Owning Pink Bloggers

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The Confident Vulnerable Heart

Wendy Strgar's picture

life of heart

Please join us in welcoming Owning Pink's newest blogger, loveologist  and author Wendy Strgar.  *Claps wildly*

“The supreme reality of our time is the vulnerability of this planet.”  -John Fitzgerald Kennedy

The life of the heart is one of contradictions. It is where our greatest strengths are often our most profound weaknesses. Finding balance between seemingly opposing forces or feelings is key to finding balance in love. I can’t think of any two more complementary forces for love than the capacity for vulnerability and the experience of confidence. Consider each one on its own: The confident but invulnerable heart can be brash, ego driven and unavailable. The confidence does not serve because it is not tempered. The vulnerable insecure heart is pitiful, full of self doubt and starts to resemble childlike dependence. It is easy to see how the vulnerability of childhood is easily confused with its more mature adult version.

To really love life, yourself or others these traits must work together. Ancient eastern scripture has long valued the cultivation of the heart broken wide open. The teachings say that it is raw, confident vulnerability that allows you to deeply feel with true compassion and leads you to the road to enlightenment.  Confident vulnerability allows you to keep showing up for yourself and others even when your heart gets a bit trampled. You have the courage to actually feel what happens to you. In turn, experiencing your feelings as they happen builds courage. 

Vulnerable confidence lets people say what they need to say and trust the listener to be kind. Balancing these forces in your heart everyday has the added benefit of ensuring that real lines of communication are always available. Combining the courage to self disclose with the confidence to be yourself feeds a relationship’s integrity because everyone knows where they stand. The more confident vulnerability shapes your communication, the more that trust thrives.

Relationships will always disappoint you at some time

Confident vulnerability doesn’t turn minor disappointments into big storylines about the places where the relationship falls short. You can keep your vulnerability intact if you have a little confidence.  Relationships, by definition will always disappoint you at some time, and heartbreak goes with the territory, which is sadly the state of things when it comes to the human race. Accepting the frailties and imperfection of ourselves and the people we live with and moving into relationships instead of away from them is the reason to cultivate a vulnerable confident heart.

Perhaps the most rewarding gift of cultivating a vulnerable confident heart is that these are the odd bedfellows that create deep and lasting passion. Closing the bedroom door with the capacity to fully open to the moment and your partner, without fear of judgment, and the freedom to find out what it means to be sexual is the treasure of sex most people search for in a lifetime. Vulnerability and confidence don’t preclude one another- they require each other. The mystery of sexual connection unravels and becomes a dance of union and spiritual rediscovery.  

Confident vulnerability is the mature path to making a life with love as its central axis. It is the only path that has real heart.

"Love many things, for therein lies the true strength, and whosoever loves much performs much, and can accomplish much, and what is done in love is done well."  -Vincent van Gogh

Comments

Patricia Lyons's picture

confident vulnerability

What a great article! Wendy Strgar has a great capacity for nailing it on so many levels. I've been reading her Positivity Quest and Sustainable Love blogs for two years now. I am always impressed with her insight and grasp of so many intimate issues. This is a very helpful, timely offering for me especially now as I prepare to attempt to express myself authentically again to my lover. My frustration and tendency to close off and shut down is a real struggle for me. Thank goodness he is very persistent and we continue to try to reach each other through a haze of miscommunication and anger. The balance of being vulnerable and the confidence of knowing myself require extreme patience and focus. If this is where the trust thrives this is where I want and need to be. Thank you Wendy again for the great advise. It's so cool and timely that you wrote this on my birthday and that I found it tonight.

Suzann Robins's picture

vulnerability of childhood

Great thought-filled article. When we are able to recognize and confront our childhood vulnerabilities and apply today's maturity to these old hurts, we truly grow up.

I have spent a lifetime looking at how best to do this and have outlined a program in my book Exploring Intimacy: Cultivating Healthy Relationships through Insight and Intuition. I hope you will take a look.

Lissa Rankin's picture

I love this, Wendy!

Wow. So true. And what a key distinction. I often talk about the power of authenticity and vulnerability, but I've never really thought about the insecure version of vulnerability. I suppose, because I am confident, I have assumed the two naturally go together- that a cracked wide open, vulnerable, confident heart is the norm. But you're so right. I've been in relationships with needy, pitiful, vulnerable people who brought out the worst in me. And then I broke their hearts because I needed strength. Yuck.

Thank you for your beautiful article. I love it. And thank you for sharing your wisdom with us here on Owning Pink!
With love
Lissa

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Wendy 's picture

thank you

Hi Lissa,
Thanks for your kind words. Happy to be working side by side.
Would love to connect some time and see if we could plan an interview.
I also would love to have some of your thoughtful content on my
my love magazine... daily.goodcleanlove.com
Best,
Wendy

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