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Special Relationships

"Love is not learned. Its meaning lies within itself. And learning ends when you have recognized all it is
not. That is the interference; that is what needs to be undone." --ACIM
Nowhere in our lives is the backward, upside-down, and pain-producing thinking of the ego more
apparent than in our relationships. Yet we have bought into the egos thought system so thoroughly that,
although our relationships always seem to involveand frequently end inpain, we rarely question the
very premises on which we attempt to build them.
What A Course in Miracles calls special relationships, or illusions of love, are those relationships in which
we believe that something outside of us can fill up or compensate for what seems to be lacking inside
that something outside ourselves can make us feel happy, loved, worthy, safe, important, powerful, whole,
fulfilled. Special love finds expression in our lives as addictions, such as addictions to alcohol, drugs,
food, sex, work. We can have special relationships with things, like our cars, our homes, our possessions,
our jobs. Most often, though, it is the special relationships we form with other people that cause us the
greatest anguish, and at the same time provide us with the greatest opportunities for growth,
transformation, and healing.
Special relationships with people are not limited to romantic or sexual relationships, although these kinds
of relationships seem to be a place we frequently get caught in the illusion of love. But the dynamics and
fantasies of special love can also operate in the relationships we have with our friends, our families, our
teachers, etc. Whenever these relationships have become a source of conflict, disappointment,
frustration, and pain in our lives, we can be certain that special love has been at play.
Special love is literally a contradiction in terms. Real love is inclusive, not exclusive. Its very nature is to
extend, to share, to reach out from and beyond itself.
Real love sets no conditions, makes no demands, sets up no bargains. Real love is naturally generous,
expanding. It gives freely and joyfully from the abundance of its own naturewhich is limitlessand it
can only increase in the giving. By contrast, special love is based on a belief in, and feeling of, lack. The
longing for specialness says "I dont have enough. I want and need more." This experience of lack grows
out of our profound sense of separation from our real spiritual identityfrom God and the love that is our
true nature. Believing this state of lack to be our reality, we seek specialness as a substitute for the
wholeness we have forgotten is our inheritance as part of God.
Specialness by its very nature must limit and exclude, because one is special by being set apart from
others, by having something others do not have, by being different or by having more of something while
others have less. Inherent in the very structure and assumption of specialness, then, is the set-up for
envy, jealousy, fear of loss, and a belief that we need to defend whatever we have from others who would
try to steal it from us. Specialness literally sets us up to be at war with each other, and war has nothing to
do with love.
The Course points out that the special love relationship is the egos most powerful weapon in its arsenal
for keeping us bound to our nightmares of guilt and fear. For in these relationships, the ego disguises its
"gifts" of hopelessness and pain in glittering promises of the fulfillment of our hopes and dreams. When
we end up, again and again, in pain, lonely, and unfulfilled, the ego counsels us to blame the other person
and look for someone else. Or it tells us that we are, after all, not good enoughleaving us desperately
hoping that someday someone will prove to us we are wrong. Finally, the ego may offer us the option of
cynicism and the conviction that love does not exist.

The Course tells us there is an alternative to this cycle of infatuation, disillusionment, desperation, anger,
and blame that characterize special love. But in order to be open to the alternative, we need first to
recognize that beneath all its promises of happiness, special relationships really offer us nothing but selfattack and belittlement.
"In looking at the special relationship, it is necessary first to realize it involves a great amount of pain.
Anxiety, despair, guilt and attack all enter into it, broken by periods in which they seem to be gone ... and
even when the hatred and savagery break briefly through, the illusion of love is not profoundly shaken.
Yet the one thing the ego never allows to reach awareness is that the special relationship is the acting out
of vengeance on yourself. Yet what else could it be? In seeking the special relationship, you look not for
glory in yourself. You have denied that it is there, and the relationship becomes your substitute for it." -ACIM

