post announcing the end of their ten-year marriage, under the headline Conscious Uncoupling on Paltrows lifestyle blog Goop, the couple wrote that it is with hearts full of sadness that we have decided to separate. After working hard for well over a year, some of it together, some of it separated, to see what might have been possible between us, they have come to the conclusion that while we love each other very much we will remain separate. They will always be a family, though, and in some ways are closer than we have ever been. They conclude with a request for privacy as they consciously uncouple and coparent.
Consciously uncoupling certainly sounds much more amicable and orderly than breaking up or even unconsciously uncoupling. But what exactly does it mean?
Paltrow helpfully followed up her initial announcement by posting a 2,000-word treatise on conscious uncoupling from Habib Sadeghi and Sherry Sami, a married couple living in Los Angeles. (Dr. Sadeghi is an osteopathic doctor who runs an integrative health center called Be Hive of Healing, pun presumably intended, and whose book Within: A Spiritual Awakening to Love and Weight Loss contains a forward written by Paltrow. His wife is a dentist.)
Sadeghi and Sami begin by explaining that given rapidly accelerating life expectancy, these days its unrealistic to expect that well be able to stick it out until death do us part, which suggests we ought to redefine the construct of marriage.
Our biology and psychology arent set up to be with one person for four, five, or six decades, they write. So theres the science. Now for some New Agey jargon: Life is a spiritual exercise in evolving from an exoskeleton for support and survival to an endoskeleton, they write in a section entitled, Intimacy & Insects. They mean by this, basically, that you have to look within yourself for support and strength and healing, not to others, or, one can infer, to any kind of external deity.
Finally, they get to the part about how to uncouple consciously and avoid the drama of divorce. You shouldnt think about it in terms of your marriage having failed, because (a) as we learned, the expectation that it would last was based on an outdated construct, and (b) this is actually going to be a positive experience if you just let go of old notions and approach it in terms of building up your partners spiritual endoskeleton. To change the concept of divorce, we need to release the belief structures we have around marriage that create rigidity in our thought process, they write. The belief structure that marriage should be for life is too much pressure for anyone.
Conscious uncoupling will bring wholeness to the spirits of both people who choose to recognize each other as their teachers. Whats more, conscious uncoupling prevents families from being broken by divorce and creates expanded families that continue to function in a healthy way outside of traditional marriage.
They conclude that by choosing to handle your uncoupling in a conscious way . . . youll see that although it looks like everything is coming apart; its actually all coming back together.
One anonymous source offered E! a more prosaic take on the end of the relationship. They both really believed in the sanctity of marriage and the role model it provided for their kids, the source said. Both of their parents were married their entire lives, and they really wanted the same for their kids. They stuck it out for a long time.
If thats an accurate description, it sounds like Dr. Sadeghi has some work to do in helping the uncoupling couple to adjust their rigid belief structures.
Katherine Connell is an associate editor at National Review.
Congrats! My wife and I will be celebrating our 21st in a month. We don’t have a kid named Apple either. But we do have a dog named Apple...
We have three Apple iPads, four Apple iPhones an Apple Mc Book Pro and an Apple Mac Pro so does that count?
Congrats on your anniversary as well! Sad that we are more of an exception than rule nowadays...
I searched for this situation and found an article from a serious chef who was impressed by her culinary commitment.
I was impressed by his impressions.
I wish more people thought like you do.
I’ve learned through shedding my own tears, but when I came to know God, I became more and more committed to Him and more committed to my husband. We will be married 22 years come May. I’ve only learned to be a decent wife in the last couple of years. I still have a long way to go. My goal is that my husband will continue to grow in his love for me and that my love for him will grow and that together we will both love God the most. It’s a big goal and I hope we attain it.
Amen.
Good one.
Paltrow is Hollywood royalty and we just don’t know our betters.
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