Once we are willing to look truthfully at the pain and ugliness built into the very structure and dynamics of
the special relationship, we eventually become willing to let go of the hope that we will ever find our
fulfillment there. Finally we reach a point where we can genuinely say, "I hope there is an alternative to
this, and I dont know what it is."
The alternative that the Course holds out to us is not a swearing off or avoidance of relationships. The
alternative is, rather, the transformation of the special relationship into a holy relationshipa relationship
which has been given over to the Holy Spirit to be used for healing, to be used as a classroom for
forgiveness.
"Be glad you have escaped the mockery of salvation (happiness) the ego offered you, and look not back
with longing on the travesty it made of your relationships. Now no one need suffer, for you have come too
far to yield to the illusion of the beauty of guilt ...
What guilt has wrought is ugly, fearful, and very dangerous. See no illusion of truth and beauty there. And
be thankful that there is a place where truth and beauty wait for you. Go on to meet them gladly, and
learn how much awaits you for the simple willingness to give up nothing because it is nothing." --ACIM
Ego's Use of Time
To really understand what is going on in special relationships, it is helpful to understand the way the ego
uses time to perpetuate itself. Key to this is the egos investment in the past and its determination that the
present and future be simply a continuation of the past.The ego emphasizes the past because that is
where the source of our guilt is found. Thus, to let go the past is to let go of the foundation of the egos
entire thought system, which is the belief that guilt is real. The ego, therefore, ensures its own continued
existence by keeping the past alive and real to us.
"The ego has a strange notion of timeand it is with this notion that your questioning might well begin.
Remember that its emphasis on guilt enables it to ensure its continuity by making the future like the past,
and thus avoiding the present.
By the notion of paying for the past in the future, the past becomes the determiner of the future, making
them continuous. For the ego regards the present only as a brief transition to the future, in which it brings
the past to the future by interpreting the present in past terms." --ACIM
Caught up in the egos way of thinking, we see our present experiences as being determined by
something that happened in the past. We blame the way we feel about ourselves on how our parents
treated us as children. We blame our reactions in our current relationship on what happened in our last
relationship. We fall in love with someone because he or she seems to be so different from those we see

as the cause of our pain in the past. From the perspective of our ego, we define and experience the
present in a way that is essentially and thoroughly past-referential.
"Now has no meaning to the ego. The present merely reminds it of past hurts, and it reacts to the present
as if it were the past. It dictates your reactions to those you meet in the present from a past reference
point, obscuring their present reality. In effect, if you follow the egos dictates you will react to your brother
as though he were someone else, and this will surely prevent you from recognizing him as he is. And you
will receive messages from him out of your own past, because, by making it real in the present, you are
forbidding yourself to let it go." aCIM
The special relationship, which is an illusion of love, is based on the past. Specifically, the Course points
out that it is an attempt to seek vengeance on the past. In the special love relationship we initially hope
and believe that the other will somehow make up for what we did not receive in the past. In our minds we
continue to accuse, condemn, and attack those in our past for what we consider to be their sins towards
us. We select a special love partner who we think will somehow be different from those figures from our
past.
"It is impossible to let the past go without relinquishing the special relationshipfor it is an attempt to reenact the past and change it. Imagined slights, remembered pains, past disappointments, perceived
injustices and deprivations all enter into the special relationship, which becomes a way in which you seek
to restore your wounded self-esteem.
What basis would you have for choosing a special partner without the past? Every such choice is made
because of something evil in the past to which you cling, and for which someone else must atone. The
special relationship takes vengeance on the past ... It has no meaning in the present, and if it means
nothing now, it cannot have any real meaning at all." --ACIM
While the special love relationship seems to be an attempt to change the past, in fact it is really a way to
preserve and hold onto it. If our current special love partner does treat us better than we were treated in
past relationships, we use this contrast to highlight the guilt of those from the past. If he disappoints us
which eventually, in some way or other, he willwe react with the accumulated rage and fury of all the
past hurts, insults, and disappointments we have nursed over time and brought with us into the current
relationship. We then add one more grievance to the heavy load we carry, and become even more
wedded to the belief that the past is what is real and meaningful, that the present is merely a continuation
of the past, and that future will be nothing but more of the same.
The Course teaches that all healing is release from the past. The special relationship is never healing
because it preserves the past. Within the special relationship we interact, not with another in his
wholeness and totality, but rather with what the Course calls the shadow figures from our own past. They
are shadow figures because they are not whole, real people, but are simply our limited, partial, egocentric
perceptions and definitions of others.
"Would you recognize a holy encounter if you are merely perceiving it as a meeting with your own
past? Each one peoples his world with figures from his individual past, and it is because of this that
private worlds do differ. Yet the figures he sees were never realfor they are made up only of his
reactions to his brothers, and do not include their reactions to him. The shadowy figures from the past are
precisely what you must escape. They are not real, and have no hold over you unless you bring them
with you. They carry the spots of pain in your mind, directing you to attack in the present in retaliation for
a past that is no more. And this decision is one of future pain.
Unless you learn that past pain is an illusion, you are choosing a future of illusions and losing the many
opportunities you could find for release in the present.The ego would preserve your nightmares, and
prevent you from awakening and understanding they are past." --ACIM

Special Love Is Dependency


Ken Wapnick has pointed out that what the world calls lovespecial love is really dependency.
"...what this world calls love is really specialness. Another word to describe it is dependency. This illusion
of love is to compensate for our own perceived lack by using someone else to fill it up. I become
dependent on you to meet my needs, and I will make you dependent on me to meet your needs. As long
as we both do that, then everything is fine."
Dependency is not love, but attachment. Yogi Amrit Desai clearly contrasts attachment, which seeks
fulfillment from without, with real love, which shines forth from within.
"Attachment focuses on an outside person or object as the center of your being. Real love emanates from
the center within. Special love uses the other to fulfill your needs and addictions. The attached person is
dependent on the object of his attachment. When the object is gone, the feeling of love is also gone. The
person who has contacted his inner source of love, however, carries the light of love with him wherever
he goes. He is like a miner with a light attached to his forehead. Wherever he turns, he sees light,
because the light is a part of him." -Amrit Desai
When we view another as the source of our well-being and happiness, we also see him as having the
power to withhold or withdraw that happiness from us. The other thus becomes, in our mind, a threata
reminder of our perceived vulnerability and lack of wholeness. Thus, the hope and promise of love we
seek in special love or dependency eventually give way to the fear and hatred out of which it is born.
"Attachment begins in fear, lives in fear, dies in fear and is again reborn in fear ...When (one) feels
incomplete in himself, he looks for someone who will provide the qualities he lacks. He becomes attached
to the person whom he thinks will make him complete. Now he needs the other. He is in bondage to the
other.
Realizing this subconsciously, he fears the others withdrawal. Gradually and subtly he begins to hate the
other. He cannot help but hate that which is a source of fear and anxiety to him. Even though he himself
created the fear and addiction, he paradoxically hates the other as the cause of all his insecurities." --Amrit
Desai

Real love, the Course teaches, is changeless and eternal. Special love inevitably turns into hate and fear.
It therefore cannot be love, but merely the illusion of love.
The Present Now
By defining the present exclusively in terms of the past, the special relationship seeks to obliterate our
awareness of the power and opportunity offered us by the present moment. The present Now is the
only aspect of time in which we can choose to see differently, choose to forgive, choose to let go of the
perception of guilt that gives rise to all our pain and fear. The present is the only aspect of time in which
we can choose and experience healing.
"How can you change the past except in fantasy? And who can give you what you think the past deprived
you of?
Do not seek to lay the blame for deprivation on it, for the past is gone. You cannot really not let go of what
has already gone... The past is gone; seek not to preserve it in the special relationship that binds you to
it, and would teach you that salvation is past and so you must return to the past to find salvation. There is
no fantasy that does not contain the dream of retribution for the past. Would you act out the dream (of
vengeance) or let it go?" --ACIM

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